Monday, September 26, 2022

RB Search Gizmos: Get Resources About a Historical Figure with the Contemporary Biography Builder

RB Search Gizmos: Get Resources About a Historical Figure with the Contemporary Biography Builder
By ResearchBuzz

The best thing about the Internet is that it’s constantly getting bigger, with more information being added every second.

The worst thing about the Internet is that it’s constantly getting bigger, with more information being added every second.

I was thinking the other day about Web-searching for historical figures. There’s so much research and content coming online now that it seems like older news and information might get buried when you’re trying to do research. It would be nice, I thought, if someone made a tool that restricted a search for a historical figure to their lifetime only.

Then I remembered I’m learning JavaScript so I made it myself. The Contemporary Biography Builder (CBB) is available at https://researchbuzz.github.io/Contemporary-Biography-Builder/  .

Screenshot from 2022-09-26 07-34-05

 

CBB only works for people listed in Wikipedia, so don’t go poking around for tea about your cousin Fred. Enter a name and Wikipedia pulls the birth and death dates from Wikipedia (if the person is still alive it uses the current year instead) and generates lifespan-delimited searches for Google Books, Internet Archive, DPLA, and the Library of Congress’ historical newspapers database, Chronicling America.

Let’s use Louisa May Alcott as an example. Enter her name and click the Search Contemporary Information button, and CBB spits out a list of URLs, all of which will open in a new tab.

Screenshot from 2022-09-26 08-58-41

 

In the case where there are different levels of access (full vs partial view, unlimited re-use vs restrictions) I created separate URLs. Click on a link and it’ll take you to a set of search results delimited by the years of the person’s lifespan – in LMA’s case, 1832-1888.

Screenshot from 2022-09-26 09-04-54

 

For Google Books, the content is what you’d expect – newspapers, magazines, books, etc. For the Internet Archive and the DPLA, though, you can find more varied content. Here’s how a search over LMA’s lifespan looks at the Internet Archive:

Screenshot from 2022-09-26 09-09-47

 

In this case, a search for LMA found a lot of books and stories, but also correspondence from her father, Amos Bronson Alcott. Similarly, the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) finds multimedia resources from a number of collections:

Screenshot from 2022-09-26 09-11-07

 

Finally, Chronicling America will find you lots of nice old content:

Screenshot from 2022-09-26 09-17-03

 

I was very excited to see a mention of LMA in December 1854, when she was only 23. I clicked on it only to discover the most frustrating paper repair of all time:

Screenshot from 2022-09-26 09-18-53

 

I was able to read some of it, but I spent way too much time squinting at this.

It’s not guaranteed that your searches will have results from all resources. In this case, there are no results for LMA in Google Books’ magazine collection (I suspect they don’t have any magazines that old.)

You’ll also find fewer results if you search for historical figures that go back more than about 200 years. When I searched for Jonathan Swift, for example (1667-1745), I found some books in Google Books (but no newspapers or magazines), a few things in the DPLA, a pretty good selection at the Internet Archive, and nothing in Chronicling America. Always check all the links, especially if you’re searching for older historical figures.

I had a couple of challenges putting this together (I had to figure out how to determine if someone listed on Wikipedia is dead or not; this is more difficult than you’d expect) so if you try it and anything weird happens, leave a comment. But mostly it should work fine. I hope it helps you make amazing discoveries!



September 26, 2022 at 07:23PM
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Sunday, September 25, 2022

Georgia Presbyterian Churches, Google Sheets, Election Memes, More: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, September 25, 2022

Georgia Presbyterian Churches, Google Sheets, Election Memes, More: Sunday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, September 25, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Digital Library of Georgia: 19th and early 20th century collections from the Presbyterian Church are now available online without paywalls or passwords.. “Selected by Georgia stakeholders and funded by the DLG, these materials document the Church’s interaction with slavery, emancipation, and religion.”

USEFUL STUFF

How-To Geek: How to Import Data With Google Sheets Functions. “You may want to work with data in your spreadsheet that resides elsewhere. Using a set of Google Sheets functions, you can import data from a CSV file, RSS feed, web page, or another spreadsheet. With the functions we’ll describe here, you can pull data into your sheet from external sources. Then, analyze, manipulate, format, and do what you please with your new data.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Washington Post: The Fetterman-Oz meme campaign, illustrated. “The rivals for Pennsylvania’s open U.S. Senate seat are turning to uncommon tactics to paint their opponent as unqualified or unfit. Since emerging from the primaries, Democratic nominee John Fetterman has waged a relentless trolling offensive, creating moments that often went viral on social media portraying Republican rival Mehmet Oz as an out-of-state elitist. Oz began countering with his own posts questioning Fetterman’s health and willingness to debate, as well as his policy positions.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Long Island Press: NY Museums to Disclose Artwork Looted by Nazis. “Museums in New York that exhibit artworks looted by Nazis during the Holocaust are now required by law to let the public know about those dark chapters in their provenance through placards displayed with the stolen objects. At least 600,000 pieces of art were looted from Jewish people before and during World War II, according to experts. Some of that plunder wound up in the world’s great museums.”

Motherboard: Revealed: US Military Bought Mass Monitoring Tool That Includes Internet Browsing, Email Data. “Multiple branches of the U.S. military have bought access to a powerful internet monitoring tool that claims to cover over 90 percent of the world’s internet traffic, and which in some cases provides access to people’s email data, browsing history, and other information such as their sensitive internet cookies, according to contracting data and other documents reviewed by Motherboard.”

CyberScoop: Commerce lacks intelligence resources to keep U.S. tech from fueling Chinese cyberthreat, experts warn. “The Commerce Department unit that approves sensitive U.S. technology exports does not have the intelligence resources to fully realize the national security consequences of selling advanced equipment and software to China, several experts and a former agency official told CyberScoop.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

The Verge: It sure seems like Google is struggling to invent the future. “If companies want to attract the sort of people who are going to build the future, they have to be the type of place where people can actually go out on limbs and not be worried about getting in trouble for barking up the wrong tree. It’d be a shame if Google became a company where that wasn’t the case.”

PC Magazine: We Must Save Streaming Video Before It’s Too Late. “The core problem, of course, is capitalism’s inherent antagonism toward art. Companies commission movies primarily for their ability to make money. Preserving them is also largely about profit, making more money by selling them again.”

Maryland Today: How AI Could Help Writers Spot Stereotypes. “Studious Asians, sassy yet helpless women and greedy shopkeepers: These tired stereotypes of literature and film not only often offend the people they caricature, but can drag down what might otherwise have been a compelling narrative. Researchers at the University of Maryland’s Human-Computer Interaction Lab are working to combat these clichés with the creation of DramatVis Personae (DVP), a web-based visual analytics system powered by artificial intelligence that helps writers identify stereotypes they might be unwittingly giving fictional form among their cast of characters (or dramatis personae).”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

Ars Technica: The case of the murdered mummies: “Virtual autopsy” reveals foul play. “An international team of scientists used CT scanning to conduct ‘virtual autopsies’ of three South American mummies and found evidence of fatal trauma in two of them, according to a recent paper published in the journal Frontiers in Medicine.” Good afternoon, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



September 26, 2022 at 12:32AM
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Andean States, NASA DART, Audio Standards, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, September 25, 2022

Andean States, NASA DART, Audio Standards, More: Sunday ResearchBuzz, September 25, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Library of Congress: Connecting Andean Voices and Heritages. “The Hispanic Reading Room has a new research guide, Interconnecting Worlds: Weaving Community Narratives, Andean Histories & the Library’s Collections. This guide, with resources in English, Spanish and Quechua, facilitates research about Andean peoples through language, literature, visual arts and music. We used video interviews to connect with Indigenous people from Argentina, Bolivia, and Peru and their communities in New York, Massachusetts and the greater Washington, D.C. area.”

EVENTS

Review Geek: Watch NASA Attack an Innocent Asteroid on Monday. “NASA is set to channel the spirit of the 1998 film Armageddon on Monday. The space agency plans to crash a spacecraft into the asteroid Dimorphos in the first test of a planetary defense system. Dubbed ‘Double Asteroid Redirection Test’ (DART), the program aims to change the celestial body’s orbit.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Ars Technica: After pushing AV1 codec, Google goes after Dolby with HDR and audio standards. “Google can do basically whatever it wants regarding video and web standards. YouTube is the world’s most popular video site. Chrome is the world’s most popular browser. Android is the world’s most popular operating system. Anything Google wants to roll out can immediately have a sizable user base of clients, servers, and content. From there, it’s just a matter of getting a few partners to tag along.”

CNET: Don’t Like a Comment on TikTok? You Can Hit the ‘Dislike’ Button. “TikTok said Friday that it’s rolling out a comment dislike button for people worldwide. The feature was created to help TikTok get feedback from its users, helping to identify ‘irrelevant or inappropriate’ comments. ”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

New York Times: What Hemingway Left in Sloppy Joe’s Bar 80 Years Ago. “The trove of items deposited in Key West, now part of a new archive at Penn State, includes four unpublished short stories, drafts of manuscripts and boxes of personal effects.”

ABC News (Australia): Pandora shipwreck history to be shared through digital project in Queensland. “Thousands of underwater films, photographs, hand-drawn maps, field journals and other unseen archive material are being digitised to bring to light the untold story of the discovery and excavation of the Pandora wreck 120 kilometres east of Cape York.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Associated Press: US allows tech firms to boost internet access in Iran. “American tech firms will be allowed to expand their business in Iran, where most internet access has been cut off in response to anti-government protests, the Treasury Department said Friday. Iran has been cracking down on demonstrators protesting the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in the custody of its morality police. Iranian state TV suggests that as many as 26 protesters and police have been killed since violence erupted over the weekend.”

News Australia: Older Aussies are exposed by shift to online banking. “Data shows phishing attacks on senior Australians are on the rise in a big way, with the ACCC’s Scamwatch reporting Australians over 65 have lost more money to phishing scams this year than all other age groups combined – totalling over $6.5 million in the first eight months of the year. And that could just be the tip of the iceberg.”

NBC News: Swizz Beatz and Timbaland reach settlement with Triller in lawsuit over Verzuz payments. “Swizz Beatz and Timbaland have settled their lawsuit with Triller, after suing the service last month for $28 million, an amount they contended was owed after their sale of Verzuz to the service in March 2021.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Nation Thailand: DITP launches new AI tool to evaluate Thailand’s trade prospects. “Phusit Rattanakul Seriroengrit, [Department of International Trade Promotion]’s director general, said on Friday that the DITP Business AI tool can analyse products in five categories, including agriculture, food, lifestyle and fashion, health and beauty, and industrial sectors. He said the system features a global trade analytics option which predicts export trends in the short term (three months) and long term (12 months).”

The Verge: Here’s Krafton’s virtual human Ana in action. “Earlier this year, Krafton — the company best known for the battle royale shooter PUBG — unveiled what it described as a ‘hyper-realistic’ virtual human. Alongside those first images and details were some big plans to turn Ana, as she’s known, into a virtual star. Now we can see what that looks like with a brand-new music video.”

The Ohio State University: Recreating “ghost neighborhoods” destroyed by highways. “The building of the interstate highway system in Columbus split and sometimes destroyed entire neighborhoods, mostly those housing African Americans, immigrants and other minorities. Now a team of researchers from The Ohio State University are working to digitally recreate these ‘ghost neighborhoods’ in 3D so that people can see, and researchers can study, what was lost.” Good morning, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



September 25, 2022 at 05:31PM
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Saturday, September 24, 2022

Indianapolis School Architecture, Indiana School Performance, San Francisco Law Enforcement, More: Saturday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, September 24, 2022

Indianapolis School Architecture, Indiana School Performance, San Francisco Law Enforcement, More: Saturday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, September 24, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Indianapolis Public Library: Digital Indy Reveals Indianapolis Public Schools Architecture Collection. “The Indianapolis Public Schools Architecture Collection spans three centuries and includes documents from the 1890s through the 1970s. The educational priorities of various time periods are reflected in the design of buildings and how they were used. For example, school floor plans that highlight what was taught in classrooms during various time periods reveal rooms designated for clothing laboratory, cabinet making shop, and other subjects that are hard to find in modern schools.”

WISH: Indiana Board of Education demos new school data tool for parents. “The site will provide visual representations of all data pertaining to an individual school, school corporation or the state as a whole. Parents and educators will be able to see data points related to math and reading scores, graduation rates and percentages of students earning college credit through high school courses. They’ll also be able to filter data by factors such as, students on free or reduced-price meal plans, race or ethnicity.”

CBS News: Residents can follow complaints against SFPD officers on new website. “The San Francisco Department of Police Accountability has launched a case status tracking portal to make it easier for complainants to follow their case, submit documents and investigate hearing requests. The department works separately from the San Francisco Police Department to independently review the public’s allegations of misconduct and abuse from police officers.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Reuters: Facebook whistleblower launches nonprofit to solve social media harms . “Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen is launching a nonprofit organization that will seek solutions to harms created by social media, she said on Thursday.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Hyperallergic: Announcing the Inaugural Center for Craft Archive Fellows. “The recipients of the Center for Craft’s 2022 Craft Archive Fellowship are Xenobia Bailey, Jeffrey Gan, Elizabeth G. Greenlee and N.E. Brown, Siera Hyte, Maru López, and Olivia Quintanilla. For their six projects, they will receive grants of $5,000 to explore and analyze archives of their choosing, allowing them to engage in both conventional and innovative approaches to archival research.”

Israel 21c: Google acquires air quality insights company BreezoMeter. “Haifa-based BreezoMeter, founded in 2014, developed a system that collects environmental data from 11 million sources around the world and applies algorithms to predicHacks and roasts: Inside the new social media currency (Vogue Business) – https://www.voguebusiness.com/companies/gen-z-tik-tok-hacks-and-roasts-inside-the-new-social-media-currency #beauty #fashion #SocialMedia #humor t hazards related to air quality, such as pollution, pollen and wildfires. BreezoMeter has about 400 million users worldwide.”

Vogue Business: Hacks and roasts: Inside the new social media currency. “Hacks, where TikTok users share tips and tricks for efficiency or creativity; and roasts, a form of insult comedy in which someone is mocked, usually playfully, are thriving on the app and going viral. Brands are finding themselves involved in both — whether they like it or not. While some luxury and fashion labels might prefer to keep a distance, not least to maintain a well-protected aspirational status, others are eagerly jumping in, dishing their own comedic responses and launching collaborations with unexpected partners.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Washington Post: Pentagon launches effort to assess crypto’s threat to national security. “The military’s innovation office is launching a sweeping review of cryptocurrencies to assess threats to national security and law enforcement posed by the rise of digital assets.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

KnowTechie: It’s not me, it’s you: Why I’m breaking up with Otter.ai. “Otter.ai is an automated service. Unlike other industries, it isn’t battling rampant wage inflation. The biggest variable that influences the cost-per-transaction is computing power, which is unbelievably cheap. Sure, the big three cloud providers (Microsoft, Google, and Amazon) have all recently hiked their prices in light of supply chain woes and soaring energy costs. But not by that much.”

New York Times: The Most Dominant Toxic Election Narratives Online. “Ballot mules. Poll watch parties. Groomers. These topics are now among the most dominant divisive and misleading narratives online about November’s midterm elections, according to researchers and data analytics companies. On Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, Truth Social and other social media sites, some of these narratives have surged in recent months, often accompanied by angry and threatening rhetoric.” Good afternoon, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



September 24, 2022 at 09:09PM
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Venezuela Fact-Checking, Mesoamerica, Google Maps, More: Saturday ResearchBuzz, September 24, 2022

Venezuela Fact-Checking, Mesoamerica, Google Maps, More: Saturday ResearchBuzz, September 24, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Miami Herald: Venezuela is a conduit for Russian propaganda, says disinformation watchdog. “Venezuela has become a conduit for Russian Spanish-language propaganda in Latin America, according to a media watchdog that is releasing a new tool that seeks to dispel misinformation in the country and region.”

The Verge: Google’s new adventure game takes a top-down trip through ancient Mesoamerica. “Google’s Arts & Culture division has released a charming new educational game all about ancient Mesoamerica. The game, The Descent of the Serpent, is available to play right now in your browser or via the Google Arts & Culture iOS and Android apps.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Birmingham Mail: Google Maps makes sombre change after the Queen’s death. “‘PegMa’am’ was introduced in 2015. It meant, whenever you were near Buckingham Palace, the cursor would transform into a portrait of Her Majesty. Google has quietly dropped the feature after the monarch died aged 96 at Balmoral earlier this month.”

9to5 Google: YouTube says it has ‘concluded’ a test that saw as many as 10 unskippable ads in one break [U]. “Ad breaks on YouTube videos typically appear before a video begins as well as during that video if the creator allows it. Generally, these breaks can last as little as a few seconds or go as long as a few minutes, but longer ads usually come with the option to skip that ad after a set period. Over the past month or two, some YouTube viewers have noted that advertisements on the platform have been expanding greatly in length and quantity, especially in unskippable formats.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

New York Times: In India, Debunking Fake News and Running Into the Authorities. “Led by its founders, Mohammed Zubair and Pratik Sinha, Alt News has criticized supporters and officials of Mr. Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party for their statements targeting minorities. But in a reflection of the growing concerns about the independence and freedom of the news media in India, Mr. Zubair has landed in the authorities’ cross hairs.”

Kotaku: Somehow This Video Game Belly Button Was Too Sexy For Google. “Just a few weeks after Hook Up: The Game released on Android, developer Sophie Artemigi was surprised to see the visual novel flagged for inappropriate sexual content.” This story is so weird that I can’t encompass it in a quote. I kept thinking about Barbara Eden’s belly button.

ABC News (Australia): Canberra galleries, museums call for urgent budget aid to undo decade of ‘utter neglect’. “Canberra’s top museums and galleries say they cannot afford to fix their ageing buildings and are pleading for financial aid in next month’s federal budget. A lobby group representing the cultural institutions said about $800 million was needed to repair the facilities, which include places like the National Gallery of Australia (NGA) and the National Library of Australia (NLA).”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Washington Post: How vigilante ‘predator catchers’ are infiltrating the criminal justice system. “In the past three years, at least 160 groups have been ‘catching predators’ in the United States, according to a Washington Post analysis of their social media posts. This year alone, a YouTube channel tracking catchers has counted more than 920 stings by amateurs. Some are fueled by right-wing rhetoric about ‘groomers’ and the need to ‘save the children.’ Some are parents fearful for their own kids, or, like Schmutte, say they are called by God to do this work. Some make thousands of dollars from clicks and donations.”

Reuters: UK to examine cloud services dominated by Amazon, Microsoft and Google. “Britain said it would investigate competition in cloud services, a market dominated by the ‘hyperscalers’ Amazon, Microsoft and Alphabet’s Google, which together account for around 81% of revenue.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

UGA Today: Did my computer say it best?. “With autocorrect and auto-generated email responses, algorithms offer plenty of assistance to help people express themselves. But new research from the University of Georgia shows people who rely on computer algorithms for assistance with language-related, creative tasks didn’t improve their performance and were more likely to trust low-quality advice.”

Tech Policy Press: It’s Time to Stop Platforming the “Big Lie” Playbook. “With Truth Social emerging as a megaphone for misinformation and extremism, tech companies that are serious about upholding their publicly professed commitments to prevent the promotion of violent content must ban Truth Social from their online stores.”

OTHER THINGS I THINK ARE COOL

New Scientist: Drone swarm that 3D prints cement structures could construct buildings. “Drones working together can create large 3D-printed structures made of foam or cement. The experiments are paving the way for a future where swarms of drones could help construct extremely tall or intricate buildings and other structures like bridges without the need for support scaffolding or large construction machinery.” Good morning, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



September 24, 2022 at 05:32PM
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Friday, September 23, 2022

University of Arkansas Museum, Twitch, Google Sheets, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, September 23, 2022

University of Arkansas Museum, Twitch, Google Sheets, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, September 23, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

University of Arkansas: U of A Museum Launches Online Database to Explore Collection. “From the first computer on campus to a meteorite that fell near Fayetteville in 1934, the museum houses a highly varied collection of more than 7.5 million objects encapsulating archeology, history, ethnology, geology and zoology. A new online resource will feature these collections.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

NPR: Twitch bans some gambling content after an outcry from streamers. “Some gambling content has been banned from Twitch after one of its streamers reportedly stole tens of thousands of dollars from fans and fellow streamers in order to fuel a gambling habit.”

USEFUL STUFF

MakeUseOf: How to Build a Simple and Effective Content Calendar in Google Sheets. “With many content calendar software available, it can be challenging to pick one. Some are overcomplicated, some are outside your budget, and others give you a suite of tools you’ll never use. It may even be that you’re still trying to pick your favorite and need a solution in the meantime—one without a paywall or trial period. Whatever the situation, you can create one that offers what you need—and nothing more—using spreadsheet software.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Outlook India: Bite Into A Slice Of India’s Architectural Diversity With These Digital Archives . “From the Mughal empire to the Rajput kingdoms and colonisation, every age in Indian history has left behind an influence that can be assessed in the structures that dot our cities.” A well-annotated overview of four Instagram-based archives.

Kotaku: GTA VI’s Vice City Is Already Being Mapped Using MS Paint, Google Earth, And Maths. “Previously this week, early development footage of the next Grand Theft Auto game, assumed to be Grand Theft Auto VI, leaked all over the internet. You probably already know about all that. Since then, it’s become harder to find the leaked footage, and sites — including Kotaku — aren’t able to showcase footage or screenshots from the leaks. But that hasn’t stopped a dedicated group of GTA fans from coming together in various places in an effort to map out as much of the new Vice City and its surroundings as they can using maths, MS Paint, Google Earth, and teamwork.”

TechCrunch: Framework partners with Google for a user-repairable $999 Chromebook. “Repairable electronics firm Framework just announced a new take on the company’s signature laptop. Produced in association with Google, the company is releasing the Framework Laptop Chromebook Edition. As the name suggests, it’s an iteration of the Framework Laptop specifically designed for ChromeOS.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

BuzzFeed News: The YouTube Channel Streaming Alex Jones’s Trial Disabled The Chat Because Of Threats To Sandy Hook Victims’ Families. “The trial, which is being livestreamed in its entirety on YouTube by the Law & Crime channel, has had thousands of viewers each day since it began last week, although Jones himself has yet to testify. As always on Law & Crime’s streams, there are hundreds of active and colorful commenters, but trial viewers and Twitter users had noted from day one that the chat was littered with the same conspiracy theories that Jones now faces paying damages for.”University of Arkansas Museum, Twitch, Google Sheets, More: Friday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, September 23, 2022

Bleeping Computer: Malwarebytes mistakenly blocks Google, YouTube for malware. “Malwarebytes has addressed an issue that prevented users from accessing websites and services hosted on the google.com domain, including Google search and Youtube. According to a large number of reports from people affected by this, their browsers were prevented from accessing Google sites after Malwarebytes flagged and blocked them as malicious.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

Mint: India is building a database for companies to train AI models: Rajeev Chandrasekhar. “India is building a large database of anonymized non-personal data for Indian companies and startups that are using artificial intellighttps://https://ift.tt/dsuFr98 (AI), said Rajeev Chandrasekhar, minister of state (MoS) for Electronics and Information Technology, at the Global Fintech Fest (GFF), an industry event, held in Mumbai on Wednesday.”

Caltech: Conventional Computers Can Learn to Solve Tricky Quantum Problems. “A new Caltech-led study in the journal Science describes how machine learning tools, run on classical computers, can be used to make predictions about quantum systems and thus help researchers solve some of the trickiest physics and chemistry problems. While this notion has been proposed before, the new report is the first to mathematically prove that the method works in problems that no traditional algorithms could solve.” Good afternoon, Internet…

Do you like ResearchBuzz? Does it help you out? Please consider supporting it on Patreon. Not interested in commitment? Perhaps you’d buy me an iced tea. I love your comments, I love your site suggestions, and I love you. Feel free to comment on the blog, or @ResearchBuzz on Twitter. Thanks!



September 24, 2022 at 12:58AM
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Puerto Rico Art, New York Long Covid Support, Silicon Valley Job Cuts, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, September 23, 2022

Puerto Rico Art, New York Long Covid Support, Silicon Valley Job Cuts, More: Friday ResearchBuzz, September 23, 2022
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Google Blog: Digitizing artwork to share Puerto Rican culture around the globe . “10 museums and archives in Puerto Rico have come together through a partnership with Google Arts & Culture, Lin-Manuel Miranda and myself to launch Puerto Rico: The Sum of Its Arts. This new, digital exhibition is an immersive experience of Puerto Rico’s rich multicultural heritage through over 60 expert stories and exhibits, curated from over 1,100 artworks and artifacts by our partners.”

New York State Department of Health: State Department of Health Launches New Website and Audio Resources to Support New Yorkers With Long COVID. “As long COVID response efforts continue – in partnership with national and global health experts – the State’s new webpage offers information on what long COVID is, the symptoms, and how New Yorkers can prepare or seek treatment from healthcare providers…. To support New Yorkers currently struggling with long COVID, the website is also available in an audio format.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

CNET: Facebook Parent Meta, Google to Cut Costs and Staff, Report Says. “Facebook parent company Meta and Alphabet’s Google are reportedly cutting staff as the tech giants look to slash costs amid slowing growth. Citing people familiar with these decisions, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that Meta is looking to slash its costs by at least 10% within the next few months.”

TechCrunch: Google rolls out a new set of search tools for eco-conscious travelers. “In recent months, Google has been steadily adding new tools to help consumers choose more sustainable options when using its services like Google Maps, Google Flights and hotel search. On Tuesday, the company announced it’s expanding these efforts with the addition of a handful of new features that allow travelers to better filter their searches to make sustainable choices when booking flights or hotels as well as improved options for trains.”

CNBC: Google co-founder’s flying car startup is winding down. “Kittyhawk was founded as Zee.Aero in 2010 when Page recruited Sebastian Thrun, who had worked on self-driving cars and other experimental projects at Google, to create electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft. The company unveiled a demonstration video of a flying car in 2017, and Thrun said he envisioned a time when people would be able to hail flying cars through an app like Lyft or Uber.”

USEFUL STUFF

Tom’s Guide: Telegram: What it is and how to use it. “There are plenty of WhatsApp alternatives for those who want to break free of Facebook’s ecosystem and Telegram is one of the more popular choices. Back in 2020, Telegram’s founder, Pavel Durov, revealed that the messaging platform had nearly 500 million active users and as it stands now, there are over 700 million monthly active users(opens in new tab).”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

Washington Post: Inside the civil rights campaign to get Big Tech to fight the ‘big lie’. “Through memos and meetings, the Change the Terms coalition for months had pleaded with Facebook parent Meta, Twitter, TikTok and YouTube to bolster the content moderation systems that it says allowed Trump’s baseless claims about election rigging to spread, setting the groundwork for the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol, according to interviews and private correspondence viewed by The Washington Post. Now, with less than two months before the general election, coalition members say they’ve seen little action from the platforms.”

Technical .ly: Meet Maryland’s Treevo, a single app for all social media accounts. “Treevo leaders Tywande Barnes and Michael Ogunyemi gave us the 411 on their app, which looks to create a centralized digital identity by letting users post and view content from all their apps in a single place.”

Make Zine: Elecrow CrowPi L: Chromebook Killer for Creatives?. “Raspberry Pi-powered laptops are not anything new, with offerings from Pi-Top, Kano, and Elecrow themselves, not to mention homebrew projects from makers, the desire to create a fully featured computing device based around the Pi is almost as old as the venerable board itself. The CrowPi L, however, represents a ready-to-run, full-featured maker lab in a box, with a price point and capabilities similar to a low-end Chromebook – but seemingly much more potential.”

SECURITY & LEGAL

Reuters: Florida asks U.S. Supreme Court to revive law targeting social media ‘censorship’. “Florida on Wednesday asked the U.S. Supreme Court to revive a state law aimed at stopping social media companies from restricting users’ political speech after a federal appeals court blocked it earlier this year. The law, which had been challenged by industry group NetChoice, would require social media companies to disclose the rules they use for banning or censoring users and to apply them consistently, and would limit their ability to ban candidates for political office from their platforms.”

New York Times: ‘They Are Watching’: Inside Russia’s Vast Surveillance State. “Roughly 800 miles east of Moscow, authorities in the Republic of Bashkortostan, one of Russia’s 85 regions, were busy tabulating the mood of comments in social media messages. They marked down YouTube posts that they said criticized the Russian government. They noted the reaction to a local protest. Then they compiled their findings.”

RESEARCH & OPINION

PR Newswire: The Open Mainframe Project Announces A New Mainframe Resource to Advance Mainframe Talent and Innovative Technologies (PRESS RELEASE). “The Open Mainframe Project today announces the availability of a z15 Mainframe system dedicated for training next generation talent and the development of new open software technologies in ways that will further strengthen the integration of mainframe and cloud.”

NewsWise: Even smartest AI models don’t match human visual processing. “Deep convolutional neural networks (DCNNs) don’t see objects the way humans do – using configural shape perception – and that could be dangerous in real-world AI applications, says Professor James Elder, co-author of a York University study published today.” Good morning, Internet…

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September 23, 2022 at 05:32PM
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