Archive for the ‘ResourceShelf Weekend Best’ Category

Best of ResourceShelf: HEALTHmap

Saturday, February 23rd, 2008

This item was originally posted in February, 2007 as a Resource of the Week. The post was written by ResourceShelf’s Senior Editor, Shirl Kennedy.

Resource of the Week: HEALTHmap
By Shirl Kennedy, Senior Editor

While fishing for reports to put on DocuTicker every day, I look at a heck of a lot of press releases. Every once in awhile, I find something with an extremely high cool quotient that I can’t wait to share with as many people as possible. Just this week, I stumbled across…

HEALTHmap
Says the press release:

Need to know where avian flu, salmonella or dengue fever been popping up? A quick view of HEALTHmap shows you where more than 50 diseases have been reported around the world, who is reporting and how “hot” an outbreak is based on the number of reports. Drill down by content and city or narrow by disease and read what has been reported in the last 30 days.

This thing is so easy to use that even someone like me, who is often visually overwhelmed by “mashups” involving Google Maps, can figure it out almost immediately. It can be manipulated like any old regular Google Map — e.g., click and drag, zoom in and out via the slider, etc. — and you can choose the map (default), satellite or hybrid view. To get to a particular part of the world quickly, use one of the links at the top of the map to zoom in by content/region. In the top righthand corner is a link that switches to a full-screen view.

Over on the lefthand side of the page are four separate menus that provide endless options for customization, in terms of the information presented on the map. According to the news release:

HEALTHmap provides a unified and comprehensive view of the current global state of infectious diseases and their effect on human and animal health by combing disparate data sources, of varying reliability, ranging from news sources (such as Google News) to curated personal accounts (such as ProMED) to validated official alerts (such as World Health Organization). Through an automated text processing system, the data is aggregated by disease and displayed by location for user-friendly access to the original alert. HEALTHmap provides a jumping-off point for real-time information on emerging infectious diseases and has particular interest for public health officials and international travelers.

The top two menus let you use checkboxes to select or deselect news feeds and different diseases. The third menu provides links that allow you to display alerts by country. The menu at the bottom offers links to the full text of the most recent alerts, displayed in a separate, smaller window.

If you look below the map, you’ll see a slider that lets you display alerts by date range. You’ll also see a colored bar labeled “Heat Index,” that shades incrementally from yellow to red. You’ll note that the markers on the map have different colors within this spectrum. According to information about this resource:

Marker color represents a composite score based on the recency of alerts, the number of disease outbreaks, and the number of sources providing information at a particular location. Our algorithm applies an exponential weighting, yielding increased heat (redness) for more recent outbreak news.

This is not a brand-new resource; it was launched in September 2006 by the Children’s Hospital Informatics Program (Boston) and the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences & Technology. The brains behind it belong to Clark Freifeld, a Research Software Developer at the Children’s Hospital Informatics Program; and John Brownstein, PhD, Instructor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, Affiliated Faculty at the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, with joint appointments to Children’s Hospital Boston Informatics Program and its Division of Emergency Medicine.

Best of ResourceShelf: Consumer Electronic and Wireless Phone Customer Support Numbers and Sites

Sunday, February 3rd, 2008

The CE (Consumer Electronics) Customer Support Contact List
Source: TechLore.com
“How many times have you had a question or problem with your device, and haven’t had a clue how to get a hold of the manufacturer? We hate that just as much as you do, which is why we will be working to maintain the ultimate list of customer support telephone numbers, links to websites websites, e-mail support, links to user manuals, and FAQs for as many CE manufacturers as possible.”

See Also: Wireless Carriers (U.S.) Phone Numbers (via PhoneNews.com)
Real timesavers!!!

And don’t forget Shirl’s favorite site ever — gethuman.com. Liberate yourself from those Byzantine phone trees when you need customer service from a bank, a credit card company, a travel vendor, a government agency, an Internet merchant, a wireless provider… Learn which key sequences to press, which voice prompts to ignore, which special phone numbers to call, etc. — and get connected immediately to a live person. (Caveat — sometimes you will have to wait if “call volume is heavy,” but you will not have to navigate one of those dreadful interactive voice response systems.) I’ve used this database countless times and my love for it grows each time my customer service frustration level is reduced.

ResourceShelf Best: Art Museum and Gallery Databases

Tuesday, December 25th, 2007

ResourceShelf Weekend Best: Art Museum and Gallery Databases
Two compilations:
1 ||| 2

Search and/or browse collections from a few of the world’s great art museums and galleries.

ResourceShelf Weekend Best #8: Database: Media Ownership in the United States

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

Media Ownership–United States
New Database, The “Well Connected” Database

From the site, This searchable database contains basic information on every radio and television station in America as well as every cable television system and telephone company. You may search by company, by call sign or by area. Searchers will find basic information on some of the most important telecommunication companies, including a brief corporate profile and basic financial information.

See Also: Rankings, Top 10 Media Holding Companies

See Also: Browse Companies in These Industries:
+ Entertainment
+ Newspapers
+ Broadcast
+ Cable
+ Telecom
+ Broadband
+ Satellite
+ Internet/Software
+ Electronics Companies

Source: Center for Public Integrity

See Also: See Also: The Complete ResourceShelf Weekend Best Collection

ResourceShelf Weekend Best #7: StateList: The Electronic Source for State Publication Lists

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

StateList: The Electronic Source for State Publication Lists
Source: Source: Documents and Law Libraries, University of Illinois

See Also: The Complete ResourceShelf Weekend Best Collection

ResourceShelf Weekend Best #6: Fast Facts: Database of Canadian Weather Rankings

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

A new series of ResourceShelf favorites from more than 6 years of posts (along with a few new items). This link will allow you to review all of the posts. Hopefully, it will introduce you to some items you might have missed or forgotten about during the past six years.

+ Fast Facts Database of Canadian Weather Rankings (via Environment Canada, September, 2003)

See Also: The Complete ResourceShelf Weekend Best Collection

Debut: ResourceShelf’s Weekend Best (RWB) & RWB #1: DiplomacyMonitor.Com

Sunday, October 14th, 2007

Its been very exciting for the ResourceShelf team to hear from so many of you about the focused collections we’re building. Links to them are listed below.

During the 6.5 years we’ve been publishing ResourceShelf, links to hundreds of databases, lists, and other items that are hopefully of value/use/interest to you. This is in addition to the news and other info web post on ResouceShelf.

We post direct links to primary documents often within hours of publication on DocuTicker.

Now, it’s time for something new.

We’re going to call it ResourceShelf’s “Weekend Best” (RWB). This collection will be where the RS team and friends will link to items (databases, lists, and other reference tools) that we’ve posted to in the past. In the past two years (our of the six we’ve been online), we’re happy, honored, and thrilled to say we’ve grown adding thousands of new users. So, many of the databases, sites, and tools will likely to be new to many of you. Those of you who watch tv in the United States might remember the NBC slogan from a few year’s ago on nights when they would run reruns, “if you haven’t seen, it’s new to you. Same thing with ResourceShelf.

Btw, depending on what we’ve selected for a given week, we might also toss in a new resource or two into that week’s “Weekend Best.”

So, let’s get to it. We have five items to share this week that you can find on the site or via the RSB RSS feed.

ResourceShelf Sunday Best #1: DiplomacyMonitor.Com
A non-stop ticker of primary documents from governments around the world. All documents are cached locally. You can browse by topic, country, etc. as well as search. Links to mechanical translation tools (caveat emptor) are provided. An RSS feed is also available.

See Also: ResourceShelf Collection: Real-Time or Near Real-Time Info Sources

See Also: ResourceShelf Collection: Today in History Resources

See Also: ResourceShelf Collection: Webcams

ResourceShelf’s Weekend Best (RWB) #2: Movie Review Query Engine

Sunday, October 14th, 2007

Movie Review Query Engine (MRQE)
One-stop shopping. Stewart Clamen’s database provides access to reviews of more than 68,000 films. The site now offers some personalization, movie times, forums, various lists, and more.

ResourceShelf’s Weekend Best (RWB) #3: Key Business Developments (Public Companies)

Sunday, October 14th, 2007

This database, found on the MSN Money site, allows uses to quickly get a summary of recent news about a company by simply entering its ticker symbol.

UPDATE: You can now find a similar feature on the Reuters web site. Enter a ticker or company name, and then click the full quote link. In the left rail will be a link labeled “Key Developments.” Here’s an example.

Btw, if you the URL listed below and add a ticker symbol to it after the = sign, you should be able to get to the same page. http://stocks.us.reuters.com/stocks/keyDevelopments.asp?symbol=

ResourceShelf’s Weekend Best (RWB) #5: Nuclear Explosions Database

Sunday, October 14th, 2007

Nuclear Explosions Database
From 1945 forward by country. Entries include location, time and size of explosions. Global in scope.
Source: GeoSciences Australia

See Also: Nuclear Information (via Los Alamos Library),