Monthly archives: November, 2021

Tracking Freedom of Information Act Libraries

Center for Data Innovation: “Lisa DeLuca, a data librarian associated with Seton Hall University, has updated a dataset tracking Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) libraries. The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requires federal agencies in the United States to make certain records available to the public, and FOIA libraries serve as the official government repositories …

Subjects: Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Legal Research, Libraries

New Updates to the US Cancer Statistics Data Visualizations Tool

CDC:  “The US Cancer Statistics Data Visualizations tool provides quick access to data for researchers, clinicians, policy makers, and public health professionals. New data have been added, and the tool’s layout has been redesigned to improve navigation, data-sharing options, and visual displays. Data are grouped under six new headings across the top of the website. …

Subjects: E-Government, Government Documents, Health Care

Elemental haiku

Elemental haiku by Mary Soon Lee: “A review of the Periodic Table composed of 119 science haiku, one for each element, plus a closing haiku for element 119 (not yet synthesized). The haiku encompass astronomy, biology, chemistry, history, physics, and a bit of whimsical flair. Click or hover over an element on the Periodic Table …

Subjects: Poetry

WaPo – Countries’ climate pledges built on flawed data

Washington Post – “…Across the world, many countries underreport their greenhouse gas emissions in their reports to the United Nations, a Washington Post investigation has found. An examination of 196 country reports reveals a giant gap between what nations declare their emissions to be versus the greenhouse gases they are sending into the atmosphere. The …

Subjects: Climate Change, Environmental Law

How to Memorize the Un-Memorizable

LitHub: “Marcus du Sautoy Offers Tips and Tricks for Building a Better “Memory Palace”…But how does [Ed Cooke, a Grand Master of Memory and founder of a new venture for learning languages called Memrise] use this cast of characters to remember a 1000-digit number? The key is to put those characters in space: “If you …

Subjects: Education, Knowledge Management

Cognitive Bias Codex

“Translations of the Cognitive Bias Codex are available in several languages including French and Spanish. Simply select your language of choice at checkout. If you are interested in helping us bring the Codex to more people by helping translate the text, we would love to hear from you. We use an online translation hub that’s …

Subjects: Knowledge Management

Marine Traffic

“MarineTraffic is the world’s leading provider of ship tracking and maritime intelligence. We are dedicated to making actionable information easily accessible. Monitoring vessel movements is at the core of what we do. Building on a base of data gathered from our network of coastal AIS-receiving stations, supplemented by satellite receivers, we apply algorithms and integrate …

Subjects: Economy, Environmental Law, Knowledge Management, Transportation

Here’s what we really know about COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness

Poynter: “If you don’t read any further, know this: No vaccine is 100% effective against any disease. The COVID shots are no exception. Effectiveness in preventing infection — defined as a positive test result — appears in some studies to wane sharply the more time that goes by after completing the one- or two-shot regimen. …

Subjects: Education, Health Care, Knowledge Management, Medicine

How to keep your intimate, embarrassing or damaging text messages as private as possible

Washington Post: “…Secure messaging is essential for people like political dissidents, whistleblowers and journalists talking to sources. But a conversation doesn’t need to fall into the hands of a government to be damaging, and you don’t need to be sharing anything high-profile to be at risk. In addition to being subpoenaed by law enforcement, private …

Subjects: E-Records, Legal Research, Privacy