A Publication of Internet Scout
Computer Science Department, University of Wisconsin
A Project of the InterNIC
The Scout Report is a weekly publication offering a selection of new and newly
discovered Internet resources of interest to researchers and educators, the
InterNIC's primary audience. However, everyone is welcome to subscribe to one of
the mailing lists (plain text or HTML). Subscription instructions are included at
the end of each report.
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/scout/report
"Emerging Law on the Electronic Frontier"
http://207.201.161.120/jcmc/index.html
http://shum.huji.ac.il/jcmc/announce.html
The well known Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication (JCMC), a joint project of
the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Southern California and
the Information Systems Division of the School of Business Administration, Hebrew
University of Jerusalem, is a net-only journal focusing on "issues that present special
challenges in computer-mediated communication in a globally interconnected Networld."
Its two most recent issues (Vol 2., Nos. 1 and 2), "Emerging Law on the Electronic
Frontier" Parts 1 and 2, contain sixteen articles on this topic. Included are articles
on "lawyers in the net world," cyberspace and copyright law, privacy, obscenity, online
consumer protection, due process, customary law and process, and selling on the Internet,
among others. "Cyberlaw" is a relatively new field, and there is much to be learned about
it in these two issues. Note that while the home page of JMJC does not use frames, these
two issues are frames based.
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Census Data for the United States 1790-1860
http://icg.harvard.edu/census/
The Instructional Computing Group of Harvard University, in cooperation with
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research at the University
of Michigan, has made a subset of historical data from U.S. decennial censuses from
1790 to 1860 available for forms-based querying on the web. Data availability
varies by year and state. From 1790 to 1830, most data concerns population breakouts
by age, sex, and free or slave. From 1840 to 1860 much more data is available,
including occupation, education, churches, mortality, and property and wealth,
among others. After year selection, users query the database for state(s) and
variable(s). Data returned can then be sorted by variable. Data are available at
the state and county level, although county querying is not possible. There is no
facility at this time for downloading data to statistical programs; however, this
is a small price to pay for a virtual treasure house of U.S. historical information.
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Exercises in Math Readiness For University Study
http://math.usask.ca/readin/
This site, provided by the University of Saskatchewan Mathematics Department,
contains a collection of exercises "on those high school mathematics topics
that seem to be most important for university study in mathematics, the other
sciences, engineering, and commerce." Exercises are available at three levels
of difficulty in fifteen subject areas ranging from absolute value and distance
to polynomials and roots. In addition to the exercises, there is an explanation
of each topic. Solutions are provided for all exercises, and, for more advanced
exercises, hints are available as well. At present seven additional topics
contain explanations but not exercises. This site is an effective resource for
advanced high school math students preparing for college classes. Note that your
browser must support subscripts and superscripts in order to get the most out of
the exercises (version 2 of both Netscape Navigator and Microsoft Internet
Explorer will work fine).
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Accounting Resources on the Internet--Rutgers University
http://www.rutgers.edu/accounting/raw/internet/internet.htm
Information on International Accounting Network
http://www.rutgers.edu/accounting/raw.htm
Accounting Resources on the Internet, provided by Rutgers University, provides
one-stop shopping for accounting resources. Here, interested Internauts can
find information on the "Big Six" accounting firms, links to over 200 accounting
firms in the U.S., U.K., and Canada, 30 different accounting associations,
information on accounting-related publications, educational, finance, and audit
resources, and more. Accounting Resources is part of the Rutgers Accounting Web,
which in turn, is part of the International Accounting Network (IAN). IAN, at
present, includes providers from the United Kingdom, Australia, Finland, and
the University of Hawaii.
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Canadian Review of Materials
http://www.mbnet.mb.ca/cm/
Published by the Manitoba Library Association, the Canadian Review of Materials
is the Web version of _CM Magazine_, a bi-weekly review of Canadian materials
for young people. _CM Magazine_ contains book, media, and web reviews, as well
as news, features, and stories of interest to teachers, librarians, parents, and
kids. Though Web issues began appearing in June 1995, the site offers an archive
of reviews, feature stories, interviews, and articles from the print version back
to 1971. The archives are indexed by date, author, title, age group, and media type.
The site contains pictures, sound clips and video clips. You can search for authors,
book titles, and reviewers. In concert with McNally Robinson Booksellers the site
offers ordering services for any book reviewed in the magazine.
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H-SAfrica
AFRI-PHIL
H-SAfrica is a new electronic discussion group dedicated to the promotion
of all aspects of South African history. H-SAfrica can be described as a
cross between an academic journal and a friendly academic newspaper that
is delivered to your electronic mailbox on an almost daily basis. It will
provide all sorts of useful information, like international job adverts,
book reviews, conference announcements and calls for papers. Subscribers
will be notified at times of new computer software, websites, films and
videos. At the same time, however, it is hoped that subscribers with an
interest in South African history will join with in mature discussions of
ongoing research, of articles and academic papers, books and journals,
methods of teaching and debates on historiography. H-SAfrica is moderated
by the editors to filter out inappropriate posts.
The primary purpose of AFRI-PHIL is to provide a forum for the exchange of
views, experiences, techniques, and professional information pertaining to
the teaching and study of the philosophical thought of African and
African-diaspora cultures. The principal emphasis of the list will be upon
the philosophical examination of African thought and culture, though this
emphasis should not be taken restrictively or in a manner excluding the
consideration of other approaches (e.g., literary, historical,
anthropological, etc.).
To subscribe to H-SAfrica send email to:
listserv@h-net.msu.edu
In the body of the message type:
SUB H-SAfrica Firstname Lastname, institution
To subscribe to AFRI-PHIL send email to:
LISTSERV@BUCKNELL.EDU
In the body of the message type:
SUB AFRI-PHIL Yourfirstname Yourlastname
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Government Information Xchange
http://www.info.gov/
The Australian Governments' Entry Point
http://www.nla.gov.au/oz/gov/
Two examples of sites that are powerful in their organization of government
information pointers are the US General Services Administration's Government
Information Xchange, and the National Library of Australia's recently reorganized
Australian Governments' Entry Point. The GSA has established the Government
Information Xchange in order to "facilitate the assimilation, sharing and
dissemination of information resources among federal, state and local governments,
and to provide a convenient forum for all levels of government to share and
exchange information with businesses and the American public." The Xchange is a
page of links to federal, state, and local government information providers, as
well as selected foreign government sources. It is searchable as well as browsable.
The Australian Governments' Entry Point has connections to commonwealth, state,
and local government information, as well as judicial information. Although the
information pointed to by these sites is by no means new, they both act as gateways
to information at all geographical levels of government in their respective countries.
Note that parts of the Government Information Xchange are frames based.
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MEDIAPOLIS
http://www.partal.com/mediapolis/ANG/index.html
MEDIAPOLIS, provided by Lavinia TV and BiB Media, is meant to be "a whole resources
index about mass media about the Net." To that end, this frames-based site has
compiled a large number of international (predominantly European and American) links
to press, radio, TV, news agencies, university media, and advertising. While the
site is a work in progress and the strength of each section varies, the press section
is particularly strong. The fact that MEDIAPOLIS is organized on international lines
also is a plus. At present the site available in English, Spanish, and French (see
the flags on the bar under the MEDIAPOLIS logo).
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The Nixon-Presley Meeting--George Washington University National
Security Archive
http://www.seas.gwu.edu/nsarchive/nsa/elvis/elnix.html
GWU National Security Archive
http://www.seas.gwu.edu/nsarchive/
One of the highlights of the recently opened National Security Archive (George
Washington University) web site, is the Richard Nixon-Elvis Presley meeting section.
After writing a six-page letter in which he suggested being made a "'Federal
Agent-at-Large'" in the Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs," Elvis Presley visited
President Nixon on December 21, 1970. This site contains an image of the actual letter
along with a transcription, and several presidential staff memoranda regarding the
meeting (in .gif format). In addition, there is background on the meeting and photographs
from it. The Nixon-Presley meeting is but one example of declassified documents that the
Archive has acquired through the Freedom of Information Act and made available at the site.
In addition, the Archive contains material on the Cuban Missile Crisis, selected White
House email, and a searchable catalog of bibliographic records in its Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Database (1945-1990).
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1996 Chess Olympiad
http://www.chess96.com/
Game transcripts and commentary
http://www.chess96.com/Olympiad/default.html
Latest news on results and pairings
http://www.chess96.com/news/default.html
The 1996 Chess Olympiad is taking place from September 15 through October 2 in Yerevan,
Armenia. Internet Telepresence is providing a web site for interested Internauts to
follow the proceedings. At the heart of the site is the "Live Games" section, which
replays selected games with commentary. Information is also available regarding the
teams, the schedule, and the results, as well as the World Chess Federation's top 100
players listing as of July 1996.
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golfcourse.com
http://www.golfcourse.com/
Finding a golf course has never been so easy! What started out as GolfAmerica, the
world's largest golf course directory, has been taken over by InterZine productions
(www.interzine.com), renamed, and added to its popular golf site iGOLF (www.igolf.com).
golfcourse.com is a comprehensive guide to over 16,000 golf courses throughout the world,
and offers complete information about each course's design, layouts, maps, rankings,
reviews, message boards, player fees, caddies/carts, and more. At its heart is the "course
locator," an extensive search engine that can be searched by course name, location,
course difficulty, cost, architect, or description keyword. There are also feature articles
on such topics as travel, course architecture, and effects of the environment on your
game. golfcourse.com has the polished feel of a corporate web site and makes excellent
use of tables and frames to organize information. Note that the site makes liberal use of
graphics and complex layouts, so a fast connection is helpful.
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Decluttr--Recovery From Cluttering Mailing List
Decluttr is for discussion of recovery from cluttering (aka messiness,
hoarding). It is primarily for clutterers; but family members and
professionals are welcome. Appropriate topics include personal experiences,
helpful organizations, and useful books.
To subscribe send email to:
LISTSERV@SJUVM.STJOHNS.EDU
In the body of the message type:
SUB Decluttr yourfirstname yourlastname
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Macmillan Computer Publishing Online Books
http://www.mcp.com/3316680954417/mcp/online_books/
Macmillan Computer Publishing Home page
http://www.mcp.com/mcp/
Highlight of the Macmillan Computer Publishing web site is the large collection of
free online books available from its subsidiaries Que and Sams. Que's Digital Bookshelf
at present contains 30 online books in topics including world wide web, web publishing,
web programming, web servers, and networking, among others. Sams Publishing offers over
15 online books on topics such as web site construction, Java, Netscape 3.0, and Javascript.
Also offered are _The Internet Starter Kit_, _The Computer Trainer's Personal Training
Guide_, and early galleys from portions of _The Electronic Citizen: How to Speak Out and
Organize on the Internet_, as well as an Internet glossary. Both the Que and Sams libraries
can be searched as well as browsed. While the Macmillan site is designed to sell books,
the publishers have made a staggering amount of their product freely available, and in so
doing have rendered a great service to the net community.
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Querying Internet Search Indexes by Email
ftp to: ftp.netcom.com
cd to pub/gb/gboyd
Gerald Boyd has spent much time learning the internal syntax of web search engines. He
has made the fruits of his labor available at an ftp site. Interested Internauts can
download FAQs on how to query fifteen generic and eight specialty search engines by
email. Included are Alta Vista, Excite, Inktomi, Yahoo, Infoseek, OKRA, Open Text,
SwitchBoard, TheList, and others. Also included is a FAQ on how to use an Agora Server
to use the web by email. See the Scout Report for March 8, 1996, along with the discussion
of Dr. Bob Rankin's _The Whole Internet...By E-Mail_, in the Scout Toolkit
(http://www.cs.wisc.edu/scout/toolkit/3d7.html) for more on Agora. The FAQs are of
greatest use to those without a web connection, but are also interesting to anyone who
is intrigued by the intricacies of search engines. Users should download wsintro.faq
(table of contents of FAQs), wscrack.faq (basic strategy for figuring out how to query
search indexes via email) and wshelp.faq (Agora help file) before any others. For those
who would like to download everything at once, wssearch.zip contains all of the files.
Note that while these files are fairly technical, they are very useful for those who
need such Internet access.
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Copyright Susan Calcari, 1996. Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of the Scout Report provided the copyright notice and this paragraph is preserved on all copies. The InterNIC provides information about the Internet to the US research and education community under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation: NCR-9218742. The Government has certain rights in this material.
Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Wisconsin - Madison, the National Science Foundation, AT&T, or Network Solutions, Inc.
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