20,753 research outputs found

    Episode 86: Coffee Talk: Tim Hall

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    Tim Hall joins Dr. Kim Perlak and Professor Sheryl Bailey on this episode of the official podcast of Berklee College of Music\u27s Guitar Department

    Evaluating Citebase, an open access Web-based citation-ranked search and impact discovery service

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    Citebase is a new citation-ranked search and impact discovery service that measures citations of scholarly research papers which are openly accessible on the Web, i.e. papers that are assessable continuously online. Other services, such as ResearchIndex, have emerged in recent years to offer citation indexing of Web research papers. In the first detailed user evaluation of an open access Web citation indexing service, Citebase has been evaluated by nearly 200 users from different backgrounds. The paper details the procedures used in the evaluation, and analyses the results of this study, which took place between June and October 2002. It was found that within the scope of its primary components, the search interface and services available from its rich bibliographic records, Citebase can be used simply and reliably for the purpose intended, and that it compares favourably with other bibliographic services. It is shown tasks can be accomplished efficiently with Citebase regardless of the background of the user. More data need to be collected and the process refined before it is as reliable for measuring citation impact of indexed papers. Better explanations and guidance are required for first-time users. Coverage is seen as a limiting factor, even though Citebase indexes over 200,000 papers from arXiv. Non-physicists were frustrated at the lack of papers from other sciences. The principle of citation searching of open access archives has thus been demonstrated and need not be restricted to current users. Since the evaluation, Citebase has become a featured service of the ArXiv physics eprint archives

    An Interview with Tim Schadla-Hall

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    I am slightly late, but Tim is still there with his previous meeting, finishing lunch. This table has witnessed hundreds of conversations and is surely a landmark for public archaeology. I am not going to make a biography here, maybe you can learn something about him from the interview. If you follow this journal, and public archaeology, you probably know something about him already

    Huffman's Music at Carnegie Hall

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    Baltimore American article announcing upcoming holiday concerts, including Spencer Huffman's March, Chorale and Variations to be performed at Carnegie Hall

    An Interview with Tim Schadla-Hall

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    14:36 – I am slightly late, but Tim is still there with his previous meeting, finishing lunch. This table has witnessed hundreds of conversations and is surely a landmark for public archaeology. I am not going to make a biography here, maybe you can learn something about him from the interview. If you follow this journal, and public archaeology, you probably know something about him already

    The Semantic Web Revisited

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    The original Scientific American article on the Semantic Web appeared in 2001. It described the evolution of a Web that consisted largely of documents for humans to read to one that included data and information for computers to manipulate. The Semantic Web is a Web of actionable information--information derived from data through a semantic theory for interpreting the symbols.This simple idea, however, remains largely unrealized. Shopbots and auction bots abound on the Web, but these are essentially handcrafted for particular tasks; they have little ability to interact with heterogeneous data and information types. Because we haven't yet delivered large-scale, agent-based mediation, some commentators argue that the Semantic Web has failed to deliver. We argue that agents can only flourish when standards are well established and that the Web standards for expressing shared meaning have progressed steadily over the past five years. Furthermore, we see the use of ontologies in the e-science community presaging ultimate success for the Semantic Web--just as the use of HTTP within the CERN particle physics community led to the revolutionary success of the original Web. This article is part of a special issue on the Future of AI

    Tim Reardon's Remarks at the College of Business Administration Dedication, 1984

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    Remarks by Business Administration Student Council President Tim Reardon at the College of Business Administration Dedication as David A. Straz, Jr. Hall, December 2, 1984

    Beautiful Concert by Curzon Ends Constitution Hall Season

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    Article review of a series of Constitution Hall concerts, including a review of Spencer Huffman's First Symphony, premiered by the National Symphony Orchestra

    Kirby Hall, Northamptonshire (Proof)

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    Lithotint by William L Walton (1796-1872), depicting a mansion with two workers standing in the entrance, two men loading grass on a horse cart and two more are relaxing on the grass. Original drawing by James Duffield Harding (1797-1863). Published in London May 1, 1844 by Chapman & Hall. Artist Proof. Originally produced for "The Baronial Halls, and Picturesque Edifices of England", London 1848, author; Samuel Carter Hall.Mr JA van Tilburg bequeathed his "prentenkabinet" of over 10 000 graphic works to the University of PretoriaJacob van Tilburgab201

    Melbourne Town Hall (Melbourne, Australia) [Performance Video Recording]

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    Digital migration of VHS. Video type: performance. Venue name: Melbourne Town Hall. Date: 14 September 1991. Circus Oz archive notes: Town Hall, Melbourne, 8:00 PM.Circus Oz video recording 1991 - Melbourne, Australia, Melbourne Town Hall - 14 September.0:00:00-0:06:16 audience warmup (Susie Dee, Derek Ives, Tim Coldwell) --- 0:06:16-0:08:18 Character intros (Tim Coldwell, Derek Ives, Susie Dee, Darren Perkins) --- 0:08:18-0:16:20 Pole (Simon Yates, Chris Sleight, Lisa Small, Tim Coldwell, Antonella Casella, Michael Ling) --- 0:16:20-0:25:42 Chairs (Julie McInnes, Tim Coldwell, Susie Dee) --- 0:25:42-0:29:02 adagio (Antonella Casella, Chris Sleight) --- 0:29:02-0:34:28 Group juggle (Michael Ling, Lisa Small, Peter Murphy, Derek Ives) --- 0:34:28-0:37:09 Duelling Accordions (Isabelle Servais, Shirley Billing) --- 0:37:09-0:40:09 Double Cello (Tim Coldwell, Isabelle Servais, Shirley Billing, Susie Dee, Julie McInnes) --- 0:40:09-0:43:06 Wheelbarrow (Michael Ling, Derek Ives) --- 0:43:06-0:49:46 Flying Burtons (Tim Coldwell, Julie McInnes, Simon Yates, Michael Ling, Isabelle Servais, Susie Dee, Lisa Small) --- 0:49:46-0:51:00 bells walk through (Susie Dee, Tim Coldwell, Derek Ives, Julie McInnes) --- 0:51:00-0:58:00 web (Antonella Casella, Chris Sleight) --- 0:58:00-1:00:56 bells (Shirley Billing, Susie Dee, Julie McInnes, Tim Coldwell) --- 1:00:56-1:07:18 Picnic (Tim Coldwell, Susie Dee, Simon Yates) --- 1:07:18-1:10:56 Cloudswing (Isabelle Servais) --- 1:10:56-1:16:15 Long legs/long arms (Antonella Casella, Chris Sleight, Darren Perkins, Shirley Billing) --- 1:16:15-1:19:20 upside down drumming (Tim Coldwell, Shirley Billing, Isabelle Servais, Simon Yates, Michael Ling, Susie Dee) --- 1:19:20-1:26:59 roofwalk (Tim Coldwell, Julie McInnes, Pete Murphy, Michael Ling) --- 1:26:59-1:29:00 Kissing Booths (Susie Dee, Simon Yates) --- 1:29:00-1:34:30 hoops (Michael Ling, Simon Yates, Lisa Small, Antonella Casella, Chris Sleight) --- 1:34:30-1:40:07 credits (Bill Vickers, Nicci Wilks, Carmel Duffy, Clare Gallagher, Tim Coldwell, Derek Ives, Susie Dee, Darren Perkins, Lisa Small, Scott Grayland, Chris Sleight, Simon Yates, Michael Ling, Natalie Dyball, Antonella Casella, Julie McInnes, Peter Murphy, Shirley Billing, Isabelle Servais, Pete Murphy
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