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journoz: updates for Australian journalists (RDF)
Find out about Net-based sources of Australian facts, research, background and contacts, as well as media news and training issues. ISSN 1448-2762. (English (US))
Added to The Feed Directory on Sun, 6 Jun 2004 13:18:21 PDT
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Last Feed Sample: With the petrol price heading ever skywards, it can be fun to look back to the heady days (and it wasn't that long ago, either) when it only cost 65 cents or less a litre. Comparisons over time are always handy for journos who have to churn out pieces on the inexorable rise in the costs of living, borrowing, and so on. Economic History Services (http://eh.net/) has a How Much is That section for that very purpose. It has various sections: one is the Exchange Rate Between the United States Dollar and Forty Other Countries, 1913 - 1999, for example.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
Click a country on a map and a report on that country will tell you all about the energy situation there. Are they producing coal? Oil? Gas? Are they importing? Exporting? How is the economy there faring? All this information is available at the click of a mouse from the Energy Information Administration, a statistical agency of the US Department of Energy. You can get oil prices from 1970-2004 (those were the days ...) Custom reports (including country comparisons, and a vast array of options) can be requested and are delivered online within seconds. Find the site at http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
Sometimes being a gazillionaire can be useful, viz. Bill Gates' Microsoft's decision to underwrite an entire issue of the influential Nature magazine about the future of computing. Where will we be in 2020? Go to http://www.nature.com/nature/focus/futurecomputing/index.html to find out. Microsoft's sponsorship of this special issue means anyone, anywhere, can read the whole thing. Bravo, Bill. Money well spent.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
Open J-Gate (http://www.openj-gate.com/) is an electronic gateway to global journal literature in the open access domain. A related site is J-Gate (http://j-gate.informindia.co.in/), which covers e-journals that are not in the open access domain.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
Congoo might prove handy for people who want to read subscription content without having to pay for it. The web site allows you to view subscription material from sites like the UK Financial Times without handing over any cash or needing passwords to get in. It's not open slather -- or the sites might go out of business -- but you can get limited content for free. You can read more about the Congoo concept at the site, which also links to recent news stories about the service and its launch. Go to http://www.congoo.com/. It currently works only with Internet... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
Trivia nuts will hit a treasure trove with The Envelope: Past Winners (http://theenvelope.latimes.com/extras/lostmind/) which has results from entertainment awards shows going waaaay back -- in some cases as far as 1916. The database covers more than 100 American, Canadian and British awards shows such as the Oscars and the Golden Globes, and also includes TV ratings and Top 40 singles. You'll be a pub quiz hero after a trawl through this lot.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
Everyone thinks Google (www.google.com) is the no. 1 site on the Web, but the surprise, surprise of Web rankings is that Yahoo! (www.yahoo.com) is. Yahoo! has really lifted its game, and it offers a lot of good destinations, not least its comparison shopping sites which take the legwork out of consuming. MSN (www.msn.com) is no. 2, and Google a mere third. Alexa (www.alexa.com) has rankings. What else is in the top ten? eBay (www.ebay.com) is for starters. Amazon (www.amazon.com) is only 11. Blogger (www.blogger.com) is no. 30, but mySpace (www.myspace.com) is 14, way ahead of CNN (cnn.com) and the BBC... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
The Dart Center for Journalism and Trauma (http://www.dartcenter.org/) was set up by a global network of journalists, teachers of journalism and health workers to improve media coverage of trauma, conflict and tragedy. The site has all kinds of materials on there, including fact sheets, personal stories, special reports, book reviews, event lists, news headlines and a blog for discussing issues such as resilience. If you have to cover very sensitive issues such as suicide or genocide or murder, you should look here for tips on how to go about it the right way.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
The World Agricultural Information Centre Portal (http://www.fao.org/waicent/) is a gateway to sites, documentation and facts and background about agriculture around the world. If you just want Australia, go via Oceania in the Geographical & Regional Information bit. Headings for Australia include General Information, Sustainable Development, Economic situation, the Agriculture, Forestry and Fishery sectors, and Technical Cooperation. Information in these sections includes reports, statistical data and noteworthy web sites. Maps, such as the Soil Degradation Map under Sustainable Development, may also feature. This is a hugely comprehensive and detailed background site for any journo on the agricultural beat.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
Just about everyone online has downloaded Google Earth (http://earth.google.com/), if only for the fun of seeing their own rooftop or street. Another freebie is the Earth Science World ImageBank (http://www.earthscienceworld.org/imagebank/), a service from the American Geological Institute (http://www.agiweb.org/) to provide geoscience images to anyone who wants them. Images include volcanoes, beaches (good if you're feeling stressed!), glaciers, landslides, fossils, waterfalls and weather -- even coral on the Barrier Reef.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
How Young People are Faring 2005 is the seventh report in an annual series from the Dusseldorp Skills Forum (http://www.dsf.org.au/). It's at http://www.dsf.org.au/papers/180.htm. What does it say? Not a lot has changed ... "In May 2005, 85.1 per cent of Australian teenagers were in full-time study or fulltime work, while 14.9 per cent or 208,400 teenagers were not. These proportions have varied only slightly since the recession of the early 1990s." But kids are learning more ... "Educational attainment is improving: in 2004, 80 percent of teenagers had completed secondary school or a Certificate II or higher compared with 75... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
... but that doesn't mean the drought has broken. In Brisbane, we've had stormy weather for what seems like weeks. Blackouts are back -- remember the fun of reading by candlelight? -- and the rain is greening gardens and lawns all over town. What it isn't doing is falling into dams -- so along with hail, winds and torrential downpours, we still have level 2 water restrictions. It's even worse elsewhere. The drought has lasted four years and the water crisis is real even if that's hard to believe when it's bucketing down outside. The Brisbane Institute has a paper... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
Another day, another statistic. The Australian Bureau of Statistics (http://www.abs.gov.au/) has published projections of Australia's population as a whole by age and sex from 2004 up to 2101, and projections for states, territories and capital cities up till 2051. The publication, Population Projections, Australia, can be found here. For future reference, it is ABS catalogue number 3222.0.... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
How well are we doing? Who's on the dole? And why? For democracy to function, we all need information to help us make up our minds about issues. Welfare is an emotive one, so thanks to the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (http://www.aihw.gov.au/) for supplying the facts -- not opinion, not hot air -- about who's getting what, where, and why in their publication Australia’s welfare 2005. See the figures for yourself at http://www.aihw.gov.au/publications/index.cfm/title/10186... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
The notion that anyone could be carted off to jail these days for sedition seems faintly preposterous -- almost in the same league as being transported as a convict to Australia for nicking someone's hanky. But we're there with the anti-terror laws. Far from taking us back to the 1950s, John Howard seems hell bent on going even further back in time -- to the 1850s, the 1750s ... back to when it was a very serious crime to rubbish the government. What has happened here, that things should have got to this point? The Gilbert + Tobin Centre of... Fri, 2 Jun 2006 6:04:49 PDT
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