thebreakfast.info
General Discussions => Spunk => Topic started by: Spacey on October 03, 2008, 02:54:33 pm
-
does anyone else use google scholar (http://scholar.google.com/)?
What is Google Scholar?
Google Scholar provides a simple way to broadly search for scholarly literature. From one place, you can search across many disciplines and sources: peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, abstracts and articles, from academic publishers, professional societies, preprint repositories, universities and other scholarly organizations. Google Scholar helps you identify the most relevant research across the world of scholarly research.
Features of Google Scholar
* Search diverse sources from one convenient place
* Find papers, abstracts and citations
* Locate the complete paper through your library or on the web
* Learn about key papers in any area of research
How are articles ranked?
Google Scholar aims to sort articles the way researchers do, weighing the full text of each article, the author, the publication in which the article appears, and how often the piece has been cited in other scholarly literature. The most relevant results will always appear on the first page.
A note from the Google Scholar team
Please let us know if you have suggestions, questions or comments about Google Scholar. We recognize the debt we owe to all those in academia whose work has made Google itself a reality and we hope to make Google Scholar as useful to this community as possible. We believe everyone should have a chance to stand on the shoulders of giants.
-
Hey Spacey- what\'s your commission from Google??
Enough not to tell you exact figures but I get a low 5 figure check from Google every month.
-
Hey Spacey- what\'s your commission from Google??
-
I definitely have run into some problems with Chrome but they are few and far in between. Its understandable.
I still use Firefox and enjoy on my Mac. Never have troubles out there and probably is the best browser available.
I hate IE. I have to use it to access insurance websites because all the systems were built with IE in mind so they don\'t all run on Firefox and I have never used them on Chrome.
I am a Googler. I believe Google has revolutionized the internet and I have grown up with Google. The have a lot to offer and it is just something that fits my personality.
Whatever works best for you is my stance.
-
I tried it out briefly when it was first released to the public at large.
I liked some of the behind the scenes features but it had issues with Flash (which may have been fixed by now) that would crash the browser.
I like firefox a lot, i use some cool plugins that I need for work as well. FireDialer etc.
I think it is a nice looking browser but I\'ll stick with firefox for now. I only use IE to interact with Verizon\'s website as it no longer will work correctly in firefox. That is the only thing I ever use IE for these days, that and when I have to remote in to some servers. The Dell remote cards need active X for remote console so I have to use it.
-
All good points and a solid argument.
I never really used any add-ons for Firefox so that was not a deciding factor.
I find it to be easy, simple and efficient for what I need to do.
I definitely can see your side especially using Linux.
-
So Google chrome is good because::
> Fast
> Each tab is a different process rather than a thread, ie, less browser crashing
And sucks because:::
> Not extensible like Firefox
> Not open source (though it uses an open source rendering engine)
I choose to stick with and support the Mozilla project. IMO Google Chrome\'s only advantage so far is a supposed 20% speed increase that I can\'t detect through normal use.
It is speculated that Google introduced Chrome to keep javascript/ajax as a primary component of web development--- even though these technologies are sort of getting tired. This benefits Google because the way Google and other search engines have their robots now, Flash is not index-able. Nor is the horrid proprietary technology "Silverlight" which Microsoft is trying to get everyone to use now.
In short. I use Linux. Open source software and community development allows me to do everything I want in an incredibly flexible, stable, and aesthetic user environment -- and do it legally for free. Mozilla is a huge asset to open source computing and, with all the community built extensions out there, it\'s still the best browser.
But, if Google\'s move slows the adoption of Microsoft Silverlight, as a web developer first, and as a Linux PC user second, I\'ll all for it.
-
i\'ll test drive it on your recommendation...... we shall see. so whats the big bonus.....
I recommend taking a look at the Google Book on Google Chrome.
http://www.google.com/googlebooks/chrome/
-
i\'ll test drive it on your recommendation...... we shall see. so whats the big bonus.....
-
I\'ve heard good things. Tried to get them to let me install it on my work PC for a web project I\'m on
"...we really need to multi-browser test this..."
but got the big NO.
jerks.
I\'m surprised because this would be ideal for that, no?
i use it. i like it. i too have all but abandoned firefox. can\'t wait til it\'s avail on macs, which i use at work.
Me too. That is why I have it on my work computer because the mac version doesn\'t have it but when it does, I am 100% google chrome.
I love google.
-
i use it. i like it. i too have all but abandoned firefox. can\'t wait til it\'s avail on macs, which i use at work.
-
I\'ve heard good things. Tried to get them to let me install it on my work PC for a web project I\'m on
"...we really need to multi-browser test this..."
but got the big NO.
jerks.
-
Does anyone use Google Chrome Web browser?
I put it on my work computer and I don\'t even use Firefox anymore here and only use IE when I need to.
I suggest looking at it and see if you like it. Takes a day or two to get use to but it is excellent in my opinion.
http://www.google.com/googlebooks/chrome/