The 2009 Horizon Report is out this month. It looks at future trends in technology in education for the next five years. It is compiled very quickly (so things do not go out of date by the time it is published.)
This year’s report highlights innovations that we will be seeing more of in
Less that 1 year
- mobile technology
- cloud computing
2-3 years
- what it calls ‘geo-everything’, which refers to the ability of the commonness pieces of kit to know where they are and feed the information back.
- The personal web
4-5 years
- semantic web applications
- smart objects
It makes interesting reading. There are many interesting examples of applications being used at the moment in higher education in the sciences.
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Scitable

Scitable is a new free social learning site offered by Nature Education. The blurb says that it “brings together a library of scientific overviews with a world wide community of scientists, researchers, teachers, and student.” As well as student collaboration and learning it allows academics to “maintain an evidence-based online course pack for your students.”
The content is taken from Nature Group publishing as well as WH Freeman and Sinauer Associates.
There are topic rooms covering individual areas where you can find articles on a subject, key concepts and links to discussion areas. It is also possible to set up groups for classes, although this part of the site doesn’t seem to have been taken up particularly by users so far.
The first module covers genetics but there are plans to focus on other areas in the future. The sections so far added are:
• Chromosomes and Cytogenetics
• Evolutionary Genetics
• Gene Expression and Regulation
• Gene Inheritance and Transmission
• Genes and Disease
• Genetics and Society
• Genomics
• Nucleic Acid Structure & Function
• Population and Quantitative Genetics
It will be interesting to see how it develops.
Wednesday, January 07, 2009
Elsevier Downtime
Science Direct and 2collab will be unavailable due to scheduled maintenance for approximately eight hours starting at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday 10th of January.
Symbiosis

Symbiosis is a service offered by Brechin based professional wildlife photographer Niall Benvie. He is "is keen to foster partnerships with field biologists, scientists, researchers and educators by providing web-resolution photographs from the Images from the Edge collection free of charge for PowerPoint presentations and research papers posted on the Web."
The website is irritating to use and you will have to allow pop-ups from it, but he does have over 3000 stunning images available.
Tuesday, January 06, 2009
Academia

Academia.edu is an interesting social networking site that allows academics to add information about themselves and their research interests and display subject and institution relationships in a hierarchical tree format with links to other researchers. There are 32 people on it so far from the University of St Andrews.
(Via Peter Godwin's blog.)
The future of physics
"Nature Video presents five short films on the future of physics. Recorded at the 2008 Nobel Laureate Meeting in Lindau, these films capture the conversations between young researchers and physics Laureates George Smoot, William Phillips, John Hall, David Gross and Gerardus 't Hooft. Join them as they grapple with universal ideas including dark matter, dark energy, the Large Hadron Collider, space-time and quantum computing."
Available from the Nature Publishing Group site.
Available from the Nature Publishing Group site.
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