This document provides information on several Google tools and productivity resources:
- It describes how to manually trigger Google's "in-depth" article section and search the Google News Archive.
- It explains how to use asterisks in Google searches and lists PubAg and Ginger as alternatives to Google.
- Finally, it introduces the text extraction capabilities of Google Drive, Project Naptha, and Wikiwand's optimized version of Wikipedia pages.
This document provides information on various Google tools and services as well as alternatives to Google. It discusses updates to Google Scholar, Google Docs tips, Google Docs add-ons, YouTube search features, and other tools for cutting and sharing YouTube videos. It also lists alternatives to Google such as BizNar and Quandl for database searching as well as resources like The British Newspaper Archive.
This document provides information on updates to Google Flights, productivity tools, alternative search engines, and other resources. Some key points include: Google Flights now allows searching without exact dates or destinations and includes new interest-based filters; ReadNotify tracks when emails and documents are opened; Sqoop provides an aggregated search across various public data sites; and The Lens/Patent Lens is a not-for-profit patent search tool that links to non-patent literature and tutorials.
This document provides information on various data visualization, literature search, and productivity tools. It summarizes recent Google products like an updated Google Trends and new citation features in Google Docs. It also introduces tools for visualizing PubMed data, extracting information from websites, and seeing browser data collections. Overall, the document scans various digital tools for researchers.
This document provides information on several Google tools and productivity resources:
- It describes how to manually trigger Google's "in-depth" article section and search the Google News Archive.
- It explains how to use asterisks in Google searches and lists PubAg and Ginger as alternatives to Google.
- Finally, it introduces the text extraction capabilities of Google Drive, Project Naptha, and Wikiwand's optimized version of Wikipedia pages.
This document provides information on various Google tools and services as well as alternatives to Google. It discusses updates to Google Scholar, Google Docs tips, Google Docs add-ons, YouTube search features, and other tools for cutting and sharing YouTube videos. It also lists alternatives to Google such as BizNar and Quandl for database searching as well as resources like The British Newspaper Archive.
This document provides information on updates to Google Flights, productivity tools, alternative search engines, and other resources. Some key points include: Google Flights now allows searching without exact dates or destinations and includes new interest-based filters; ReadNotify tracks when emails and documents are opened; Sqoop provides an aggregated search across various public data sites; and The Lens/Patent Lens is a not-for-profit patent search tool that links to non-patent literature and tutorials.
This document provides information on various data visualization, literature search, and productivity tools. It summarizes recent Google products like an updated Google Trends and new citation features in Google Docs. It also introduces tools for visualizing PubMed data, extracting information from websites, and seeing browser data collections. Overall, the document scans various digital tools for researchers.
This document provides information and tips for working remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic. It discusses using virtual backgrounds in Zoom calls, finding presentation templates, organizing files in Google Drive, using optical character recognition on PDFs, annotating PDFs, adding and rearranging pages in documents, alternative search engines, finding email addresses, tracking website changes, downloading videos from various platforms including YouTube and Facebook, translating websites, reviewing privacy settings for off-Facebook activity, creating maps and visualizations in Google My Maps, and comparing lists online.
This document provides information on various tools and resources:
- Answer the Public and Wiki.com can help find answers to questions and community information.
- Google Docs version history allows viewing and restoring previous versions of files.
- ToxicDocs is a database of industry documents about toxic chemicals.
- Utter and Invideo enable searching within YouTube videos for keywords or phrases.
This document provides information on various Chrome extensions and tools for researching and summarizing scholarly documents. It describes extensions such as Power Thesaurus and Search Current Site that help find synonyms and search within websites. It also outlines tools from Google Trends, Internet Archive, and 1science that allow visualizing search trends and accessing archived webpages and peer-reviewed articles. Finally, it mentions Citation Gecko, Scholarcy, and Semantic Scholar as resources for mapping citation networks and extracting summaries and metadata from scholarly PDFs.
This document provides information on various online tools and trends:
- The Google Consumer Barometer allows users to explore internet usage trends and device usage across countries.
- The Global Trend Tracker visualization shows trending search topics by country in real-time.
- Flourish is a tool for creating custom graphics and visualizations to embed online or export.
- Adding a "Volunteer Experience and Causes" section to your LinkedIn profile can help with hiring and give candidates an edge, as many employers value volunteer experience similarly to paid work.
Patent information & patent analytics lesson learned from my studentsInbar Yasur ענבר יסעור
The document discusses lessons learned from teaching patent information and analytics to students. It describes how collaborative work produced more complete results than individual efforts. Students searching patent information on aerial firefighting found different relevant patents, and combining their results led to more comprehensive coverage. Analyzing and tagging patents as a group also uncovered insights not found by individuals. The document concludes collaborative teams are better than individual specialists at patent analytics, due to more thorough searches, diverse perspectives, and iterative improvements at each analysis stage.
The document discusses various visual search and personalization features available on Google, Bing, and other platforms. It provides screenshots and descriptions of how users can search by image on Bing or Google, save search results, get keyword suggestions, customize their news feeds on Google News, and extract images from PDF files. The document also presents tips on setting up alerts for new company employees and changing capitalization in Word and PowerPoint.
This document discusses tools for combating fake news. It describes Google's fact-check tags and Project Owl for improving search quality. Project Owl includes feedback forms for search suggestions and featured snippets. It also emphasizes using quality raters to evaluate search results. Other tools mentioned include a satire recognition tool, WikiTRIBUNE for evidence-based journalism, and Facebook's planned use of fact-checkers. The document also notes new services in academic libraries, including allowing students to borrow a therapy dog. It describes the Unpaywall extension for accessing open-access scholarly articles and introduces Judy and the IFISH forum.
This document provides tips and tools for improving productivity. It summarizes recent updates to services like Google, YouTube, and Gmail. It also introduces specialized data tools from sources like the USPTO and Crunchbase for exploring trends in patents and companies. Finally, it outlines several social networks and boards that can help discover new information online.
The document provides an information update from October 2014. It includes summaries and links for various tools and search features, including updates to Google Dictionary, PearlTrees for organizing URLs, using site: to search specific websites on Google, Milliontall for eliminating top sites from searches, and visualization tools like Visme for creating infographics. Keyboard shortcuts and Microsoft Word tips are also listed, such as using Shift+F3 to change text case and ALT dragging to select rectangular text areas.
This document provides information on several online tools and Google features. It describes Pearltrees for organizing URLs and photos, Google Dictionary and MeSH on Demand for identifying terms. It also outlines tools for creating presentations, emails and mind maps, as well as Google Finance, Trends and Correlate. Tips on private browsing and restricting searches are included. Alternative search engines such as Leap.it are also mentioned.
This document provides information and tips for working remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic. It discusses using virtual backgrounds in Zoom calls, finding presentation templates, organizing files in Google Drive, using optical character recognition on PDFs, annotating PDFs, adding and rearranging pages in documents, alternative search engines, finding email addresses, tracking website changes, downloading videos from various platforms including YouTube and Facebook, translating websites, reviewing privacy settings for off-Facebook activity, creating maps and visualizations in Google My Maps, and comparing lists online.
This document provides information on various tools and resources:
- Answer the Public and Wiki.com can help find answers to questions and community information.
- Google Docs version history allows viewing and restoring previous versions of files.
- ToxicDocs is a database of industry documents about toxic chemicals.
- Utter and Invideo enable searching within YouTube videos for keywords or phrases.
This document provides information on various Chrome extensions and tools for researching and summarizing scholarly documents. It describes extensions such as Power Thesaurus and Search Current Site that help find synonyms and search within websites. It also outlines tools from Google Trends, Internet Archive, and 1science that allow visualizing search trends and accessing archived webpages and peer-reviewed articles. Finally, it mentions Citation Gecko, Scholarcy, and Semantic Scholar as resources for mapping citation networks and extracting summaries and metadata from scholarly PDFs.
This document provides information on various online tools and trends:
- The Google Consumer Barometer allows users to explore internet usage trends and device usage across countries.
- The Global Trend Tracker visualization shows trending search topics by country in real-time.
- Flourish is a tool for creating custom graphics and visualizations to embed online or export.
- Adding a "Volunteer Experience and Causes" section to your LinkedIn profile can help with hiring and give candidates an edge, as many employers value volunteer experience similarly to paid work.
Patent information & patent analytics lesson learned from my studentsInbar Yasur ענבר יסעור
The document discusses lessons learned from teaching patent information and analytics to students. It describes how collaborative work produced more complete results than individual efforts. Students searching patent information on aerial firefighting found different relevant patents, and combining their results led to more comprehensive coverage. Analyzing and tagging patents as a group also uncovered insights not found by individuals. The document concludes collaborative teams are better than individual specialists at patent analytics, due to more thorough searches, diverse perspectives, and iterative improvements at each analysis stage.
The document discusses various visual search and personalization features available on Google, Bing, and other platforms. It provides screenshots and descriptions of how users can search by image on Bing or Google, save search results, get keyword suggestions, customize their news feeds on Google News, and extract images from PDF files. The document also presents tips on setting up alerts for new company employees and changing capitalization in Word and PowerPoint.
This document discusses tools for combating fake news. It describes Google's fact-check tags and Project Owl for improving search quality. Project Owl includes feedback forms for search suggestions and featured snippets. It also emphasizes using quality raters to evaluate search results. Other tools mentioned include a satire recognition tool, WikiTRIBUNE for evidence-based journalism, and Facebook's planned use of fact-checkers. The document also notes new services in academic libraries, including allowing students to borrow a therapy dog. It describes the Unpaywall extension for accessing open-access scholarly articles and introduces Judy and the IFISH forum.
This document provides tips and tools for improving productivity. It summarizes recent updates to services like Google, YouTube, and Gmail. It also introduces specialized data tools from sources like the USPTO and Crunchbase for exploring trends in patents and companies. Finally, it outlines several social networks and boards that can help discover new information online.
The document provides an information update from October 2014. It includes summaries and links for various tools and search features, including updates to Google Dictionary, PearlTrees for organizing URLs, using site: to search specific websites on Google, Milliontall for eliminating top sites from searches, and visualization tools like Visme for creating infographics. Keyboard shortcuts and Microsoft Word tips are also listed, such as using Shift+F3 to change text case and ALT dragging to select rectangular text areas.
This document provides information on several online tools and Google features. It describes Pearltrees for organizing URLs and photos, Google Dictionary and MeSH on Demand for identifying terms. It also outlines tools for creating presentations, emails and mind maps, as well as Google Finance, Trends and Correlate. Tips on private browsing and restricting searches are included. Alternative search engines such as Leap.it are also mentioned.
The document provides tips and summaries of various productivity and search tools, including TimeStats for tracking website usage, Convertii and MergFil for file conversion and merging, Slidebean for creating presentations, and Google tools like Quick Scroll, Trends, the scientific calculator, and searching techniques. The document aims to inform readers of useful online tools and features for work and research.
This document provides a summary of tools and resources for research, including:
- EuroVoc, a multilingual thesaurus of EU terms in 23 languages
- Pearltrees, a tool to visually organize and share URLs and media
- The Internet Archive, which archives web pages and provides access to historical software, TV news broadcasts, and the Wayback Machine for archived web pages
- Tools for creating charts, timelines, and maps from data like DIY Chart, TimelineJS, and Mapland
- Resources for market share statistics and infographics on topics like browsers, OSs, and search engines
- Scholar search tools including Google Scholar for accessing academic articles
This document provides a summary of various Google tools and services from July 2013, as well as alternatives to Google tools. It discusses Google search market share, deprecated operators, synonym searches, changes to Google Alerts RSS feeds, nutrition information in searches, and table searches. It also summarizes Google Keep, Google Images searches, DragDis clipping tool, online courses, and full text article finding methods like Google Scholar, open access repositories, and article renting/purchasing services like Reprints Desk.
The document provides a summary of various online tools and resources for searching, organizing, archiving and analyzing information on the web. It describes search engines and databases for academic research, legal documents, trademarks and patents. It also outlines statistical data sources from organizations like the World Bank, Census Bureau and others that can be explored visually through tools like Google Public Data Explorer. Specific resources covered include Q-Sensei, Bibliogo, WebCite and various government open data portals for finding statistics by topic.