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Take Part in the Great Sunflower Project

Researchers at my alma mater, San Francisco State University, are looking for ordinary individuals to help in their project to count bees in cities: the Great Sunflower Project.

This project is a first step in helping to determine what effect urban bees have on pollination.

According to the Great Sunflower Project web site: “We do not know much about how healthy bee populations are maintained in an urban environment. Because natural habitats are uncommon in urban landscapes, they may not provide enough resources to support viable pollinator communities. However, if other habitats, such as urban gardens and restored areas, are sufficiently connected to natural habitat, then native populations may thrive.”

You can register with the group to receive a form on which you can collect data about local bees. If you live in the United States or Canada, you can also get free Lemon Queen Sunflower seeds to plant in your garden to attract bees.

Learn more about the Great Sunflower Project.

If you’re wondering why we should care about bees, you may not have heard about what’s being called colony collapse disorder, a recent dying off of bees that are used in U.S. agricultural production.

Pew Center: The State of the News Media 2009

The Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism has issued its report: The State of the News Media 2009. If you have time for nothing else, read the press release.

Source

Joe Garofoli, Nonprofit Mother Jones Role Model for Industry, San Francisco Chronicle, March 24, 2009.

Pioneering New Uses for Cell Phones

A short news item in the latest issue of Promise of Berkeley, titled Can You Heal Me Now?, mentions two innovative uses for cell phones in medicine and public health.

Professor Boris Rubinsky and his team created “a simple, easy-to-operate data acquisition device” and showed how a cell phone “could transmit the raw data to a remote computer to create a medical image” for viewing and analysis.

Meanwhile, on the same campus, Professor Daniel Fletcher and his team have “developed a powerful microscope that clips to a cell phone.” They’ve named it the CellScope. The aim is to use the CellScope to help health-care workers — even those with little training — diagnose diseases.

Source

University of California, Berkeley, Promise of Berkeley, Winter 2009 issue, p. 17.

Connecting Students With Employers: InternshipIN.com

Three students at the University of California, Berkeley, created internshipIN.com in fall 2008 to help college students find valuable internships in the United States.

Students Arielle Patrice Scott, Jessica Mah, and Andy Su built the site to help startup companies connect with a pool of talented students who are looking for opportunities to take their classroom learning to the workplace.

Log in to build a student profile or to recruit student interns.

Source

University of California, Berkeley, Promise of Berkeley, Winter 2009 issue, p. 11.

San Francisco’s Exploratorium: New Outdoor Exhibits

The San Francisco Exploratorium is an interactive museum, currently housed in the Palace of Fine Arts.

Recently, the museum has established some outdoor exhibits at Fort Mason Center. Take a look at these images and read David Perlman’s article about the new exhibits that help people learn about wind, water, and the land.

Source

David Perlman, S.F.’s Exploratorium Opens Outdoor Exhibits, San Francisco Chronicle, March 7, 2009.

James Warren: Is There Hope for Journalism?

James Warren’s article When No News Is Bad News, published in the Atlantic Monthly discusses the decline of print journalism. He asks, “Is there hope for good journalism?”

Source

James Warren, When No News Is Bad News, Atlantic Monthly, January 2009.

Sreenath Sreenivasan: Bullish on Journalism & Whatever Comes Next

Stuck in freeway traffic this morning, I switched on local news radio station KCBS to find out the cause of the delay. Instead, I heard a few minutes of an interview with Sreenath Sreenivasan of Columbia University Journalism School.

Despite the closing of many U.S. newspapers, Sreenivasan described himself as “bullish” on journalism. He sees the American public hungering for news and consuming news and opinion in many different formats, including blogs.

Here’s the description of his web page, SreeTips.com: “The best blogs for and by journalists and how you can join the blogging revolution as a reader and/or creator of blogs. Also: Podcasting, Web 2.0, wikis, RSS and whatever’s next.” The layout is simple, the links well chosen.

Perhaps the end of print journalism will be the beginning of something we cannot yet imagine.

Source

Print Journalism Fading Away, KCBS radio, San Francisco, Calif., March 8, 2009.

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Three Ways to Network Without Getting Sweaty Palms

You read about an event nearby for people with your interest — be it environmental, professional, social, or political — and you show up for the event because you know you have to network.

When you arrive, the room is filled with people who seem to know each other: talking animatedly, getting food and drink, exchanging business cards. Your palms are getting sweaty. How are you going to break in? Are you really the only one here who knows no one else in the room?

Of course not. If they knew each other, no one would need to exchange those business cards.

Networking is a necessity in our time. Even people with full-time jobs need a Plan B for when the company decides to lay off 50 or 5,000 people. And if you want to switch to a different company or a whole new career, you can benefit from knowing someone who can help you cross that bridge.

How do you break in and become one of the people who seem to be networking with ease? Here are three easy ways to network without getting sweaty palms.

Volunteer to Help

Someone has to find a location for the next group event. Someone has to put out the food and drink. Someone else has to refresh the group’s web site, send out press releases, or write and publish the newsletter. That person could be you. Most organizations are more than happy to welcome another pair of hands, so you can make one good contact by offering your services. And that contact will lead to others, in a way that is less intimidating and less artificial.

Which is easier, volunteering to help with an event or walking up to strangers to introduce yourself with your elevator pitch, while juggling your business cards and your plate of raw carrots and hummus?

The downside: Don’t become so valuable as a volunteer that you can’t break away when your volunteering begins to take more time and energy than it is giving you. You’ll know it’s time to go when you find yourself resenting the very people that you meant to help. That resentment can be apparent, no matter how you school yourself.

Use the Internet

Join email groups such as Yahoo Groups, Google Groups, and other electronic mailing lists for your interest. Track down Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, and other social-media pages that will get you involved in the conversations and the communities that you want to participate in. Tamar Weinberg’s Ultimate Social Media Etiquette Handbook has tips on how to use these tools and others.

Lurk for a while and observe the group members’ behavior: Is the style of engagement casual or formal? What topics do people not discuss? Is there a particular political bent?

Introduce yourself to the group online. Add a tag line to your email signature or social-media page that gives your contact info and a one-line summary of what you do: perhaps “Human resources manager,” “Award-winning developer,” or “Pastry chef.” Some people add a slogan: “Creating the finest pastries west of Paris.” Showing a little personality is good, but avoid being too clever. It’s easy to appear self-absorbed.

The downside: You leave an electronic trail of your thoughts, feelings, and attitude toward life. If you act like an idiot on the Internet, someone — and maybe many people — will know that you have. If you’re lucky, someone will tell you about it, and you can either delete the offending post or apologize publicly — or both. (Note: Thank them for calling this to your attention. They have done you a favor, though gratitude may not be your initial response.)

Assume that nothing that you do on the Web is private: Emails can be forwarded and are stored for years in groups; people may remember your name in entirely the wrong light (“Hmmph, some editor, she can’t even spell…”); a search engine can store or cache the web page that you deleted. No privacy setting can assure that your slip-ups don’t travel the world. The Internet is a megaphone. What you say into the mouthpiece will carry.

Do a Good Job Where You Are Now

Build good will, share resources, offer to help. Assume that others you work with are doing the best they can. If you can help them look good, you will look good as well. And if your colleague compliments you on the quality of your work, ask him or her to tell your manager about your good work.

A wise person once said that you should always treat well the people that you meet on your way up the career ladder, because you are likely to meet them again on your way back down. You never know who will help you get that next job.

The downside: Some people will respond to your attempts to help with coldness or suspicion. Check with a trusted colleague to see whether your perceptions are justified: Is this person behaving badly toward you in particular, or is he or she being disagreeable because of a chronically ill partner or child at home? Context is everything.

Monitor how much you help others, and make sure that you continue to fulfill your core functions to the best of your ability. Don’t spread yourself too thin.

See you at the next event, my friend.

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Kiva.org: Microlending Around the World

KivaWorld, a mapping app built in the open-source Build Kiva developer program, shows you the location of microlender Kiva.org‘s latest 100 loans around the world.

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Columbia Journalism Review: Language Corner

The Columbia Journalism Review is a venerable publication, and luckily for those who love the English language, its Language Corner column, by Merrill Perlman, discusses issues that keep some readers, writers, and editors awake at night.

See Your Site the Way a Search Engine Might

Ever wonder what a search engine “sees” when it reads through your web site? This site lets you see your site the way some search engines do.

Thanks to the search engine optimization (SEO) team at Sun for the link.

Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox: Write for Reuse

Usability expert Jakob Nielsen says that readers often find web sites in ways that the writer may not have planned for — through search engines, for example, or links on sites that the writer may not be aware of. How will you write content that can be useful for unknown contexts and unknown users? Read the article.