Skip to main content
Skip to main content
Glendon Campus Alumni Research Giving to York Media Careers International York U Lions Accessibility
Future Students Current Students Faculty and Staff
Faculties Libraries York U Organization Directory Site Index Campus Maps

STS / HUMA 3770 Issues in the Modern Physical Sciences Research Session

Just for fun

FREE Citation Management Software

Logging in from Home

  • Need to use Passport York or bar code number & PIN from library card to authenticate as a York user
  • Information here on logging in
  • Remember: Use the library web page or this blog post for the link as it will prompt for login

Continue reading


ENGN / ENG 3310 Space Mission Design Research Session

Background info and FREE Citation Management Software

  • For books and reports that York Libraries don’t have:

General Information

  • Peer review: researchers validating each others work before publication
  • Kinds of documents:
    • patents: government granted license to an invention
    • standards: agreed upon methodology: ie 802.11
    • journals: research results presented in a periodical/magazine. Peer reviewed.
    • trade literature: discipline-specific magazines. Not Peer Reviewed.
    • conference proceedings: research results presented at a meeting. Often peer reviewed, but not always.
    • technical report: description of a solution to a specific problem. Not peer reviewed.
    • books
      • reference: encyclopedias, tables, data collections, properties
      • manuals: lab methods, programming languages, operating systems
      • monographs: general topics
    • technical specifications: how a device or component works, ie circuit diagrams
  • If you’re not sure how to get started on your project, come to Steacie.
  • My Topic: Pick one from last year.

Continue reading



Workshop: Web 2.0 for Scientists / Cool Tools for Scholars

These are the notes for my upcoming Steacie Library Grad Student Workshops. This post will include the notes for both Part 1 (Web 2.0 for Scientists) and Part 2 (Cool Tools for Scholars)

What is web 2.0, anyway? Tim O’Reilly or Wikipedia?

Take a look at the power of web 2.0 technologies to solve your problems.

Let’s take a look at some tools that will help you with the research process from start to finish!

  • Invisible college: networking
  • Literature review: environment scan, keeping up, organizing readings
  • Executing the project: keeping track of results
  • Writing up the work: document preparation
  • Disseminating: distributing and popularizing the work


Blogging & RSS
(IC, LR, Dis)

Reading what’s going on

Doing your own!

Don’t forget RSS aggregators like Bloglines & Google Reader.

Also, lots of journals have RSS feeds for their TOCs.

Social Bookmarking & Citation Management (LR, Writing)

  • del.icio.us — most popular social bookmarking site
  • Connotea — just like del.icio.us but geared for academia, by Nature
  • 2collab — similar to Connotea but by Elsevier
  • Mendeley — new citation management system, more like workflow management
  • CiteULike — another academic citation/bookmarking site.  Can also look at journal TOCs
  • Zotero — Firerfox browser add-in, free and open source, supported by non-profit foundation. Coolest and most forward looking of the bunch
  • RefWorks — officially sanctioned York-sponsored product

Using Wikis in Reseach (Results)

Social Networks for Scientists (IC, Dis)

Collaborative Document Creation (Writing & Dis)

  • Google Docs — pretty complete online version of MS Office with sharable documents
  • Zoho — another similar one
  • SlideShare — share your PowerPoint slides with the world

Using Audio & Video (Dis)

Bringing it all Together: Lifestreaming

  • FriendFeed — aggregates all your feeds and shows you the content from trusted friends. Also facilitates conversation better than most other platforms.

NATS 1820 Molecules and the Mind

Just for fun

FREE Citation Management Software

Logging in from Home

  • Need to use Passport York or bar code number & PIN from library card to authenticate as a York user
  • Information here on logging in
  • Remember: Use the library web page or this blog post for the link as it will prompt for login

Continue reading


Space and beyond: Science Rendezvous at York

Tons of space and science related events at the upcoming Science Rendezvous event at the Keele campus It’s Saturday, May 10th. Lots of info in today’s Y-File article.

York University will throw open the doors of its space science and engineering facilities to hundreds of future astronauts on Saturday, May 10. York is participating in Science Rendezvous, a new full day event that is free and open to the public. During Science Rendezvous, leading science and technology institutes, including York, will offer free tours, events, demonstrations and lectures. Participants can register for the day and pick up a program in the lobby of the Computer Science & Engineering Building. Registration opens at 12:30pm.

“York University’s event will be very unique,” says Elissa Strome, research officer for the Faculty of Science & Engineering. “We are opening the doors to our world-renowned space science and engineering facilites to showcase them to Canada’s future astronauts and space scientists.”

York-specific information here.


Is Dextre the last hurrah?

…for the Canadian Space Program, that is.

At least that’s the thrust of a recent article in the National Post.

Some background:

But even as Canada celebrates another milestone in its nearly 50-year history of involvement in space, some critics are wondering: Will it be the last?

The shuttle Endeavour will carry the Canadian-built Dextre module — the nickname given to the Special Purpose Dextrous Manipulator, the “hand” for the massive Canadarm2 robotic arm — to the International Space tation, the last component in Canada’s contribution to the 16-nation project.

The arm, an 18-metre-long, remotely controlled and highly complex construction crane, was installed in 2001 while the Mobile Base System, the “shoulder” for the Canadarm, was brought up to the space station in 2002.

York Space Engineering prof. Brendan Quine is quoted:

Ben Quine, a professor at York University’s Earth and Space Engineering department, said the sudden departure of the former president was cause for concern. “That was somewhat alarming. He had only really been in the job for a few months and it came as a surprise when he left … It was not a good sign.”

Prof. Quine says Dextre’s arrival in orbit may well mark the beginning of a new era in Canada’s role in space exploration, but it is not yet clear what that role will be.

“Canadarm was a great Canadian success story,” he says. “But to some extent, we’ve lost our way in the space industry in this country … I think we’ve got to be really careful about our direction in the future. We need a viable space industry and a vibrant research and development sector.”

*snip*

“Governments don’t typically have much interest in a big space program in Canada,” he says. “But this is an export market that generates wealth in our economy … [and] it’s a high-tech industry.”

Prof. Quine says space and related industries worldwide are worth about $200-billion a year, and that Canada’s share of that business — about $2-billion a year — could dry up without a greater commitment from Ottawa to support it. “If we don’t support our industry, we risk losing our share of that market,” he says. “And it’s a market that’s going to get extremely competitive in the next few years with India and China moving into space.

“We really have to articulate more clearly to governments why it’s important for Canada to fund space exploration … We need to tell our political leaders about the huge benefits space can bring Canada.”

You tell ‘em, Ben!


Women in Computer Science & Engineering

Since it’s International Women’s Day, I thought I’d point out a nice article in Y-File profiling York’s Women in Computer Science & Engineering program.

York computer science Professor Eshrat Arjomandi can remember a time when she was one of only a handful of women studying computer science at university. It was a lonely road, filled with challenging and grueling course work, hours of study and the isolation that comes from being a female in a male-dominated profession. It was with this experience in mind that Arjomandi, together with colleagues in York’s Faculty of Science & Engineering, formed a small ad-hoc group in 2004 with a mission to support and mentor a growing number of young women choosing to study computer science and engineering at York.

It’s a great article about some great women doing some really important work. Here’s a nice photo of some of the students (Anna Topol, Foroohar Foroozan, Mary Kuruvilla and Neha Durwas) along with Profs. Melanie Baljko, Eshrat Arjomandi and Natalija Vlajic. (And don’t forget Prof. Baljko’s daughter Erma).
WiCSE

Also of interest, the Steacie Spotlight this month is books on Women in Science. We have highlighted over 30 books on that theme, ranging from Grace Hopper to Lise Meitner and women astronauts and everything in between. Check it out (and check out the books too) on the Steacie New Books shelves.



Prof. Vincent Tao on the launch of MS Live Maps in China

York Geomatics prof Vincent Tao has an interview up on one of my favourite technology/commentary blogs, O’Reilly Radar.

Can you tell us about coverage? What exactly launched today? What’s the difference in the platform between VE China and VE everywhere else?

The China release demonstrates our success in deploying our first VE data center remotely. We now have an in-country data center offering the better system performance and greater user experiences. This distributed mapping architecture allows us to grow the international markets in a scalable way. In this first release, VE China covers both tier-1 and tier-2 total 114 cities with very rich local contents (millions of POI/YP). In addition to most VE features in USA, China release offers the public transit feature for bus and train commuters. We understand that this is the most demanding feature for China users when concerning maps. We cannot afford not having this feature even for v1 release