Daniel M. Russell
Goodreads Author
Member Since
February 2011
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The Joy of Search: A Google Insider's Guide to Going Beyond the Basics
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published
2019
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8 editions
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| Olson writes book about forgotten (or never known) heroes. Usually she writes about World War II, so this is a real change—writing about a French woman who was a real fire-ball who literally organized the world to save Abu Simbel (and other famous si ...more | |
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| It is the story of a truly heroic effort to literally save the seed corn that had been painstakingly collected by Russian botanists, then lovingly preserved in their seed bank. But then Leningrad was besieged by the German army, and their charismatic ...more | |
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Background David Robinson is a visiting scholar at the Social Science Matrix at the University of California, Berkeley. He is also a member of the faculty at Apple University, where he teaches seminars on the intersection of technology and the liberal ...more |
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| Ira's story about using computers to forecast the outcome of the 1952 election is full of surprises and unlikely serendipity. It's also a story about how an industry (news) pivots slowly and cautiously to using new technology to portray what's going ...more | |
“there’s a lot of not-so-great scholarship out there, even in books and what seems like primary sources. In particular, there’s a lot of repetition of
errors that were introduced early on and somehow never corrected. (That’s what I mean by poor scholarship. Just repeating something that you found on the internet doesn’t make it right; it merely makes it repetitious. And if you didn’t double check it in the first place, you’re earning yourself a particularly nasty place in hell”
― The Joy of Search: A Google Insider's Guide to Going Beyond the Basics
errors that were introduced early on and somehow never corrected. (That’s what I mean by poor scholarship. Just repeating something that you found on the internet doesn’t make it right; it merely makes it repetitious. And if you didn’t double check it in the first place, you’re earning yourself a particularly nasty place in hell”
― The Joy of Search: A Google Insider's Guide to Going Beyond the Basics
“The increasing sophistication in representing world knowledge online also implies that asking the right questions will become more of a skill. A common error made among beginning searchers is to pose queries that have a built-in bias, a kind of leading question. A question that “leads the witness” wouldn’t be allowed in a courtroom and shouldn’t be in your research queries either. This is fairly common among K–12 students who don’t yet understand the basics of web search and often frame their questions with built-in assumptions. In cases like this, you need to know that the results are ordered by rank depending on the terms in the query.
Take the following query:
[is the average length of an octopus 25 inches?]
It will give web links in the search results page that look right, but there’s an assumption within the query—that is, that octopuses actually are, on average, 25 inches in length. The web search results will be a bit misleading because there are so many positive hits that mention the terms “octopus” and “25 inches” on the same page. In this case, the search engine doesn’t really understand the question, but gives pages that best match the query, with its biases built in.”
― The Joy of Search: A Google Insider's Guide to Going Beyond the Basics
Take the following query:
[is the average length of an octopus 25 inches?]
It will give web links in the search results page that look right, but there’s an assumption within the query—that is, that octopuses actually are, on average, 25 inches in length. The web search results will be a bit misleading because there are so many positive hits that mention the terms “octopus” and “25 inches” on the same page. In this case, the search engine doesn’t really understand the question, but gives pages that best match the query, with its biases built in.”
― The Joy of Search: A Google Insider's Guide to Going Beyond the Basics
“How can I read it and understand what’s going on in complex texts? I have a two-step process for making this understandable.
First, I read through the article, searching for terms and concepts that I don’t understand. I look up these terms, usually by opening new tabs with the searches, both so I won’t lose my place in the original article and have several pages open for reference. My friend and colleague at Stanford, Sam Wineburg, calls this method “lateral reading,” which emphasizes understanding the gestalt by pursuing multiple searches in parallel.
Second, it often helps to simplify the text into a form that I understand. That is, I go sentence by sentence (or paragraph by paragraph) rewriting the article in language that I can comprehend. This is a bit slow, but it frequently really helps reduce complicated language into something you can understand. Don’t be intimidated by complex language. Be a bold reader!”
― The Joy of Search: A Google Insider's Guide to Going Beyond the Basics
First, I read through the article, searching for terms and concepts that I don’t understand. I look up these terms, usually by opening new tabs with the searches, both so I won’t lose my place in the original article and have several pages open for reference. My friend and colleague at Stanford, Sam Wineburg, calls this method “lateral reading,” which emphasizes understanding the gestalt by pursuing multiple searches in parallel.
Second, it often helps to simplify the text into a form that I understand. That is, I go sentence by sentence (or paragraph by paragraph) rewriting the article in language that I can comprehend. This is a bit slow, but it frequently really helps reduce complicated language into something you can understand. Don’t be intimidated by complex language. Be a bold reader!”
― The Joy of Search: A Google Insider's Guide to Going Beyond the Basics
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