Search Results

808 results for the search term: wikipedia
Add Clipmarks to:  iGoogle  Netvibes  
   
 
 
 
   
 
top scroll end
145
POPS
Beyond Wikipedia...reference sites you can''t do without
Newfman
by Newfman  9-15-2007    2
 No Remarks
120
POPS
12 Popular Wikis that actually ‘WORK’
Newfman
by Newfman  4-28-2007    7
 (6) WikiSummaries - short, quick summaries for thousands of books. (Summaries: Freakonomics, Getting Things Done, …, see other bestsellers) (7) WikiMapia - cool mashup between Google Maps and wiki-style editing. Lets you browse, view, search and add descriptive notes to any location on the globe. (8) Wiktionary - multilingual, comprehensive, user-edited dictionary. Provides word definitions, etymologies, pronunciations, sample quotations, synonyms, antonyms and translations. (9) Uncyclopedia - extremely entertaining wikipedia clone, that is filled with funny and not-necessarily correct articles. Check out: Colonel, Britney Spears, Donald Trump, …or an image pulled from an article about Women. (No offense ladies, it’s just funny…)
113
POPS
100 Tools for Learning (by popularity)
frogtuxedo
by frogtuxedo  7-31-2007    6
 "This list is being compiled from the Top 10 Favourite Tools lists of a growing number of contributions from e-learning professionals."
62
POPS
25 Unexpectedly Useful Websites for the Uncommonly Curious
Socratoad
by Socratoad  7-10-2008    3
 The rest are on the site
52
POPS
The Mathematical Lives of Plants
Kore7
by Kore7  5-6-2007    6
  The seeds of a sunflower, the spines of a cactus, and the bracts of a pine cone all grow in whirling spiral patterns. Remarkable for their complexity and beauty, they also show consistent mathematical patterns that scientists have been striving to understand. ... Scientists have puzzled over this pattern of plant growth for hundreds of years. Why would plants prefer the golden angle to any other? And how can plants possibly "know" anything about Fibonacci numbers? For the first time, scientists have found convincing biochemical mechanisms responsible for the interlocking spiral growth patterns seen in many plants. (The Romanesco broccoli plant is a striking example.) The video of the experiment with magnetized liquid iron droplets demonstrates how the geometry of such growth could occur in nature.
45
POPS
Interesting origins of words
wildcat
by wildcat  11-21-2007    3
 No Remarks
36
POPS
Bush Outlaws All War Protest In USA
thisnamecantbetaken
by thisnamecantbetaken  7-22-2007    33
 I can't believe it. I'm not good at legal speak so I am not sure what to make of this. Go to the site and read the rest or just google the title of the article and find out more. If anyone has any idea if this in any way can be true, please say so. "(ii) to have materially assisted, sponsored, or provided financial, material, logistical, or technical support for, or goods or services in support of, such an act or acts of violence or any person whose property and interests in property are blocked pursuant to this order
34
POPS
PC Mag Top Web Sites 2007: Learn
righthand
by righthand  8-31-2007    4
 No Remarks
32
POPS
You' named Time's person of 2006
wildcat
by wildcat  12-17-2006    12
 yes! "seizing the reins of the global media" let them check clipmarks!
32
POPS
Quotes from Voltaire
overture
by overture  6-11-2007    7
  Voltaire was a French Enlightenment writer, essayist, deist and philosopher known for his wit, philosophical sport, and defense of civil liberties, including freedom of religion and the right to a fair trial. He was an outspoken supporter of social reform despite strict censorship laws in France and harsh penalties for those who broke them. A satirical polemicist, he frequently made use of his works to criticize Christian Church dogma and the French institutions of his day. -- From Wikipedia
30
POPS
Jim Carrey and Conan discuss quantum physics
rmowery
by rmowery  3-5-2007   
 No Remarks
29
POPS
The Trouble with Anonymity on the Web
arifsali
by arifsali  8-21-2007    12
 No Remarks
28
POPS
Avoid Ad Hominem on Clipmarks
LGagnon
by LGagnon  12-23-2006    45
 Having seen this logical fallacy used on Clipmarks several times, I thought it would be a good idea to point it out to everyone so that we can avoid this in the future.
28
POPS
Happy Birthday, Arthur C. Clarke!
wildcat
by wildcat  12-15-2007    3
 No Remarks
27
POPS
Glorious Glass Art
JohnWaterman
by JohnWaterman  9-23-2008    9
 No Remarks
27
POPS
Wiki Mind Map
Djiezes
by Djiezes  6-5-2007    9
 No Remarks
27
POPS
Why we clip for each other...
egoldstein
by egoldstein  5-2-2007    14
 This is an excerpt from a great blog post by jicwyllie . Check it out at the source.
26
POPS
Wikipedia opens online library on human genes
Mohir
by Mohir  7-8-2008   
 No Remarks
25
POPS
Math Behind Ancient Islamic Tile Patterns Decoded
Kore7
by Kore7  2-24-2007    6
  When Peter J. Lu traveled to Uzbekistan, he had no idea of the mathematical journey that he was about to embark on as well. See the full research article as published in Science . It's a wonderful example of original, multidisciplinary academic research bridging history and mathematics that happens to force us to re-think the sophistication of ancient geometrical knowledge. When Lu looked at photographs of Islamic buildings, he found that he could break the patterns on their surfaces up into the same shapes, even though the shapes often weren't immediately visible. "I couldn't sleep for days," he said. "I skipped Christmas break to work on it."
25
POPS
Wikipedia and the Meaning of Truth
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  10-23-2008    6
 These policies have become the social contract for Wikipedia's army of apparently insomniac volunteers. Thanks to them, incorrect information generally disappears quite quickly. So how do the Wikipedians decide what's true and what's not? On what is their epistemology based? Unlike the laws of mathematics or science, wikitruth isn't based on principles such as consistency or observa­bility. It's not even based on common sense or firsthand experience. Wikipedia has evolved a radically different set of epistemological standards--standards that aren't especially surprising given that the site is rooted in a Web-based community, but that should concern those of us who are interested in traditional notions of truth and accuracy. On Wikipedia, objective truth isn't all that important, actually. What makes a fact or statement fit for inclusion is that it appeared in some other publication--ideally, one that is in English and is available free online. "The threshold for inclusion in Wiki
23
POPS
The Humungous Fungus
Djiezes
by Djiezes  6-11-2007    2
 See wikipedia: Largest Organism Armillaria ostoyae (Image: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Armillaria_ostoyae.jpg)
22
POPS
Great pyramids of China
invictus
by invictus  8-21-2007    2
 Try and see if you can spot some of them using Google Earth.
22
POPS
Soundflavor, the IMDB of music?
wildcat
by wildcat  5-31-2008    2
 No Remarks
22
POPS
Open source versus Google
Silkweaver
by Silkweaver  12-18-2007   
 No Remarks
22
POPS
Teen summonsed for calling Scientology a cult
pokkets
by pokkets  7-7-2008    19
 The City of London police came under fire two years ago when it emerged that more than 20 officers, ranging from constable to chief superintendent, had accepted gifts worth thousands of pounds from the Church of Scientology. The City of London Chief Superintendent, Kevin Hurley, praised Scientology for "raising the spiritual wealth of society" during the opening of its headquarters in 2006. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anonymous_(group)
22
POPS
The Man Who Loved Only Numbers - Lecture (video) on Paul Erdös
Djiezes
by Djiezes  11-10-2007    1
 a fascinating story
21
POPS
Danger! CAMERA Alert on Wikipedia!!!
righthand
by righthand  4-26-2008    6
 No Remarks
21
POPS
Mystery of String Theory Unravelled
tabsey
by tabsey  1-30-2008    5
 Bloody unreal. We live and learn. (Actually, I learn more than I live, or do I?)
20
POPS
Worlds Most Famous Uncracked Codes and Ciphers
constantskeptic
by constantskeptic  12-1-2007    2
 wow... can any of you solve these?
20
POPS
CIA edited Wikipedia entries
invictus
by invictus  8-15-2007    24
 IP logs also show Vatican and The Democratic Party edited some articles on Wikipedia too.
20
POPS
Who's actually participating in the Web 2.0 revolution?
adamc
by adamc  4-18-2007    7
 We've always wondered what kind of model would unfold with Clipmarks. Will everyone be a clipper? Will we have a huge visitor base that simply enjoys what the core group of clippers are contributing to the site?
19
POPS
Pictures of Insanely Complex Highway Intersections
BigBadWolf
by BigBadWolf  6-20-2007    4
 No Remarks
19
POPS
Where mathematic and art meet - Fractal art ..inspirational
einbar
by einbar  9-15-2008    3
 "A fractal is generally “a rough or fragmented geometric shape that can be split into parts, each of which is (at least approximately) a reduced-size copy of the whole,” a property called self-similarity. The term was coined by Benoît Mandelbrot in 1975 and was derived from the Latin fractus meaning “broken” or “fractured.” -Wikipedia
19
POPS
Apophenia
morgainelefaye
by morgainelefaye  6-20-2007   
 No Remarks
19
POPS
Web 2.0: Opening up, or dumbing down?
wildcat
by wildcat  4-4-2008    7
 The aggregated "wisdom of the crowd," epitomized by Google and Wikipedia, is rife with opinion, misinformation, and lies because Web 2.0 creates an "environment where anyone can say anything," Keen argued. And that's "a bad thing for the cultural producers, the creative class,"
19
POPS
Memes evolve into Bemes
wildcat
by wildcat  3-5-2007    2
 No Remarks
18
POPS
Lighting the Night
JohnWaterman
by JohnWaterman  10-22-2008    7
 Visit boston.com for the full impact.
18
POPS
Elves in Chinese folklore
zephyrgong
by zephyrgong  7-12-2006    9
 They're top 10 widely spreadly elves in Chinese folklore,sorry it's too hard to translate their names to English,but the Chinese names are bellow: 狐仙(Fox spirits),龙女,夜叉(Yaksha),判官,牛头(Ox heads),马面(horse faces ),二郎(Erlang Shen ),七郎,刑天(Xing Tian),辟邪 I hope I can have time and ability to do some short description to each of them.There's already have a detailed list about Chinese mythology on Wikipedia(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_mythology), most of them have well described,but I think have some pictures will make more sense. ;)
18
POPS
more accurate wikipedia warnings
kphonic
by kphonic  11-21-2006    3
 No Remarks
18
POPS
The battle for Wikipedia's soul
Aribeth
by Aribeth  3-10-2008    6
 "To create a new article on Wikipedia and be sure that it will survive, you need to be able to write a “deletionist-proof” entry and ensure that you have enough online backing (such as Google matches) to convince the increasingly picky Wikipedia people of its importance. This raises the threshold for writing articles so high that very few people actually do it. Many who are excited about contributing to the site end up on the “Missing Wikipedians” page: a constantly updated list of those who have decided to stop contributing. It serves as a reminder that frustration at having work removed prompts many people to abandon the project. Google has recently announced its own entry into the field, in the form of an encyclopedia-like project called “Knol” that will allow anybody to create entries on topics of their choice.But even if it does not turn out to be the Wikipedia-killer that some people imagine, it may push Wikipedia to rethink its editorial stance."
— end of the list —
Get widget

Wikipedia  

loading clips...
rss tools
Clipmarks
About   Clippers   Blog   Privacy   EULA   Copyright   Site Map   Forbes Digital

OK