tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5251183560375528307.post6734243423843636205..comments2024-03-28T10:30:02.679-05:00Comments on Bit Tooth Energy: The endurance of University data records - be discouragedHeading Outhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01790783659594652657noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5251183560375528307.post-4503320645982597232021-08-02T06:17:49.384-05:002021-08-02T06:17:49.384-05:00RR
ไม่ว่าจะอัตราการจ่ายเงิน ความง่ายในการเล่น โบน... RR <br />ไม่ว่าจะอัตราการจ่ายเงิน ความง่ายในการเล่น โบนัสฟรีสปินมาไวมาก รวมไปถึงรางวัลแจ็คพอตที่่จายอย่างไม่อั้น <br />สำหรับใครที่อยากรวยทางลัด ด้วยการลงทุนไม่กี่บาท ไม่ต้องรอนาน สามารถเห็นตัวเงิน และถอนได้เลยล่ะก็ หากคุณอ่านบทความนี้แล้ว <br />คุณจะไม่ผิดหวังเลยล่ะค่ะ เพราะฉะนั้นแล้ว มาดูกันเถอะว่าเกมสล็อตแตกง่าย ประจำเดือนกรกฎาคม ในปี 2021 นี้จะมีเกมอะไรบ้าง จะเป็นเกมที่คุณกำลังเล่นอยู่หรือป่าว มาดูกันเลย!<br />สล็อต1234<br /><a href="https://superslot98.net//" rel="nofollow">สล็อต1234</a><br>Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03930496931550702958noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5251183560375528307.post-4593584338230228262010-03-04T22:25:46.958-06:002010-03-04T22:25:46.958-06:00Thanks for the comment and the good wishes, which ...Thanks for the comment and the good wishes, which are much appreciated.<br /><br /> One of the sources for the data, that I am sort of relying on, lies in the appendices to the dissertations and masters theses that were also produced from the work. I generally insisted that these contain the data files, and these are stored at the University in the library, in paper. But it may, in some cases, be quite difficult to know and then get access to those documents. (I have been refused permission to see some on occasion).Heading Outhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01790783659594652657noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5251183560375528307.post-45849599320992057182010-03-03T19:35:54.515-06:002010-03-03T19:35:54.515-06:00The policy to destroy research data seven years af...The policy to destroy research data seven years after the end of a project troubles me too. A colleague once told me that models and theories come and go but a good observation lasts forever. As you point out, though, it may not. <br /><br />I’ve worked for universities but never at one. My inexperienced view of academic scientists is that they usually collect data as the basis for publication. Once the reports and the papers are written, or before then, it’s on to the next grant and/or the next contract. The university’s administration values its scientists for their successes and awards, the money and prestige they can attract and, in the best case, for their teaching ability. Data preservation is not what universities do; none of the foregoing rewards it. <br /><br />A newsletter I produce recently received a letter from an academic oceanographer near retirement. Oceanographic observations made by a scientist on a ship have often been fabulously costly per bit and are irreplaceable. Those exact observations can never be made again. This scientist was worried that his data would vanish when he retired, and he thought the government should do something about that. He had, of course, used the data to publish but the publications had no room for the raw data which might, for example, be useful to someone investigating ocean climate. His university also had no mechanism for data stewardship and, I suspect, no interest in it. <br /><br />I have a bit more experience with the Canadian government’s oceanographic program, where the government does, indeed, have a program to rescue data from its own retiring scientists. Some of them also started work when notes, graph paper and a calculator were the standard analytical tools. The rescued data must go through steps for description, quality control, formatting and archiving, after which they become available for others to retrieve on demand. The government’s historical physical oceanographic observations have been relatively well looked after in this fashion, the chemical and biological data less so. Unlike an academic department, a government agency often has a mission that entails preserving and building on the past. However, science within government has fallen from favour in Canada, leaving programs like data rescue minimally funded. <br /><br />I’ve spent some time thinking about this problem but to little avail. One solution might see government granting agencies require all the data arising from a grant to be quality controlled and submitted electronically, along with the metadata, before the grant can be signed off. After a while, someone at the granting agency might realise they had something valuable and start organising it for retrieval. <br /><br />Even in the short term, it does no good to save data without the metadata to describe its collection, analysis and quality control. In the longer term it does no good to save it without a mechanism for retrieval, and that’s a costly affair. Data storage and archiving is neither sexy, fashionable nor publicly demanded, and that seems pretty much to be the end of the story. <br /><br />Congratulations on your retirement, HO. I hope it brings you continuing interest, enjoyment and good health.porsenahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04362269873149438270noreply@blogger.com