inform Prime Minister and President of China hold Delegation Level Talks during Chennai Informal Summit in Mamallapuram[ph]Photo Courtesy:- Lalit Kumar[/ph] By meacms.mea.gov.in Published On :: Sat, 12 Oct 2019 00:00:00 GMT Full Article
inform Prime Minister and Xi Jinping, President of China hold Tete-e-Tete during Chennai Informal Summit in Mamallapuram[ph]Photo Courtesy:- Lalit Kumar[/ph] By meacms.mea.gov.in Published On :: Sat, 12 Oct 2019 00:00:00 GMT Full Article
inform Secretary (East) inaugurates the maiden Coastal Security workshop for BIMSTEC countries conducted by Information Fusion Centre – IOR in New Delhi[ph]Photo Courtesy: Hemant Joshi[/ph] By meacms.mea.gov.in Published On :: Wed, 20 Nov 2019 00:00:00 GMT Full Article
inform Focus on correct information, right treatment to stop Covid-19: Priyanka By www.business-standard.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 12:27:00 +0530 The death toll due to Covid-19 in Uttar Pradesh rose to 27 with two more fatalities, while 177 fresh cases were reported on Saturday Full Article
inform Right-to-information or disclosure? By indiatogether.org Published On :: Sun, 01 Aug 2004 00:00:00 +0000 We need to think about how RTI could be used to ensure more "systemic" solutions, where the performance of our government institutions are discussed in a regular, predictable manner says Ramesh Ramanathan. Full Article
inform Apply to be an Information Commissioner By indiatogether.org Published On :: Mon, 31 May 2010 00:00:00 +0000 Civil society candidates should be eligible for appointment to key RTI posts in the States and the Centre. We must apply for such jobs, and help improve the system, writes Krishnaraj Rao. Full Article
inform What good is an auditor without information? By indiatogether.org Published On :: Tue, 02 Sep 2014 04:41:54 +0000 A recent letter written by the CAG Shashikant Sharma to the finance minister, seeking access to required information through RTI, exposes once more the lacunae in the powers of the Supreme Audit Institution. Himanshu Upadhyaya analyses the debate around the issue. Full Article
inform Registration of informal land sales By indiatogether.org Published On :: Sun, 07 Aug 2016 18:30:00 +0000 Telangana’s free registration of plain paper land sale initiative to digitally clean up its land records not only benefits its dispossessed farmers but makes land governance transparent, reports Manipadma Jena. Full Article
inform The business case for informed consent By indiatogether.org Published On :: Mon, 06 Aug 2007 00:00:00 +0000 A recent publication from the World Resources Institute shows that the informed consent of those affected by large projects can be an asset to those projects, rather than an obstacle. Shripad Dharmadhikary reviews Development Without Conflict: The Business Case for Community Consent. Full Article
inform Intelligent information By indiatogether.org Published On :: Tue, 01 Apr 2003 00:00:00 +0000 Shelter Associates uses Geographic Information Systems to study slums, and Maharashtra's municipal councils find new opportunities for civic improvement. Full Article
inform Facebook, Youtube Remove 'Plandemic', A Viral Video Spreading COVID-19 Misinformation By www.news18.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 12:30:59 +0530 The 26-minute video went viral this week across social media platforms. Full Article
inform Not Just IPL, Coronavirus has Adverse Implications on Grassroots and Informal Sectors of Cricket too By www.news18.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Apr 2020 11:05:49 +0530 The impact of COVID-19 on the cricket ecosystem - structured and unstructured - at the grassroots has slipped under the radar Full Article
inform Horror Writer Stephen King Quits Facebook Over Misinformation By www.news18.com Published On :: Mon, 3 Feb 2020 12:17:44 +0530 Stephen King has quit Facebook, saying there is too much fake news and misinformation on the platform. Full Article
inform Victims Run Over by Train in Aurangabad Left Without Informing Administration, Employer: Official By www.news18.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 07:22:56 +0530 While the administration is running a shelter camp for migrant labourers, the victims were living on the premises of the factory where worked, he added. Full Article
inform Coronavirus Outbreak: Facebook Removes Posts To Curb Spread Of Misinformation By www.gizbot.com Published On :: Sat, 01 Feb 2020 12:38:21 +0530 The coronavirus outbreak is not only creating waves of shock across China but also on a global scale. It has given rise to the anti-China sentiment around the world. As many as 12,000 people in China have been affected by coronavirus, Full Article
inform Twitter To Curb Coronavirus Misinformation On Its Platform By www.gizbot.com Published On :: Thu, 19 Mar 2020 12:17:20 +0530 Social media platforms are a thriving hub for communication. Serving as messaging platforms as well, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and other social media sites are platforms to discuss various topics. However, with the coronavirus pandemic, a lot of misinformation is circulating on Full Article
inform Facebook Introduces New Tool To Reveal Users Who Spread COVID-19 Misinformation By www.gizbot.com Published On :: Fri, 17 Apr 2020 11:51:55 +0530 Facebook has over 300 million users in India. The social media platform has announced that It will actively start notifying those users who have liked, commented on, or shared COVID-19 related misinformation. Facebook hopes the step will stop the spread of wrong Full Article
inform AICTE COVID-19 National Bio-informatics Online Hackathon For Full Stackers By www.careerindia.com Published On :: Sat, 25 Apr 2020 13:29:17 +0530 The national-level council for technical education, All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), has announced a ‘'COVID-19 National Bio-informatics Online Hackathon For Full Stackers.'' The AICTE COVID-19 Hackathon will be held from April 27 to May 6, 2020. Hackathon is rolled Full Article
inform Information Security (IS) By www.fsis.usda.gov Published On :: Wed, 16 Nov 2011 10:28:44 -0400 FSIS Directive 1306.1, Incident Response (IR), provides system users with procedures to follow in the event of security incidents, theft or loss of IT equipment. FSIS Directive 1306.8, Security Awareness and Training (SAT), addresses the requirement that all employees (i.e., federal, contractor, student and part-time) complete basic Security Awareness Training (SAT) each fiscal year. New employees must complete SAT training prior to obtaining network access. Questions related to Information Security can be submitted to FSIS_Information_Security@fsis.usda.gov. Full Article
inform Web Information Systems and Technologies [Electronic book] : 14th International Conference, WEBIST 2018, Seville, Spain, September 18-20, 2018, Revised Selected Papers / edited by María José Escalona, Francisco Domínguez Mayo, Tim A. Majchr By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2019. Full Article
inform Research and Practical Issues of Enterprise Information Systems [Electronic book] : 13th IFIP WG 8. 9 International Conference, CONFENIS 2019, Prague, Czech Republic, December 16-17, 2019, Proceedings / Petr Doucek, Josef Basl, A Min Tjoa, Maria Raffai, A By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2019. Full Article
inform Possibility theory for the design of information fusion systems [Electronic book] / Basel Solaiman, Éloi Bossé. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, c2019. Full Article
inform POSSIBILITY THEORY FOR THE DESIGN OF INFORMATION FUSION SYSTEMS [Electronic book]. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [S.l.] : SPRINGER NATURE, 2020. Full Article
inform Perspectives of System Informatics [Electronic book] : 12th International Andrei P. Ershov Informatics Conference, PSI 2019, Novosibirsk, Russia, July 2-5, 2019, Revised Selected Papers / Nikolaj Bjørner, Irina Virbitskaite, Andrei Voronkov (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2019. Full Article
inform The origins of informality : why the legal foundations of global governance are shifting, and why it matters [Electronic book] / Charles B. Roger. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2020. Full Article
inform NII Testbeds and Community for Information Access Research [Electronic book] : 14th International Conference, NTCIR 2019, Tokyo, Japan, June 10-13, 2019, Revised Selected Papers / Makoto P. Kato, Yiqun Liu, Noriko Kando, Charles L. A. Clarke (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2019. Full Article
inform Neural information processing [Electronic book] : 26th International Conference, ICONIP 2019, Sydney, NSW, Australia, December 12-15, 2019, Proceedings. Part I / Tom Gedeon, Kok Wai Wong, Minho Lee (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2019. Full Article
inform Neural Information Processing [Electronic book] : 26th International Conference, ICONIP 2019, Sydney, NSW, Australia, December 12-15, 2019, Proceedings. Part II / Tom Gedeon, Kok Wai Wong, Minho Lee (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2020. Full Article
inform Neural Information Processing [Electronic book] : 26th International Conference, ICONIP 2019, Sydney, NSW, Australia, December 12-15, 2019, Proceedings. Part III / Tom Gedeon, Kok Wai Wong, Minho Lee (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2020. Full Article
inform Neural information processing [Electronic book] : 26th International Conference, ICONIP 2019, Sydney, NSW, Australia, December 12-15, 2019, Proceedings. Part IV / Tom Gedeon, Kok Wai Wong, Minho Lee (eds.) By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, c2019. Full Article
inform Neural information processing [Electronic book] : 26th International Conference, ICONIP 2019, Sydney, NSW, Australia, December 12-15, 2019, Proceedings. Part V / Tom Gedeon, Kok Wai Wong, Minho Lee (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, c2019. Full Article
inform Learning in information-rich environments : I-LEARN and the construction of knowledge from information [Electronic book] / Delia Neuman, Mary Jean Tecce DeCarlo, Vera J. Lee, Stacey Greenwell, Allen Grant. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham, Switzerland : Springer, [2019] Full Article
inform Information systems security : 15th International Conference, ICISS 2019, Hyderabad, India, December 16-20, 2019, Proceedings [Electronic book] / Deepak Garg, N. V. Narendra Kumar, Rudrapatna K. Shyamasundar (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham, Switzerland : Springer, 2019. Full Article
inform Historical studies in computing, information, and society : insights from the Flatiron lectures [Electronic book] / William Aspray, editor. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham, Switzerland : Springer, [2019] Full Article
inform Frontiers and advances in positive learning in the age of InformaTiOn (PLATO) [Electronic book] / Olga Zlatkin-Troitschanskaia, editor. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, c2019. Full Article
inform Democracy without journalism? : confronting the misinformation society [Electronic book] / Victor Pickard. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, 2019. Full Article
inform Business Information Systems Workshops [Electronic book] : BIS 2019 International Workshops, Seville, Spain, June 26-28, 2019, Revised Papers / Witold Abramowicz, Rafael Corchuelo (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2020. Full Article
inform Business Information Systems Workshops [Electronic book] / Abramowicz. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: [Place of publication not identified] Springer International Publishing, 2017. Full Article
inform Brain Informatics [Electronic book] : 12th International Conference, BI 2019, Haikou, China, December 13-15, 2019, Proceedings / Peipeng Liang, Vinod Goel, Chunlei Shan (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2020. Full Article
inform Analyzing time interval data : introducing an information system for time interval data analysis [Electronic book] / Philipp Meisen. By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Wiesbaden : Springer Vieweg, [2016] Full Article
inform Advanced hybrid information processing : Third EAI International Conference, ADHIP 2019, Nanjing, China, September 21-22, 2019, proceedings. Part II [Electronic book] / Guan Gui, Lin Yun (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham, Switzerland : Springer, [2019] Full Article
inform Advanced Hybrid Information Processing [Electronic book] : Third EAI International Conference, ADHIP 2019, Nanjing, China, September 21-22, 2019, Proceedings. Part I / Guan Gui, Lin Yun (eds.). By encore.st-andrews.ac.uk Published On :: Cham : Springer, 2019. Full Article
inform Black hole information and thermodynamics / Dieter Lüst, Ward Vleeshouwers By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 24 Feb 2019 13:08:03 EST Online Resource Full Article
inform Criteria for selecting the Leading Health Indicators for Healthy People 2030 / Committee on Informing the Selection of Leading Health Indicators for Healthy People 2030, Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice, Health and Medicine Division By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 29 Mar 2020 06:39:15 EDT Online Resource Full Article
inform Everyday Information Architecture: Auditing for Structure By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-04-18T12:45:30+00:00 Just as we need to understand our content before we can recategorize it, we need to understand the system before we try to rebuild it. Enter the structural audit: a review of the site focused solely on its menus, links, flows, and hierarchies. I know you thought we were done with audits back in Chapter 2, but hear me out! Structural audits have an important and singular purpose: to help us build a new sitemap. This isn’t about recreating the intended sitemap—no, this is about experiencing the site the way users experience it. This audit is meant to track and record the structure of the site as it really works. Setting up the template First, we’re gonna need another spreadsheet. (Look, it is not my fault that spreadsheets are the perfect system for recording audit data. I don’t make the rules.) Because this involves building a spreadsheet from scratch, I keep a “template” at the top of my audit files—rows that I can copy and paste into each new audit (Fig 4.1). It’s a color-coded outline key that helps me track my page hierarchy and my place in the auditing process. When auditing thousands of pages, it’s easy to get dizzyingly lost, particularly when coming back into the sheet after a break; the key helps me stay oriented, no matter how deep the rabbit hole. Fig 4.1: I use a color-coded outline key to record page hierarchy as I move through the audit. Wait, how many circles did Dante write about? Color-coding Color is the easiest, quickest way to convey page depth at a glance. The repetition of black text, white cells, and gray lines can have a numbing effect—too many rows of sameness, and your eyes glaze over. My coloring may result in a spreadsheet that looks like a twee box of macarons, but at least I know, instantly, where I am. The exact colors don’t really matter, but I find that the familiar mental model of a rainbow helps with recognition—the cooler the row color, the deeper into the site I know I must be. The nested rainbow of pages is great when you’re auditing neatly nested pages—but most websites color outside the lines (pun extremely intended) with their structure. I leave my orderly rainbow behind to capture duplicate pages, circular links, external navigation, and other inconsistencies like: On-page navigation. A bright text color denotes pages that are accessible via links within page content—not through the navigation. These pages are critical to site structure but are easily overlooked. Not every page needs to be displayed in the navigation menus, of course—news articles are a perfect example—but sometimes this indicates publishing errors. External links. These are navigation links that go to pages outside the domain. They might be social media pages, or even sites held by the same company—but if the domain isn’t the one I’m auditing, I don’t need to follow it. I do need to note its existence in my spreadsheet, so I color the text as the red flag that it is. (As a general rule, I steer clients away from placing external links in navigation, in order to maintain a consistent experience. If there’s a need to send users offsite, I’ll suggest using a contextual, on-page link.)Files. This mostly refers to PDFs, but can include Word files, slide decks, or anything else that requires downloading. As with external links, I want to capture anything that might disrupt the in-site browsing experience. (My audits usually filter out PDFs, but for organizations that overuse them, I’ll audit them separately to show how much “website” content is locked inside.) Unknown hierarchy. Every once in a while, there’s a page that doesn’t seem to belong anywhere—maybe it’s missing from the menu, while its URL suggests it belongs in one section and its navigation scheme suggests another. These pages need to be discussed with their owners to determine whether the content needs to be considered in the new site.Crosslinks. These are navigation links for pages that canonically live in a different section of the site—in other words, they’re duplicates. This often happens in footer navigation, which may repeat the main navigation or surface links to deeper-but-important pages (like a Contact page or a privacy policy). I don’t want to record the same information about the page twice, but I do need to know where the crosslink is, so I can track different paths to the content. I color these cells gray so they don’t draw my attention. Note that coloring every row (and indenting, as you’ll see in a moment) can be a tedious process—unless you rely on Excel’s formatting brush. That tool applies all the right styles in just two quick clicks. Outlines and page IDs Color-coding is half of my template; the other half is the outline, which is how I keep track of the structure itself. (No big deal, just the entire point of the spreadsheet.) Every page in the site gets assigned an ID. You are assigning this number; it doesn’t correspond to anything but your own perception of the navigation. This number does three things for you: It associates pages with their place in the site hierarchy. Decimals indicate levels, so the page ID can be decoded as the page’s place in the system.It gives each page a unique identifier, so you can easily refer to a particular page—saying “2.4.1” is much clearer than “you know that one page in the fourth product category?”You can keep using the ID in other contexts, like your sitemap. Then, later, when your team decides to wireframe pages 1.1.1 and 7.0, you’ll all be working from the same understanding. Let me be completely honest: things might get goofy sometimes with the decimal outline. There will come a day when you’ll find yourself casually typing out “1.2.1.2.1.1.1,” and at that moment, a fellow auditor somewhere in the universe will ring a tiny gong for you. In addition to the IDs, I indent each level, which reinforces both the numbers and the colors. Each level down—each digit in the ID, each change in color—gets one indentation. I identify top-level pages with a single number: 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, etc. The next page level in the first section would be 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, and so on. I mark the homepage as 0.0, which is mildly controversial—the homepage is technically a level above—but, look: I’ve got a lot of numbers to write, and I don’t need those numbers to tell me they’re under the homepage, so this is my system. Feel free to use the numbering system that work best for you. Criteria and columns So we’ve got some secret codes for tracking hierarchy and depth, but what about other structural criteria? What are our spreadsheet columns (Fig 4.2)? In addition to a column for Page ID, here’s what I cover: URL. I don’t consistently fill out this column, because I already collected this data back in my automated audit. I include it every twenty entries or so (and on crosslinks or pages with unknown hierarchy) as another way of tracking progress, and as a direct link into the site itself. Menu label/link. I include this column only if I notice a lot of mismatches between links, labels, and page names. Perfect agreement isn’t required; but frequent, significant differences between the language that leads to a page and the language on the page itself may indicate inconsistencies in editorial approach or backend structures. Name/headline. Think of this as “what does the page owner call it?” It may be the H1, or an H2; it may match the link that brought you here, or the page title in the browser, or it may not. Page title. This is for the name of the page in the metadata. Again, I don’t use this in every audit—particularly if the site uses the same long, branded metadata title for every single page—but frequent mismatches can be useful to track.Section. While the template can indicate your level, it can’t tell you which area of the site you’re in—unless you write it down. (This may differ from the section data you applied to your automated audit, taken from the URL structure; here, you’re noting the section where the page appears.)Notes. Finally, I keep a column to note specific challenges, and to track patterns I’m seeing across multiple pages—things like “Different template, missing subnav” or “Only visible from previous page.” My only caution here is that if you’re planning to share this audit with another person, make sure your notes are—ahem—professional. Unless you enjoy anxiously combing through hundreds of entries to revise comments like “Wow haha nope” (not that I would know anything about that). Fig 4.2: A semi-complete structural audit. This view shows a lot of second- and third-level pages, as well as pages accessed through on-page navigation. Depending on your project needs, there may be other columns, too. If, in addition to using this spreadsheet for your new sitemap, you want to use it in migration planning or template mapping, you may want columns for new URLs, or template types. You can get your own copy of my template as a downloadable Excel file. Feel free to tweak it to suit your style and needs; I know I always do. As long as your spreadsheet helps you understand the hierarchy and structure of your website, you’re good to go. Gathering data Setting up the template is one thing—actually filling it out is, admittedly, another. So how do we go from a shiny, new, naive spreadsheet to a complete, jaded, seen-some-stuff spreadsheet? I always liked Erin Kissane’s description of the process, from The Elements of Content Strategy: Big inventories involve a lot of black coffee, a few late nights, and a playlist of questionable but cheering music prominently featuring the soundtrack of object-collecting video game Katamari Damacy. It takes quite a while to exhaustively inventory a large site, but it’s the only way to really understand what you have to work with. We’re not talking about the same kind of exhaustive inventory she was describing (though I am recommending Katamari music). But even our less intensive approach is going to require your butt in a seat, your eyes on a screen, and a certain amount of patience and focus. You’re about to walk, with your fingers, through most of a website. Start on the homepage. (We know that not all users start there, but we’ve got to have some kind of order to this process or we’ll never get through it.) Explore the main navigation before moving on to secondary navigation structures. Move left to right, top to bottom (assuming that is your language direction) over each page, looking for the links. You want to record every page you can reasonably access on the site, noting navigational and structural considerations as you go. My advice as you work: Use two monitors. I struggle immensely without two screens in this process, which involves constantly switching between spreadsheet and browser in rapid, tennis-match-like succession. If you don’t have access to multiple monitors, find whatever way is easiest for you to quickly flip between applications.Record what you see. I generally note all visible menu links at the same level, then exhaust one section at a time. Sometimes this means I have to adjust what I initially observed, or backtrack to pages I missed earlier. You might prefer to record all data across a level before going deeper, and that would work, too. Just be consistent to minimize missed links.Be alert to inconsistencies. On-page links, external links, and crosslinks can tell you a lot about the structure of the site, but they’re easy to overlook. Missed on-page links mean missed content; missed crosslinks mean duplicate work. (Note: the further you get into the site, the more you’ll start seeing crosslinks, given all the pages you’ve already recorded.) Stick to what’s structurally relevant. A single file that’s not part of a larger pattern of file use is not going to change your understanding of the structure. Neither is recording every single blog post, quarterly newsletter, or news story in the archive. For content that’s dynamic, repeatable, and plentiful, I use an x in the page ID to denote more of the same. For example, a news archive with a page ID of 2.8 might show just one entry beneath it as 2.8.x; I don’t need to record every page up to 2.8.791 to understand that there are 791 articles on the site (assuming I noted that fact in an earlier content review). Save. Save frequently. I cannot even begin to speak of the unfathomable heartbreak that is Microsoft Excel burning an unsaved audit to the ground. Knowing which links to follow, which to record, and how best to untangle structural confusion—that improves with time and experience. Performing structural audits will not only teach you about your current site, but will help you develop fluency in systems thinking—a boon when it comes time to document the new site. Full Article
inform Applied economic analysis of information and risk Moriki Hosoe, Iltae Kim By library.mit.edu Published On :: Sun, 26 Apr 2020 09:04:30 EDT Online Resource Full Article
inform Security Information and Event Manager System By Published On :: Security Information and Event Manager System Full Article
inform Renewable power : a case study into selected renewable energy sectors in Australia for the inquiry into developing Australia's non-fossil fuel energy industry : background information : interim report / House of Representatives, Standing Committee on By prospero.murdoch.edu.au Published On :: Australia. Parliament. House of Representatives. Standing Committee on Industry and Resources Full Article