Davison@UH.EDU (Dan Davison) (06/12/91)
This is a repost from BIONEWS that will be of interest to Bio-Matrix'ers. dan Date: Mon, 10 Jun 91 00:26:48 EDT From: Sue Anderson <aq941@cleveland.Freenet.EDU> Subject: Help "Save the Infosphere" ?? Sender: EDTECH - Educational Technology <EDTECH@OHSTVMA.BITNET> This summer and fall, the National Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN), a nonprofit public computer network headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, will be working on it's first annual "Infosphere Report" -- a research project which will attempt to assess the nation's health with regard to information age issues. We are defining the infosphere as: the technical and organizational environment in which the general public can access computer-mediated communication and information resources. The central idea is to conduct an on-going study similar to those conducted in areas such as economics, population growth and the environment, with reports appearing every year. The data will be cumulative, comparative, and prescriptive. That is, it is expected that over-time a portrait will emerge which will describe this nation's progress as it enters an information age. It will show where we are doing well, where we are doing poorly, and where more emphasis is needed. One of the trickiest parts of doing a study like this is trying to figure out what the critical variables are when measuring something like the "infosphere." If you are measuring the health of the environment, you can measure the presence of various chemicals in the air, water, or soil. But how do you measure the health of our informational environment? We have some ideas about what information should be included. We might, for example, be interested in finding out how many homes, schools, and libraries have computers and modems; how many libraries allow modem and/or internet access to their computerized card catalogues; and how many government agencies allow modem and/or internet access to their informational resources. We want more ideas. So we are actively soliciting the computer networks and telecomputing community to be a part of this effort. If you have any thoughts on how the infosphere might best be assessed-- what kind of variables we should be looking at--we'd appreciate your input. All suggestion are valued. Suggestions which also tell us where we might go to actually FIND that information are cherished! Please send your suggestions to: Sue Anderson, M.Ed., NPTN - Infosphere Project aq941@cleveland.freenet.edu or Tom Grundner, Ed.D., NPTN - President aa001@cleveland.freenet.edu Please also feel free to re-post this message where ever you think appropriate. -- dr. dan davison/dept. of biochemical and biophysical sciences/univ. of Houston/4800 Calhoun/Houston,TX 77204-5934/davison@uh.edu/DAVISON@UHOU Disclaimer: As always, I speak only for myself, and, usually, only to myself.