Saturday 15 December 2007

It's the Web Treasure Hunt Quiz!

This quiz is designed to give you an excuse to revisit some of the year's posts on this blog, and the websites we have featured from our Gateway to websites. Westminster Libraries staff receive this by email, with an incentive in the form of chocolate as prizes. No chocs on the blog, unfortunately, but we hope you will find it a bit of fun.

Big hint: each question contains keywords (or suggests keywords) which will go quite nicely into the search box at the top of this page. Of course, if you prefer to scan each post, that's OK too!

The questions


  1. How did Lady Chatterley go on the record this year?

  2. Is it a bird? Is it a plane? What on earth (or rather, what on the Web) is Zoho?

  3. I urgently need a recipe to use up some pork and… let me see – oh yes, a few apples. Who can help me?

  4. I’ve quite forgotten where we buried Auntie Nellie. Any suggestions? (The website will suffice – I don’t insist that you track her down personally.)

  5. I’m sure the CIA are a blessing to the whole free world, but where will they give me just the facts?

  6. OK, I should be able to cook a turkey by now, but which nice lady will give me some tips?

  7. I have a rather old-fashioned CV – six pages including all my hobbies! Who can help me bring it up to date and down to 2 sides of A4?

  8. Can I get some right royal advice on whipping up a great window-box?

  9. What posthumous achievement has distinguished Adam Faith this year?

  10. What can I do with all this rennet?
The answers will be posted after 4 January. Good hunting!

Friday 7 December 2007

When you meet a spider

Advice comes at us from all quarters, much of it unwelcome, irrelevant or with strings attached. The two websites we feature this week are both well-aimed at particular age groups and, having picked their targets, get down to business fast.

Real life

Age Concern has got really wizzy. Their website’s home page is a model of simplicity – news and featured topics in the middle of the page, and a straightforward menu on the left hand side, leading to information and advice, more news, chatty articles about the real life of older people, and so on.

The top feature when I looked was entitled "Keep warm: Winter guide". Unlike the stuff on some official websites, which express pious hopes about people’s welfare and generally patronise us all, Age Concern’s approach is purely practical. Eight sections cover everything from getting help with heating costs to making sure you don’t swap one problem, being cold, for another – burning the house down.

The fun stuff is also good. I enjoyed the article about whether grandparents or grandchildren were more squeamish when it came to dealing with a bee or a spider in your home. Arachnophobes like me might sympathise more with the kids.

Take a good look round: this is a big site with lots to see.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Oldies online". Age Concern is under "Advice & practical help". Or you can select "Family & personal", and then "Retirement & older people". )

Like it is

The entry on the Gateway describes The Site as "no-holds-barred advice and help for 16-24 year olds". Now that’s the sort of "aren’t I cool and trendy?" tag you see attached to rather too many websites aimed at "yoof". Does this one justify our description?

As far as this greybeard can tell, it does. Sex, drugs, work and leisure – all are covered with admirable directness. There is none of that sniggering approach which leaves you confused about whether it’s smart or not to take drugs or try getting off with everyone you fancy at work. They point out the snags and leave the reader to make a decision. What more can a website do?

Actually, they do do a bit more. They have some lively discussion boards, which seem to me genuinely to carry forward the basic information on the site. I wouldn’t presume to advise younger people, but I would with a clear conscience point them towards The Site.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Advice & help". The Site is a Key Link.)

Picture credit: d3f/morguefile.com

Friday 30 November 2007

Daily doors and funny food

As Christmas approaches, we at WTH Towers are busy darning our biggest stockings (in case anything falls out on Christmas morning). Some of us tend to be a bit humbuggy about the whole thing, so I’ve found some websites to get us all in the mood – including food, which always works.

Don’t wait up


Advent Calendars press the right buttons: they are in synch with the season, they have an air of mystery (as you wait to open the next door), and they surprise and delight us anew every 24 hours. How poetic!

The
Westminster Libraries Advent Calendar has all these elements in spades. Colourful numbers are there already but, frustrating us deliciously, each number becomes a clickable link only at midnight on the relevant day.

Now I don’t want you getting in trouble with your mummies by staying awake until midnight every night. The morning will be time enough to discover the calendar’s daily delights, ranging from seasonal recipes to some very odd wintery customs (you’ll just have to wait to find out what they are).
It would be surprising if we had nothing to say about Christmas books. We have two other special pages on the Westminster Libraries website, one with
favourite festive books for adults, and one with great Christmas books for children. Having had nothing to do with the choosing, I can say that they are both impressive lists – not just the usual suspects, although you will no doubt find some old favourites among the many new surprises.

Tiny Tim is there of course, but he is in company with Hercule Poirot, the inhabitants of discworld, and a navigationally-challenged wise man. If I were you I’d pop down to the library right now, and when you get back you’ll be ready for something to eat [cue next item].

Pork and apricots, anybody?


I don’t cook. I tried it once, but I didn’t really get on with it. So I eat out or stuff the microwave. But if you do cook, and if you accumulate odd combinations of leftover food, Recipe search can help.

It’s not just there to help you clear out your fridge. This web page, from Sainsbury’s, contains thousands of recipes for all occasions (sorry – a stray cliché got in there). The clever bit is that you can choose by course, cooking time, type of cooking, and several more options. And the really, really clever bit is that you can pile up your odds and ends of food on the kitchen table, bung them into the Recipe Search search box and, with a bit of luck, up will pop a dream meal.

Recipe search is just part of a much bigger website with ideas from the company, ideas from other users, advice on special diets, and a booze guide. Of course they would rather like you to go and buy all the food and drink from Sainsbury’s, but the commercial aspect is not oppressive, and the recipes work even if you buy the stuff elsewhere. Naturally I have not personally checked out the accuracy of the last statement – that would require me to cook!

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Home & Garden". Recipe search is under "Food & drink".)





Picture credit: kakisky/morguefile.com

Monday 19 November 2007

Ken shows us round

Now that Ken Livingstone’s transport empire has been extended to take in "The Overground", it seems like a good idea to revisit the Transport for London (TfL) website, and in particular the Journey Planner.

An onscreen leaflet rack

You can still get maps and leaflets at tube stations about routes, fares, this and that. But the most reliable source of this information is the TfL website.

Underground, buses, river boats, trams, DLR – all these and more are covered in great detail. Taxis and minicabs are included, with details of the "Get home safely" scheme (you text a given number and they text you back the numbers of one taxi firm and two licensed minicab companies).

If you prefer to cycle, or you are interested in that other eccentric activity, walking, there is lots of help and advice. And if you have an Oyster Card, there are special money-off offers. I’m getting my nails done with 20% off – maybe I won’t chew them when they are bright pink with inset rhinestones!

So – lots of lovely info, and then there’s the Journey Planner…

(From the
Gateway to websites, select "Transport & tourism". Transport for London is a Key Link.)

The wheels on the bus go round and round (almost)

The TfL Journey Planner makes you purr with satisfaction. It’s just so good! Calm down, David, and tell the nice people why it’s so good.

Where are you, and where do you want to be? – as long as you know that, the Journey Planner will do the rest. You can specify a station, an address (or postcode) or a place of interest. If you do a simple search, it will find you the fastest journeys by any means of transport. But if you only want bus journeys, or you want to walk, just uncheck all the boxes you wish to exclude, and it will work with what you leave it.

If you like the look of one of the offered journeys, you can click to see the detailed breakdown of the journey. Then you can obtain PDF maps of the start, the finish and any interchange. Or – and this is when the fun starts – you can select an interactive map. What pops up is an ordinary-looking map of the start of your journey. But look for the "Wizard" box in the corner, click it and – wheee! – a tube symbol or a little bus (or whatever is appropriate) goes on the journey in front of your very eyes. Talk about bells and whistles!

You can edit your search, check for real-time information on any delays, and find out what the fare will be. And more and more and more.

Go exporing. You’ll have a ball.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Transport & tourism". Journey Planner is a Key Link.)
Picture credit: mantasmagorical/morguefile.com

Friday 16 November 2007

No experience required

Some people just go out and get a job; many more of us need a bit of help. Here are some online suggestions and an offline oasis…

Beginners please


If you are new in London, maybe with not many qualifications, or you are returning to work after taking time out, it can be difficult to find a job. This is where Fuse Jobs may be able to help. They specialise in "entry level" jobs.


Fuse Jobs is not a charity; it’s a limited company and it presumably makes money out of the website. So just bear that in mind. Apparently two people with experience in recruitment and training set up the site because they thought that more could be done to help people into work, and to help employment advisers. They don’t say so in so many words, but I guess the message is that most agencies and websites prefer you already to be in work – it’s simpler for them.

I tried to find a secretarial job in the public sector (don’t worry – I won’t be applying). I got a list of 94 vacancies, not all of which were really "entry level", so a bit more sifting would be nice. But enough of them were at the right level to encourage me if I were job-hunting. I asked for more details of one, and was linked through to a specialist employment agency (it was a medical job).

There is advice on things like writing a CV and preparing for interviews, and a "skills match" service is promised soon. Fuse Jobs I probably not the answer to every job-searcher’s quest, but well worth a look.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Education & jobs". Fuse Jobs is under "Jobs & careers".)

Browsers welcome

After mentioning a jobs website, I thought I would desert cyberspace and remind you about the Education & Careers collection at Marylebone Information Service. This is – shock! horror! – books and other printed material collected over many years but (I hasten to add) constantly updated.

As well as directories of schools, colleges and universities, there are prospectuses for individual institutions, guides to international study, and books giving tips on all aspects of getting a job. Then there are the Red Boxes.

The Red Boxes contain advice on many different categories of career. In front of me now is Box E: Fashion & Beauty. It’s full of books and pamphlets, some so specialised and thin that they would get lost if they were shelved individually.
A dear little book on modelling tells me that I might get to be famous, but that it can be a rewarding career even if I don’t reach the super-league. That’s reassuring, isn’t it? I must say immediately that it packs a huge amount of practical information into 36 pages, with "I never thought of that" stuff like the advantages of speaking a second language if you want to do modelling abroad.

A lot of this can be found online, and the Gateway to websites’ "Education and careers" category has a range of sources, but a trip to Marylebone will provide a good complement.

(Marylebone’s Education & Careers collection has its own page with
many more details.)


Picture credit: mantasmagorical/morguefile.com

Friday 9 November 2007

Everything's green except the cheese

Now I’m as green as the next man… as long as he’s not too green. But it’s all very well paying lip service to conservation – politicians show us the way. What about a practical approach?

A net benefit for nature

The "about" blurb for Naturenet includes the following: "Naturenet is a voluntary enterprise to provide a good online resource for practical nature conservation and countryside management." The website was started by the Isle of Wight’s countryside manager, for the very good reason that he couldn’t find anything already doing the job. But is there anything in it for the rest of us?

I had a look at the information about rights of way. I rather expected some general stuff about keeping clear of cows, together with large chunks of legalese. But no: they’ve written and published here articles about the subject in plain English. Whatever next?!

It’s the same with the greener bits. They don’t just tell you that it’s a good idea to plant a tree or a hedge on your bit of land, they tell you what would work best and how to go about it. Their blog is even funnier than this one (I particularly liked the bit about a Talking Heads album being all about the Town & Country Planning Acts – that had never occurred to me before. Just in case you don’t believe it, a YouTube extract is included).

If you want to be preached at about conservation, I can recommend some very worthy official utterances. If you want an approach which is down-to-earth and fun, Naturenet is for you.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Science". Naturenet is a Key Link.)

It’s not rocket science (actually it is, sometimes).

Because the Gateway’s "Science" category was getting a bit top heavy with Key Links, How Products Are Made has been moved to "Engineering", but this is not intended as a slight on what remains a great source of information.
Mind you, first impressions are not encouraging. A list of volumes 1 to 7 doesn’t give much away. And using the search box often takes you to a rather bewildering list of articles, some but not all of which are from this website. But be a bit persistent – it’s worth it.

I tried cheese. "How cheese is made" was first in the hit list, linking to an incredibly detailed rundown on the cheese making process, with diagrams, a reading list, and even some tempting adverts. Since I assume that the ads probably pay for the other stuff, I didn’t mind them, and they didn’t flash or pop or anything like that.

Now, where did I put my rennet?

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Science". How Products Are Made is under "Engineering".)


Picture credit: Herbert Hoskins/Juicy Orange

Thursday 1 November 2007

Gone with the fairies

Let’s face it: if you work in a library, you’re likely to get asked questions about other libraries. You could just gasp in amazement that anyone could wish for more than the treasures immediately around them, or you could read on…

What’s out there, Tink?

I know I’m easy to impress, but I still think What’s in London Libraries is a little bit of magic, a sort of Tinkerbell of the libraries, flitting around London and finding us the books we need.

If all that tosh doesn’t put you off, the first impression of the site is not very magical. You get a welcome, and you can click to search across London. Then it starts to get clunky. You have select "public library catalogues" and click" next", then click on "full list", then click on "select all" and "search".

Only after all that faff can you do a book search and start the magic: before your very eyes, the page whirrs and clicks as the catalogues are given a good shake. Out pop the hits, and you can then click through for more details of where the books are.

OK, it’s not perfect. There are always a few catalogues which are "temporarily unavailable" (only three when I last tried), and as with all catalogue searches what you end up with is a series of allegations that the books (or other items) are where the catalogues say they are. But you should be able to get enough information to check by phone and, if you belong to the relevant library, you can often reserve the book online.

I’m not sure that I really believe in fairies (gasp!), but this bit of cyber-magic has me hooked.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Libraries". What’s in London Libraries is just under London Libraries in the Key Links.)

Superheroes of simplicity

Sometimes you just need an efficient A to Z list. Some A to Zs, of course, make life more rather than less complicated (I name no names), but UK Public Libraries is great.

It’s put together by a couple called Sheila and Robert Harden. I checked up on them – it seems that they are legends in their own lifetimes, pioneers in enabling libraries to get the most out of the Internet and in persuading public library services to co-operate (not something which came very easily to most of them!).

UK Public Libraries is not snazzy, but it works. It provides links to each library service’s home page, its online catalogue if it has one and, in a few cases, to a source of local images.

If you need to know which library service covers a particular place, there is a link to a gazetteer. There are other links, and they give gold stars to the library websites which they find especially attractive. But mostly it starts at A and goes through to Z (Y actually) with a clear, unambiguous list. How often do you see that? Thank you, Hardens!

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Libraries". UK Public Libraries is a Key Link.)
Picture credit: somadjinn/morguefile.com

Thursday 25 October 2007

Instead of a scare

"A good scare is worth more than good advice": so goes the proverb. Well, if you need or want a good scare, Halloween is just around the corner, but if you seek advice, read on…

No appointment necessary

Getting face-to-face help from Citizens Advice Bureaux can be an uphill task these days, There aren’t so many of them around, and the ones which are left struggle to cope with the demand. Online assistance is not always an adequate substitute, but it can help if it’s good. Luckily, CAB Adviceguide is good.

The approach is practical and as straightforward as it can be, given the complexity of some of the problems people face. On debt, for instance, the Adviceguide helps you to examine your current position and then move towards possible solutions. Helpfully, the Frequently Asked Questions really are the ones which must often be asked by people with debt-related problems.

This website is not all about miserable things. The section about travel could, if you approach it negatively, simply put you off going anywhere. But just follow a few helpful tips and you will probably have a much nicer time when you eventually dip your toes in the Med. No advice, though, on what to wear – some things you have to do yourself.

The site is packed with good stuff, and is frequently updated. Well worth a look.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Advice & help". CAB Adviceguide is a Key Link.)

This is your life


Talking of advice, there is a great source of it which doesn’t necessarily spring to mind – this is KnowUK, one of the Westminster Subscription websites. It has lots of directories, but it also has things like Which? Guides and other information on all aspects of life (and death).

The easiest way in to this is to select an option called "Life Events" from the KnowUK home page. From before birth to after death, our lives are covered in extraordinary detail. About the only advice I couldn’t find for those about to be married is Punch’s: "Don’t"!

Many of the links are to other KnowUK pages, but there are outside links too – I spotted one to the BBC, one to the Citizens Advice Bureau (see above) and one to the Government, which is always ready with advice. KnowUK is a hidden gem which deserves to be widely admired (he opines, rather pompously).

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Advice & help". KnowUK is a Key Link.)

Picture credit: Darnok/morguefile.com

Wednesday 17 October 2007

Anything but Jeffrey Archer!

You know how it is: you’ve enjoyed a book, you didn’t really want it to end, and you’d like to read another one just like it. Or… you struggled through that brick-sized saga with a gruelling plot and not many jokes, and all you want now is a bit of light relief. Help is at hand

Larger than life ... or down to earth?


Whichbook is a bit of fun, really infuriating, jolly useful or a waste of bandwidth, depending on how you approach it. The "about" says that "Whichbook gives readers an enjoyable and intuitive way to find books to match their mood."

I think its real task is to provoke you into thinking about what you actually want to read, whether or not it’s on their suggestions list.

The way it works is that you select any four of twelve bars which have opposing attributes on them. So you can use the "happy-sad" bar by clicking "happy" or "sad", and so on. It isn’t made very clear, but after four it stops accepting your clicks – you have to start the search at this point.

I asked it to find me a happy, unpredictable, short book with a bit of sex in it. The eight suggestions included novels, poetry and a book of short stories. Along with reader reviews, there was a feature which should have been really clever, but wasn’t quite.

By hitting a button marked "Borrow", you should be taken to the catalogue of the library service of your choice, to check whether they’ve got the book. Somewhere along the line, I got a "page cannot be displayed" message rather than the Westminster catalogue. I’m sure it’s just a temporary blip.

(From the
Gateway to websites, select "Books". Whichbook is under "Choosing books".)

Testing trivia


As you will know by now, we at Treasure Hunt Towers tend to be intensely serious about more or less everything, including books and literature. But we recognise that not everyone can reach our high standards of seriousness, so here’s something completely trivial.

FunTrivia Literature has quizzes on every aspect of the written word. Novels, poetry, plays, sci fi and manga – all these and lots more are given the pop quiz treatment. Some of them are ridiculously easy and some are really quite hard.

They warn you about the level of difficulty, and the joy of this site is that you can always pick the book you read last or have engraved on your brain from A-levels, to make sure you get a good score.

Modesty forbids me from revealing the rather good score I achieved on The Importance of Being Earnest, and shame prevents me telling you just how much I’ve forgotten about The Tempest.

Good fun, though.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Books". FunTrivia Literature is under "Fun stuff".)

Tuesday 9 October 2007

Take your partner... and relax

Steps in the right direction

It’s a funny profession, dance. You train for years, continue to work out every day, and then deliberately pursue an activity with a high probability of causing you physical discomfort or injury, often getting paid about the same as an unskilled fruit-picker.

Of course it’s voluntary, so we shouldn’t shed too many tears. But it’s good to see that there is now a website, Dance UK, which aims to help dancers with information and support.


The promoter of the site is also called Dance UK – this is a membership organisation which lobbies for better conditions and funding for dancers. But you don’t get on to the Gateway just by sticking up for a good cause; you have to offer information on the website itself and, preferably, link to other information sources.


Dance UK has information on how dancers can stay healthy, with lists of speakers on the subject, advanced details of conferences and other events, and even an ultra-healthy recipe of the month. This is just one example; there is news and information on other subjects of interest to dancers.


For some things you have to register, but this is free and appears to be uncomplicated. Now I must make a start at knocking up my wholemeal couscous salad…

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Stage & screen". Dance UK is, not very surprisingly, under "Dance".)

There’s nothing on… is there?

If all that talk of dancing has made you all weak at the knees, perhaps you should curl up on the sofa with the Radio Times. Of course you can still go down to the newsagent and buy the print version, but I find that the website gives me all I need. And recent improvements have smoothed out the process of finding something to watch.

This is another website which works better for you if you register, and again it’s free to do so. You can build a list of your favourite channels and then, whenever you log in, the list is displayed with a choice of what’s on now, later in the day, or for up to two weeks in advance. Click on a listing for further details and viewer ratings.


But there’s much more to Radio Times than just telly. Apart from radio, they also have oodles of stuff on films, whether on TV or in the cinemas, competitions, news and gossip. The only thing they don’t seem to have is those wonderful black-and-white line drawings of your favourite characters. What? – the print version is also now in colour! Is nothing sacred?


(From the Gateway to websites, select "Stage & screen". Radio Times is under "TV & radio".)

Picture credit: Babzy/morguefile.com

Friday 28 September 2007

Shall we walk or take a ride?

Whether you want to get about London under your own steam, or take a virtual trip on the Tube, we’ve got the gen.

A walk in agreeable company


If you live in or near London and want to know more about the history of the bits you don’t usually visit, or even the bits you do, then we have the answer: go for a walk with a nice chap talking into your ear. If someone asks you about reliable guides who don’t shout and hold umbrellas in the air, let them in on the same secret.


If you download a Free Walks in London podcast to your MP3 player or iPod, it will be like arranging with a knowledgeable but slightly hesitant chum to go for a walk with you. I listened to the first few minutes of a couple of the walks, and I liked what I heard.

The Docklands one starts in Shadwell tube station, where there is some building work going on. Consequently the friendly chap doing the chat has to compete with a lot of crashing and banging. There are some pauses while he checks his notes to tell us exactly how to get to Shadwell. Still, it makes it wonderfully "authentic", and once he gets into his stride, I feel that I am in good hands.

Each walk has a written introduction, which sets the mood for the walk to come. There are walks all over London, from Bayswater to Clerkenwell, from Regents Park to Bergen. Bergen? Surely that’s in Norway? It is, but apparently he just popped it in because "it was too good to miss". Rather endearing, I thought, and a bit daft. But it’s still a great site.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "London". Free Walks in London is under "Tourism, travel and facilities".)


Where does that line really go?


While we’re in London, have a look (just above the Free Walks in London entry on the Gateway) at the Interactive Tube Map. This is not a Transport for London offering. It’s not clear who exactly does promote it, but it uses Google mapping to show the Tube lines in their proper, geographical position. It’s informative and great fun.


You can view the Tube lines superimposed on a street plan of London, or swap that for a satellite view or – a bit confusing, this – a hybrid view with Tube + street plan + satellite. The default pointer is the "grab" hand - just left click and drag the map to see the bit you want.

Marvel at how close the Victoria Line goes to the Emirates Stadium. Make the pointer "hover" over a station symbol to find out its name, which lines it’s on, and which busses pass by. Or just follow a line to see where it really goes (switching between views to get the most out of it). Fascinating and, if you’re that way inclined, possibly addictive.


(From the Gateway to websites, select "London". Interactive Tube Map is under "Tourism, travel and facilities".)


Picture: mantasmagorical/morguefile.com

Thursday 20 September 2007

Uncle Sam gets global

There are lots of good jokes about Americans’ somewhat hazy knowledge of world geography (oh go on, you must have heard them), but this week’s featured websites show a rather firmer grasp on foreign affairs.

The view from Capitol Hill ...

The Library of Congress serves both the American government and its people as a repository for all things American - it claims to be the largest library in the World (no surprise there). But you don’t have to be American to use some of their online resources, and one of the best is Portals to the World.
Pick a country, any country - what do you want to know? I chose France, and I was offered links covering everything from the geography of the country to its language and culture, taking in government, media, libraries and lots more on the way.
They even have links to French search engines - particularly useful, as there is a lot of information in French which is (for reasons I’m too polite to mention) not translated into English.
It doesn’t look exciting - no, let’s be fair, it’s a one-note symphony in tedious blueness. But if you’re going somewhere new for your holidays, or just trying to get some facts on a place you’ve never heard of, Portals to the World does the biz.

(From the
Gateway to websites, select "Transport & tourism". Portals to the World is under "Tourism & travel: World".)

... and the view from Spook Central


When you select a country from Portals to the World (described above), one of the links you are offered is to what they coyly refer to as the "World Factbook". Now this is actually an old friend, the splendidly sinister CIA World Factbook. While our own beloved MI5 maintains a website merely as a PR stunt, the American cloak-and-dagger boys (OK, and girls) publish huge quantities of material about the countries they are - presumably - spying on.
The country information is very straightforward, describing the place, its location, its people, its industry and its politics. The historical thumbnail sketches are useful - there isn’t an annoyingly American slant on the information, rather it’s written in the manner of someone taking a polite interest. There is no mention on the France page of cheese eating surrender monkeys!
If it’s all part of a sinister Yankee plot to run the world - and who am I to judge? - all I can say is that glancing through the CIA World Factbook is a jolly good way to pass the time while we wait for the invasion.


(From the Gateway to Websites, select "Government & politics: national and international". CIA World Factbook is under "Worldwide government". Or get in via Portals to the World as above.)


Picture credit: click/morguefile.com

Thursday 13 September 2007

The night of the long titles

We’ve made a few changes to the Gateway to websites. The front page is now (we think) cleaner and crisper, with icons at the bottom linked to related pages. Within several of the category pages there are links to Webtastic, the revised and greatly improved website suggestions for homework.

And when you visit a category page, you will see that all the other categories are listed on the left, so that you can switch between them without going back to the front page every time.
Please let us know if you have any comments or suggestions.

A good look


RNIB Technology Information Sheets doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue as a title, and the page itself doesn’t grip me with its dazzling brilliance. But the actual information is very much to-the-point. For people with sight problems, IT equipment can be daunting. All the online and on-screen stuff that normally-sighted people take for granted these days can be of little or no use unless the equipment can be adapted or demystified.

I looked at "Developing keyboard skills", and it’s good stuff. It starts with a summary of why you would bother - the keyboard is the most reliable and, for some people, the only workable method of inputting information to a computer. Then the available courses are discussed, with price indications and links to suppliers.


All the hardware gubbins you can tack on to a computer to assist you, and all the software you can install to "bend" the machinery to your personal needs, are covered in other information sheets. The emphasis is very much on helping you to help yourself; contact details are included for the RNIB’s Technology Team, so you don’t have to struggle alone.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Computers and the Internet". RNIB Technology Information Sheets are under "Accessibility".)

All the developments


Another snappy title is A History of Photography from its beginnings till the 1920s, but at least it tells you pretty much all you need to know about this website. You can be fairly sure it’s not about moonwalking or the Dead Sea Scrolls!

Robert Leggatt is the author of this site, and he tells us that it's for dipping into rather than being a course of academic study. In rather small type, he deals with the origins of photography, "significant people" (there are quite a lot of these), and the various photographic processes (almost as many of these).


You might spot that - unless I missed them somewhere - there aren’t any actual photographs on the site, but there is a list of places where you can see them.
Take Robert at his word - don’t try reading the lot, or you might just lose the will to live. The website justifies its place in the Gateway because, if you need a quick(ish) rundown on a photographer or a type of photo, you can probably get it here.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Art & design".A History of Photography from its beginnings till the 1920s is under "Photography".)






Picture credit: taliesin/morguefile.com

Friday 7 September 2007

Speak up!

Bienvenue, bébé

Talk To Your Baby "has produced a series of quick tips for parents and practitioners to help children develop good talking and listening skills." I was a bit mystified by the word "practitioners" - what do they practise, and are you allowed to practise on real babies?


However, I understood "parents", and when I am told that "talking to your baby from day one will help the two of you get to know each other, and gives your child a great start in life," I’m willing to accept that getting to know Junior and giving him/her a leg up early in the growing game is a good thing. Talk To Your Baby has all the facts on having a rich conversation with the new arrival.

Starting with saying hello, moving on to playing and sharing books, the website’s advice is contained in PDF factsheets in English and several other languages. If you are a bi-lingual household, there are tips on talking to your baby in your own language.

The factsheet on what to do if you speak one language and baby’s first words are in another language is particularly useful… no, you’re right, I made that bit up. The whole concept of this website, provided by the National Literacy Trust, is ripe for satirical sniggers, but I suspect that raising children is one of those pursuits that seems easy until you’re actually doing it, by which time a few tips are welcome.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Languages". Talk To Your Baby is under "Language learning and teaching".)

Welcome to English

That’s enough baby stuff for one week. What about someone who made it through babyhood, probably in another country, who comes to this country with little English and less confidence to speak it. Can you help?

You can do such a person a real favour by pointing them towards BBC Learning English. I know I’m always banging on about how good the BBC’s specialist web pages are, but they just are. From family history to flower arranging, they’ve got it taped, and for learning English in an enjoyable way, this is the place to start.
Podcasts, cartoons, quizzes and soap operas: all these and more are used to help you practise your vocabulary, your grammar and - particularly important - how to use what you’ve learned in real situations. "Asking for help in emergencies" is illustrated with a picture from Z Cars, but I think the words are a bit more up-to-date!

BBC Learning English is a treasure trove - pass it on.

(From the Gateway to Websites, select "Languages". BBC Learning English is under "English for speakers of other languages" - probably our longest title.)
Pic: mantasmagorical/morguefile.com

Thursday 30 August 2007

Homework and dirty work

Junior gets a makeover

Webtastic is the Gateway to websites’ younger sibling (gender unknown). We’ve had a collection of links to useful homework websites for a long time, but recently a colleague has been beavering away, adding more links, banishing faded ones, and making the pages much (much) brighter – and Webtastic was born!
Ranging from "Art & design" to "Webguides and search engines", the categories are broadly similar to those on the Gateway. But if, for instance, we look at "History", we can see a motley collection of the usual schoolwork suspects – the Ancient Egyptians, The Tudors, and the Victorians.


The Romans are also included, of course – they are billed as BBC Romans, not because they are a bunch of actors kitted out in the Television Centre wardrobe, but because the link is to yet another subject about which the BBC coverage reigns supreme.

The aim of Webtastic is to cover more or less everything on the school curriculum – we’re constantly looking for gaps to fill – but there’s nothing to stop you using these links for college coursework, or just for the pleasure of getting all the dirt on Henry VIII and his spousicidal tendencies (don’t bother checking – I made that word up, then found out that it’s been done before, dash it).


Go directly to Webtastic


Criminal relations

After looking at "History" on Webtastic, I glanced through the same category on the Gateway itself. I was drawn, not for the first time, to a website called Proceedings of the Old Bailey, which is pretty self-explanatory. Various learned bodies have got together to digitise the reports, from 1674 to 1834, of cases before the most famous court in the land.

I’m sure the motives behind the project are serious and scholarly, but that’s no reason why we can’t have fun with it. The best way is to enter your own surname into the search box and see what trouble your forebears got into. There were just four entries for my name, involving two people; each was transported for nicking things (or "simple grand larceny" as it was more picturesquely called at the time).


Then I moved on to colleagues’ names. Well! What a bunch of crooks and ne’er-do-wells. It’s a silly game, of course – after all, they wouldn’t be here unless they were criminals or witnesses to crime. And they might be no relation whatsoever. Good fun, though.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "History". Proceedings of the Old Bailey is under "Local history".)

Picture Credit: ren/morguefile.com

Thursday 23 August 2007

From near to eternity

From the cradle . . .

Have you noticed that schools in Westminster have a disconcerting habit of changing their names? I’m sure they have the best possible motives – they’re probably not doing to just avoid their creditors or to put undesirable pupils off the scent. But it can be confusing.

With this in mind, we thought it might be helpful to put a direct link on to the Gateway. The Gateway’s Westminster Schools entry links to the Council’s summary page for this subject. From there you can find a list of, say, secondary schools, then an individual page for each school with a link to the school’s individual website (except one which does not work yet, for a new academy).

Usefully, there is a "find your nearest" feature, and links to Ofsted reports on schools. If you want to go into the minutiae of admissions policies and applications procedures, things get a bit more complicated. But the basics are simply (and well) presented on the opening page.

(From the Gateway to Websites, select "Education & jobs". Westminster Schools is a Key Link. Ofsted reports are also listed under "Schools".)

. . . to the grave

After all that serious educational stuff, time for a bit of fun. How about a gambol through the gravestones? Not just any old gravestones – let’s find a celebrity grave using Find a Grave. As you would expect, you can search this website by name - rather sweetly, you can look for famous graves or just any old graves.

There are lots of other ways to search. "Claims to fame" include actors (4,131), actresses (only 2,360 – a bit controversial, eh?) and magicians (it says 26 in brackets, but I could only find 14 listed).

Find a Grave was started by a self-confessed nerd living in Salt Lake City. It relies on contributions from individuals, and most of the entries are American. But this is not some sort of sneering criticism. It’s well worth a try, whether you are looking for a particular grave or just celebrity-spotting. And it’s fun.

And if they haven’t got Auntie Nellie listed, the solution is in your hands – send her details in. And if she was a famous bareback rider, all the better.

(From the Gateway to Websites, select "Biography". Find a Grave is, somewhat bizarrely, under "Specialist biographies".)

Wednesday 15 August 2007

News from Turkmenistan (or Teddington)

Whether you prefer to see the newsstand version or the online edition, we can help you find your newspaper.

Hold the front page

I was glancing at the front page of today’s Telegraph just a minute ago. Not our own dear Daily Telegraph – the one I was looking at is published in Calcutta, and I reached its front page using the Newseum. I could have looked at any one of 578 other front pages from around the world.


Useful? After all, the Calcutta Telegraph has a website with all its top news stories and features, and so do most of the other newspapers featured on Newseum. But if you think that a trawl through the front pages gives you a flavour of what’s bugging people in India or Australia or Huntsville, Alabama, then the Newseum is for you.

There is going to be an actual, physical Newseum in Washington DC. You can watch a video of the building going up (don’t bother with any of the other videos on the site: they don’t work). Lots of new and exciting features are promised; we remain to be impressed by these if and when they happen. It’s the nearly 600 front pages that impress us right now.

(From the Gateway to Websites, select "New & mags". Newseum is a Key Link.)


Local woman in house plant horror

Talking of online newspapers, the best bet for tracking them down is called, spookily, Online Newspapers. When I opened the front page, it was dominated by an advert for central heating boilers, with a very dull series of drop-down menus below it. Do not be put off: these will lead you to hundreds and hundreds of newspapers with websites. Look, for instance, under "United Kingdom" (left hand column, third box down) and find "England A to K". Click on that to make virtual visits to Andover, Birkenhead, Congleton and Dewsbury, through the medium of their local rags.

Of course, some newspapers are absolute awful, not worth wrapping chips in. And they don’t suddenly become journalistic swans just because they’re online. If you don’t believe me, just try looking at the [libel lawyers have removed the name - Ed]. So don’t blame me if you drown in a sea of "Weather fails to spoil church fete" stories.

(From the Gateway to Websites, select "New & mags". Online Newspapers is a Key Link.)

Thursday 9 August 2007

Take a tip from June

This week, stretch your legs out and relax in the most helpful household anyone could wish for.

Welcome to June’s house

Hint and things is run by “a plump, old, grey wrinkly living in the south of England” (her words), called June Jackson. There’s a picture on the website showing June and her family, and it sets the tone for the whole edifice. June’s aim is to provide (I quote her again) “some of the information that used to be passed down from generation to generation… basic cooking, knitting, sewing, and gardening terms; advice on cutting costs etc. In fact the things you might ask your mum, dad, gran or grandad.”

The website’s contents are reached by way of a Cluedo-style ground plan of a house - baby toys and bullying in the nursery, bakeware and buying a turkey in the kitchen - but there is also a complete list in case you’re not sure where to find wedding venues (in the living room) or make-up tips (the bathroom).

Spot the wrinkles

I cannot begin to do justice to this site in a few brief paragraphs: it is a vast, sprawling collection of ideas, wrinkles (not just June’s!), opportunities and revelations. Sometimes there are links to shopping opportunities, but only (it seems) if June has decided that the product or service is worthwhile. She runs competitions, and cannily taps into other people’s competitions.

Take a peep through June’s front door - you’ll get a warm welcome, and come away with some useful (and a smattering of useless-but-fun) information.

(From the Gateway to Websites, select “Home & garden”. Hints and things is a Key Link)

Friday 3 August 2007

Fat mag goes cyber

An ugly (or, at least, dull) duckling becomes a dazzling swan. We reflect on its new magnificence.

Watch, join in, eat, shop


Time Out used to be listed on the Gateway with a health warning along the lines of "don’t expect anything like the chubby magazine that rests between the Skinny Latte and the Blackberry on the coffee table of anyone who's in the flow of life in London." The website used to be just a few brief overseas destination guides and not much more. All that has changed.
Time Out still has the destination guides, but there are now 120 of them, all-singing, all-dancing, all anything a reasonable person might want to do in cities from Abu Dhabi to Zurich. Unsurprisingly, the guides vary in depth in proportion to how "happening" the places are. Alghero, a nice enough place but not thrilling, gets very decent coverage of its permanent and passing delights. Barcelona receives the full interactive treatment – pick a date, pick an artform, pick a cuisine or just go shopping.
These guides may not replace the dog-eared book in your handbag or pocket, but they provide a first-rate preview of what to expect at the other end of that bargain-basement flight.


(From the Gateway to Websites, select "Transport & tourism". Time Out is a Key Link.)


Where it’s at (and when)

Time Out London is a constituent part of the Time Out site detailed above, but if you live in London it goes to the heart of the matter. Basically, Time Out London is the listings mag in all its visually confusing, in your face, everything included glory.
However rude I might be about its appearance ("Why does everything have to be so loud?" he moans as he tugs his grey beard) the fact remains that for listings and reviews there never has been anything more all-embracing, and there probably never will.
I came across the London bit when I looked to see what was on at a Curzon cinema. For reviews of the films they are showing, Curzon link straight through to Time Out. Perhaps if the film is really slagged off, they find an alternative link, but I was grateful to be pushed into this wonderous world of events, eating and shopping opportunities to fill every minute of the day.
The New York and Chicago versions are also available, but that’s enough excitement for one Treasure Hunt.


(From the Gateway to Websites, select "London". Time Out London is a Key Link.)

Wednesday 25 July 2007

No need to put your trousers on

We’ve added two new sub-categories to the Computers section of the Gateway to Websites. So I will waffle on about these rather than pick individual sites.

Give us the tools and we’ll conquer the Web


It’s not good enough to surf the Net these days, you have to be interactive. That’s b******s of course – you can have a great time just drifting about the Internet, but using interactive tools can be useful and fun.
Our new sub-category "Online tools" highlights a few of the cyber-gadgets you can use to organise your life, and other people’s lives as well if you manage to get them hooked. Del.icio.us (how stupid to clutter up a perfectly good word with full stops!) is like a set of portable favourites. Once you have set up your own list of links, you can reach it anywhere with Internet access, not just on the machine you asked to "add to favourites".
Birthday Alarm does far more than birthdays. You tell it your important dates (anniversaries, holidays, days in court…) and Birthday Alarm sends you a reminder.
Google tools include calendars and online documents (which you can share with others), and a simple way to set up your own blog (which we used to set up the WTH blog).
As for Zoho, I read an article the other day advocating getting rid of all your Microsoft Office software and keeping your entire electronic office on Zoho. You don’t download anything – you just use their word processor or spreadsheet or presentation tool online. It’s all free, and as with the other tools we’ve mentioned, you can share all your stuff with friends. You can even conduct exams online using Zoho!
Whatever next? Well don’t ask me, I’m reeling from that lot.
(From the Gateway to Websites, select "Computers". The Online Tools link is towards the bottom of the page.)

Where are they now? (in front of a screen)

If you want to find long-lost chums, keep up with the chums you never lost, or make new ones, there’s an online community to help you. We are featuring just a few of these in our "Online communities" sub-category.
Myspace has got a name for enabling kids to pretend they’re being sociable without actually meeting anyone, or even bothering to get dressed. But of course it’s what you make of it. You can keep in touch, arrange to meet, or invite all and sundry to listen to your latest music recording; they can join in or not…
Facebook does a similar job, I read at the weekend that 150,000 people a day are joining up. The mind (mine anyway) boggles.
Friends Reunited is another modern legend. You need to bear in mind that you cannot do very much with it unless you register (which is free), and that to use it to re-establish contact with all the spotty oiks in Year 10, there will come a time when you will have to pay.
Gumtree is a community for some, while for others it is just a place to find a job or a flat or a cheap holiday. It’s vast and sprawling, free to read and cheap to advertise on. It’s the nearest thing I know to the notice board in the corridor with news, immoderate opinions and small ads jostling for space, and a couple having a snog as they lean against the bit you’re trying to read. Happy days…
(From the Gateway to Websites, select "Computers". The Online Communities link is towards the bottom of the page.)

Monday 16 July 2007

A Good Read (and so's this)

I was feeling a bit retro, so I thought I would do books.

Beebooks

It’s great fun to knock the BBC, so don’t let me put you off. But I have to say that their website is more awesome every time I look. Try to name a subject for which they haven’t got an in-depth collection of web pages. It’s not easy. Their books pages are exemplary.

If the first page of BBC Books is a bit crammed – actually it’s very crammed – this is because they’ve got so much content to present. Factual writing, fiction writing, films about writers, DIY poetry, a Dickens game, a feature about Joe Orton… the list goes on and on.

The BBC obviously sees its job as being to stimulate reading and writing rather than to flog particular books, which is refreshing. The clever thing is that they use their own resources – sound recordings, video, interactive programmes – to reinforce the attractions of curling up with a good book.

Of course relevant BBC programmes and campaigns get a good mention, but all emphasis is on helping people to read, to read more adventurously, or to write. An ace website.

(From the Gateway to Websites, select “Books”. BBC Books is a Key Link.)

Put your trust in a book

Booktrust is “an independent national charity that encourages people of all ages and cultures to discover and enjoy reading. The reader is at the heart of everything we do.” Sounds like another good bet for readers? - it certainly is.

They administer prizes for literature, baby books, teenage fiction, women and several more categories. They promote reading by giving out books to babies, appointing a Children’s Laureate (presently mega-bookstar Jacqueline Wilson), running the National Short Story competition, and sending writers into schools.

They could do all those laudable things without having a decent website. But they don’t – they use the site to suggest and review recently-published books, list author events and other news, and provide “best book” guides in different formats.

It’s not the most intuitive site on the web – you have to drift around it a bit to find the nuggets. But it’s well worth the time spent.

(From the Gateway to Websites, select “Books”. Booktrust is a Key Link.)

Monday 9 July 2007

Late arrivals at the Biography Ball

This week a big beast which just keeps getting bigger.

Laydeez ‘n’ gennelmen, please welcome…

What do Geoffrey de Burgh, Roger of Salisbury and John the Chanter have in common. Buzz! --- "Smartypants, Oxbridge" --- "They were all bishops!"
Smartypants is quite right, they were bishops in the 12th and 13th centuries. But their recent claim to fame is that they have just made it into the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Exactly why it took John the Chanter 816 years to receive this accolade, I have no idea. But that’s the way it is with the ODNB – they’re beavering away as I type, preparing the next batch of additions, corrections and essays on themes running through the dictionary.
Don’t run away with the idea that you normally have to wait several centuries to get into the dictionary. You do have to be dead, but not usually for very long. You have to be noteworthy, but not respectable. 202 biographies have already been added of people who died in 2003, including actress Wendy Hiller, singer and share-tipster Adam Faith, and mass-murderer Idi Amin (I told you they didn’t all have to be respectable).

A year in the life

It cost a fortune for the Oxford University Press to prepare a new edition of the Dictionary of National Biography in 2004, and it costs them a pretty penny to keep it up to date. So they are naturally quite keen to get people reading it. Themed articles may not seem like most jazzy way of getting people’s attention, but they are a great way of pulling together the material from the biographies in a readable way. Let’s look, for instance, at the Summer of Love.
40 years after the first release of Sgt Pepper, ODNB have got together with the American National Biography, woven flowers into each other’s hair, and put together a fascinating slice of 60s life. They’re all there – the Mamas & the Papas, Brian Jones, Janis Joplin, Nyree Dawn Porter (in the TV smash hit, The Forsyte Saga), and all the stars of the Monterey Festival. Celebrity deaths included Joe Orton and Brian Epstein.
You can listen to podcasts of George Harrison or Jimi Hendrix, or go to an interactive album cover for Sgt Pepper – move the cursor over each figure in the picture to find out who they are (Karl Marx and Mae West pictured together, who’d have thought it…).
After all that free love and substance-abuse, I was tempted to tell you that the ODNB also has an interesting feature on Prime Ministers, but it occurred to me that perhaps you don’t share my fascination. Ah well.

(From the
Gateway to Websites, select "Biography". The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography is a Key Link. It is a Westminster Libraries Exclusive Resource, which means that you will have to have a Westminster library card to access most the site, although some of the feature articles are freely-available.)

Friday 29 June 2007

Dig up your relatives

Struggling to be friendly

I had to smile when I looked again at the National Archives home page (From the Gateway to websites, select “Family history”; the National Archives are a Key Link). I knew they’d got very cuddly, offering to help you find information rather than just salt it away. But they stick with the sub-heading, "UK government records and information management". Very approachable (not).

But ignore the vestiges of Civil Service-speak, this really is a good place to come if you are trying to find information about your ancestors, or just doing a bit of history. The home page is rather bewildering – there’s so much here. So let’s ignore all the serious stuff for a second and get a fix of scandal. Among the "Latest document releases" is Lady Chatterley's Lover – not the naughty gamekeeper in person, you understand, but documents relating to the prosecution of Penguin Books for publishing the shabby shocker.

The good thing is that they have collected, and now published, a wide selection of documents relating to the case, including press articles and letters that officials would rather you never saw. Anything involving the then Attorney General, Sir Reginald Manningham-Buller, is always good for a laugh.

If you want to see the documents, things get a bit complicated. You have to pretend that you are going to buy them. Other records cost money, so free ones like the Chatterley collection have to be added to a basket as though you were shopping at Amazon. But at the last minute your offer to pay zero pounds is accepted, and the documents are available to download straightaway or within 56 days (the instructions are emailed to you).

Perusing the privates

You will probably have got the message by now that this is not always a website for a quick flip – there is serious stuff here, so if you want to find the golden nugget for your research, you have to pay attention. But they do try to help you organise your thoughts. For instance, click on "British Army". The search screen asks you some basic questions: was the person you are tracking down an officer? When? If he or she was an "other rank", when did they leave the army?

If you don’t know what ranks counted as being officers, a pop-up list will help you. And so it goes on: the searches may be complicated, but there are research guides and explanations to ease the pain.

They suggest that you might find it worthwhile visiting the National Archives – this is code for the fact that not everything is digitised and on the website, although more is being added all the time. Inducements to visit include exhibitions and displays of the Archives’ special treasures.

As for me and Mellors, we're going to repair to the shrubbery for a serious look at this Lady Chatterley stuff. My word, did he really do that? Still, it’s art, so that’s all right…

Wednesday 20 June 2007

Clever stuff (with a bit of help)

Get the facts

There’s a good practical reason for mentioning TechEncyclopedia again. You’ve probably guessed why – when we were discussing blogs and RSS feeds and mysterious things like that, TechEncylopedia was my first port of call for definitions of the technical terms.
Sometimes, when you visit the site, the screen is obliterated by a huge advertisement. Don’t panic: you can either hit the "close" button, or wait a few moments for it to get tired and slink away. It’s worth persisting, just because the site is so useful. They claim to have 20,000 definitions, and I have no reason to doubt it. And here’s the killer argument – usually I understand the definition!
I’m not a "techie", and often I’ve foolishly Googled a new term and ended up more confused than when I started. I should have gone to TechEncyclopedia in the first place.


(From the Gateway to websites, select "Computers". TechEncyclopedia is a Key Link.)


Conquer the Web (Web, Web…)

I’ve admitted to being a "non-techie", but I’m keen to try new things, Having done blogs (rubs hands together, moves on), I thought I might start a website – something tasteful, a place to air ideas and opinions (mostly my own, naturally). EchoEcho will help me on my way to Web domination.
The EchoEcho home page is not drop-dead gorgeous; it’s rather mousy and understated, but it backs up its claim to be "your one stop free help site for all things web related" (phew!) with tutorials, forums, free resources and much more for the budding webmeister.
I looked at the tutorial for learning HTML (the "secret language" behind web pages, telling your computer to make the page a certain colour and make some words bold). I’ve tinkered with HTML, so it wasn’t all new, but it seemed admirably clear and – important this – encouraging.
Far be it from me to encourage you to add to the enormous weight of websites, but if you are determined to have a go, tuck EchoEcho under your arm for protection.

(From the Gateway to websites, select "Computers", then select "Website authoring" from "Other links". Here you will find EchoEcho.)

Friday 15 June 2007

How does yours grow, Mary?

"Ooh, I wouldn’t have planted it there!"

The National Gardens Scheme is a Good Thing. People open their gardens – anything from the poshest estate to a humble cottage flower-bed – and all the money taken at the gate goes to charity. (From the Gateway, select "Home & garden". The National Gardens Scheme is under "Gardening".)
The proceeds from the guide to gardens ("The Yellow Book") also go to charity, and it has lots of gorgeous photos, but if all you want to do is find out what’s open near you, there is a very efficient search box on the website. You can search by name, by county, or by inserting your postcode, how far you want to travel, and when.
Garden visiting is a great pastime on a sunny day. If you don’t have a garden of your own, or you’ve got one but can’t be bothered weeding it, you can enjoy the results of other people’s efforts. And if you are a keen gardener, you can whisper derogatory remarks about how much better your Peaonia Lactiflora is than the one you’re looking at.
Sometimes, you can get a cup of tea and a piece of cake. How civilised.

Get some royal advice

So you’ve been round and sneered at the neighbour’s brassicas, and decided that there’s clearly nothing to this gardening lark – all you need is a bit of advice and encouragement. Why not try the Royal Horticultural Society (from the Gateway, select "Home & garden"; the Royal Horticultural Society is under "Gardening").
If this sounds a bit grand, don’t be put off. Like a lot of similar organisations, the RHS is into inclusiveness in a big way. Their flower shows may be big and their gardens magnificent, but they want as much of the shine as possible to rub off on the proud owner of a pocket-handkerchief garden or just a window-box.
They will help you to choose plants, give you advice on growing them; they will even tell you where to go to see what they should look like if you grow them properly.
You can become a member and get extra benefits – swan around the Chelsea Flower Show on special days, that sort of thing – but any visitor to the website, member or not, is made to feel welcome.
My bonsai’s looking a bit sick. I wonder if that nice Alan Titchmarsh would have a look at it…


Tuesday 12 June 2007

Car clubs, jobs help and small intestines

This post has impeccable liberal credentials (you’d laugh if you knew me). The first two sites are new additions to the Gateway to Websites; the third is, for reasons which will become clear, unlikely to make it on to the Gateway.

Your car or mine
We read a lot of worthy stuff about responsible (read "less") car use, but some of the suggestions are a bit airy-fairy. CarPlus sets out to provide a practical solution to the problem. (From the Gateway select "Transport & tourism", then from the links down the page select "Road". Here you will find CarPlus).

CarPlus is a charity dedicated to encourage responsible car use in several ways, but the bit that caught my eye is their database of accredited car clubs, through which you book a car when you need one, and pick it up from a nearby parking place. The term "car club" encompasses voluntary organisations, but also commercial set-ups like Streetcar.

Local councils and car park owners are, it seems, increasingly making spaces available for club cars, so using the interactive search map you can find a convenient parking place and book your vehicle. Of course you have to sign up with the provider – full contact details are given.

Luckily for me, somebody else drives my motor (the number 13 if I’m going into the West End), but if you prefer to drive but don’t want the hassle of your own car, CarPlus is worth a look.

Just the job and how to get one
Some of us swear by the Guardian as a newspaper, others swear at it. But whatever you think of the rag itself, the Guardian website is excellent, and no part of it is better than Guardian Jobs. (From the Gateway, select "Education and jobs", then select "Jobs and careers".)

Now, however much we want to encourage you all to apply for jobs in the meejah, we wouldn’t include Guardian Jobs because it has all the trendy job ads (which it does). What makes it Gateway material is the advice on getting a job.

A click on the tab "careers advice" takes you to some valuable tips on filling in an application form ("read the blurb"), writing a CV ("keep it on one page") and interviews ("don’t allow your mouth to do all the talking").

There is a bucketful of good advice here [I was going to put the old Guardian joke about spelling mistakes here, but spellcheckers have taken all the joy out of life].

The height (or weight) of folly
WEIRDCONVERTER probably won’t help you with your studies, and it’ll never make the Gateway, but if you’ve always wondered how many inches long was the Great Wall of China, or how many human tongues you could lay end-to-end up the side of the Empire State Building, look no further than http://www.weirdconverter.com/

A selection of ludicrous comparisons is presented on the home page, but for further madness you need to click on "weight" or "length/height", where you can, for instance, select "spider monkey" and "baby grand piano" to compare their weights. Why? – pass…

Very silly – enjoy!