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FTE25 ~ The best tool for a well-grounded environmental knowledge base
Faster Than Expected - podcast
English - June 06, 2018 00:00 - 20 minutes - 16.8 MB - ★★★★★ - 5 ratingsNatural Sciences Science abrupt climate change faster than expected schneller als gedacht grief arctic climate disruption Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Some people drink from the fountain of knowledge, others just gargle. ~ Robert Anthony
Let‘s take a swig with Jan Wyllie. Together with Simon Eaton he has founded The Database of Environmental Change. It‘s a collection of more than 40,000 articles and their headlines about environmental issues. And it‘s growing fast. This is really core journalistic work what they are doing.
You can find the tool at www.open-intelligence.co.uk. But before you look around there please listen to Jan Wyllie about the background and purpose of their work. Or do it the other way round.
This podcast episode has been an experiment of an audio and video version. But that didn‘t work. So I decided to split this episode into three parts:
1) First you‘ll hear from Jan Wyllie about his professional background and motivation to work on such a database.
2) The second part is a video, where Jan gives us a brief introduction how to use the database tool. You ca find it embedded in the shownotes fasterthanexpected.one/fte25
3) Then please come back to hear from Jan, how he is dealing with his emotions while he is improving his knowledge about the environmental disaster.
A fountain of knowledge
Some people drink from the fountain of knowledge, others just gargle. ~ Robert Anthony
Let‘s take a swig with Jan Wyllie. Together with Simon Eaton he has founded The Database of Environmental Change. It‘s a collection of more than 40,000 articles and their headlines about environmental issues. And it‘s growing fast. This is really core journalistic work what they are doing.
You can find the tool at www.open-intelligence.co.uk. But before you look around there please listen to Jan Wyllie about the background and purpose of their work. Or do it the other way round.
This podcast episode has been an experiment of an audio and video version. But that didn‘t work. So I decided to split this episode into three parts:
1) First you‘ll hear from Jan Wyllie about his professional background and motivation to work on such a database.
2) The second part is a video, where Jan gives us a brief introduction how to use the database tool. You ca find it embedded in the shownotes fasterthanexpected.one/fte25
3) Then please come back to hear from Jan, how he is dealing with his emotions while he is improving his knowledge about the environmental disaster.