Seed Media Group

Page 3.14

The Best of ScienceBlogs, and Beyond

Search this blog

Subscribe via Email

Stay abreast of your favorite bloggers' latest and greatest via e-mail, via a daily digest.

Sign me up!

Profile

old_neuron.jpg Maintained by Seed's editors, web editors, and the other people who make Seed tick, Page 3.14 points you in the direction of some of ScienceBlogs' finest offerings, plus the tastiest tidbits of science news and opinion from around the web.

Other Good Stuff

MEMBER, ORDER OF THE SCIENCE SCOUTS OF EXEMPLARY REPUTE AND ABOVE AVERAGE PHYSIQUE



Add ScienceBlogs to your Technorati favorites:



Add this blog to my Technorati Favorites!

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

« Ask A ScienceBlogger, June 9 | Main | Ask A ScienceBlogger, June 15 »

What Happened to ScienceBlogs' Old Look?

Category: Announcement
Posted on: June 12, 2006 5:24 PM, by Katherine Sharpe

Hi there. If this is your first visit to the newly-designed ScienceBlogs homepage, welcome. And if you're a return visitor, welcome back.

I want to take a moment to walk you through the new features and functionalities on the page, but first, a reminder.

If you're feeling disoriented by the new design, and are aflame with nostalgia for ScienceBlogs Classic®, I urge you to check out the 'Last 24 Hours' channel, in the upper left-hand corner of the page. Clicking 'Last 24 Hours' will take you to an "alternate homepage" that works exactly as the 'old' ScienceBlogs did: it's an uncluttered space displaying titles and excerpts from the latest posts on all the blogs, updated as they appear.

You can bookmark it and use it as your default gateway to ScienceBlogs, although I recommend sacrificing continuity occasionally and exploring the new homepage, because it includes beaucoup new features that you will soon wonder how you lived without:

Content-specific channels

As you probably know, the ScienceBlogs network is growing like a magical beanstalk. That's wonderful, but it means that if we'd stuck with the old homepage design, new posts would have gotten crowded off the latest-posts list in the blink of an eye. Our main innovation to make ScienceBlogs more user-friendly has been the creation of category channels. Now, every single post on the ScienceBlogs network is sorted into one of ten categories. View the latest posts in every category, on the 'Last 24 Hours' channel, or indulge an interest in, say, the latest news in neuroscience, or the state of science policy, by filtering out everything else. Clicking on a category will take you to an alternate homepage showing the latest posts in this category, in chronological order.

Here's a guide to what the category shorthands mean:

  • Academia: Science education, Lab life, Career paths
  • Biology: Zoology, Botany, Cell biology, Evolutionary biology, Genetics
  • Brain & Behavior: Neuroscience, Psychobiology, Psychology, Psychiatry
  • Chatter: Books and films, Personal blogging, Levity
  • Culture Wars: Creationism, Quackery, Science & religion
  • Medicine: Diseases, Research, Pharmacology, Public health, Life as a physician
  • Philosophy of Science: History of science, Scientific ethics, Social studies of science
  • Physical Science: Math, Physics, Astronomy, Chemistry
  • Planet Earth: Ecology, Oceanography, Geology, Paleontology, Climate science
  • Policy & Politics: Science in the Civic Arena

Read what you're interested in, and skip what you aren't. Devour everything you can about the physical sciences, before brushing up on policy. Dip into 'Last 24 Hours' for something unexpected. It's our experiment in organizing information, and making the blogosphere just a little more navigable. Let us know what you think.

The Buzz

What stories have the science blogosphere's attention right now? Several times a week, ScienceBlogs' editors choose a timely topic that the bloggers are abuzz over. We select one "Must-Read Entry"--the first or most comprehensive post on that topic--and subsequent posts about the same issue populate into the "Latest Related Entries" window below.

Top Five

See the Top Five most-searched-for terms on the network, and the top five most-emailed and most-active (having the largest number of comments) posts systemwide.

Wordburst

Powered by Postgenomic, the Wordburst module picks out five terms that are appearing with statistically-improbable frequency in recent posts. Glance at the list for a quick impression of what's big on ScienceBlogs right now.

Page 3.14

With apologies to the New York Post's iconic gossip column Page Six, Page 3.14 is your guide to what's hot on ScienceBlogs. Watch this space for profiles of our bloggers, thoughts from the ScienceBlogs editorial desk, and system announcements.

The Network Banner

At the very top of your browser window, the network banner (a feature we share with sister site, seedmagazine.com, the network banner calls out two not-to-be-missed ScienceBlogs posts each day.

Ask A ScienceBlogger

The weekly question-and-answer series now has its very own space on the homepage.


...And that's it for now. Have fun, play with the new features, and enjoy ScienceBlogs as much as we enjoy bringing it to you.

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry:

Comments

Are there RSS feeds for each of the channels (ie, Physical Science, Planet Earth, etc.) or am I missing something dreadfully obvious?

Posted by: bluestocking [TypeKey Profile Page] | June 13, 2006 06:45 AM

I like the new look. Two little points and one larger point:

* In the "Most recent posts by channel" section, I expected the channel names and/or pics to be links to the channel page. I spent a few days assuming these pages didn't exist until I read this post, the sidebar links alone aren't intuitive to me.

* It would be nice if the links on the front page changed colour after you follow them so you can see easily what you've already read.

* All the bloggers use tags to organise their posts --- it would be interesting to have these used in some global way.

I was a bit dubious when I heard about the planned rapid increase in the number of blogs, but the new format seems to be handling it well.

Posted by: a [TypeKey Profile Page] | June 13, 2006 10:09 AM

RSS feeds for the individual channels are under development, and will be coming very soon. They are definitely part of the plan!

Posted by: Katherine Sharpe [TypeKey Profile Page] | June 13, 2006 10:48 AM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting?

Search All Blogs

Blogs in the Network

Top Five: Readers' Picks