Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google. Show all posts

November 2 - From Boole...to Google?

Posted on November 2, 2021


This is an update of my post published on November 2, 2010:


Happy Birthday, George Boole!

Born in England on this day in 1815, Boole grew up to become a mathematician. He came up with a kind of algebra we now call Boolean Algebra. The three most common operations of this kind of algebra are still used today in computer science, logic systems, and even in Google searches:

AND
OR and
NOT.

Boole did not create the first computer. However, in hindsight he has been called the founder of computer science. Here's why:

In the 1930s an American named Claude Shannon and a Russian named Victor Shestakov both (separately) realized that Boolean Algebra could be used with electrical switches. Each switch has only two states: On and Off, or True and False, 1 and 0. The AND, OR, and NOT functions can be made into logic gates that serve as the foundation for the digital revolution.



If you search for puppy AND kitten, you will only get pages that include both words.
If you search for puppy OR kitten, you will get pages that either one or both words.
If you search for puppy NOT kitten, you will get pages that include the
word "puppy," but do not include the word "kitten."

So AND and NOT limit and focus your search.
OR widens your search.





Let's see how Boolean logic works. Say there are a lot of foods on a table: a ham sandwich, a green apple, a brownie, a banana, an orange, an Oreo cookie, a yellow cookie decorated with yellow frosting, and a white container full of plain yogurt. Which foods would you get with the following “searches”?

  1. fruit AND yellow
  2. fruit OR yellow
  3. NOT fruit
  4. NOT yellow
  5. fruit NOT yellow
  6. yellow NOT fruit
ANSWERS: 
1. banana 
2. apple, banana, orange, yellow cookie 
3. sandwich, brownie, both cookies, yogurt 
4. sandwich, apple, brownie, orange, Oreo, yogurt 
5. apple and orange 
6. yellow cookie

Learn more

  • Here is a quickie guide to how Boolean terms can focus or widen a search using a search engine. 
  • I tried using the Boolean terms with Google and immediately realized that NOT does not work. Instead, I found out, you type a minus sign immediately before the term you want to exclude. Also, to be recognized as the OR operator, you have to type capital letters OR
  • Here is an explanation of how to Boolify your web search - and a search engine meant for kids.




September 15 - Google Day AND National Online Learning Day

Posted on September 15, 2018

Thanks to the internet, the world has a LOT of words and phrases, now, that it didn't when I was a kid. For one thing, there's the word internet itself!

Online. Website. YouTube. Social media. Google. Search engine. Blog. Distance learning. 

Those are just a few of the words that and names that have entered our language:
Before you ask a teacher, google your question and see if you can find out on your own. You are much more likely to remember an answer you discovered on your own. 
My friend is a YouTuber who even has sponsors for her vlog.



Today is the anniversary of the registration of the domain google.com! That happened in 1997, so Google turns 21 years old today!

Google is, of course, a search engine that helps people find information and websites on the internet. With about a billion and a half websites on the world wide web today (about 200 million of which are active), there would be no way to enjoy the information age without some method of searching for particular topics or particular specific sites.

Google isn't the only search engine. There's also Bing, Yahoo, Ask.com, AOL.com, and some I've never heard of like Wolframalpha.


Online learning usually refers to the use of specifically educational websites and online services. But, actually, everything from Do-It-Yourself videos on YouTube to Wikipedia, from multiplayer video games to online comic books - everything helps us learn something! 

The official website for National Online Learning Day reminds us that online learning is for everybody, from preschoolers to seniors. Even folks in poverty stricken communities can often access computers or smart phones and hook up to WiFi - maybe in libraries or schools. And once hooked up, the possibilities are endless!


Here is a list of "the top" (as in most popular) platforms for online education, aka eLearning. 

And this list is full of more unusual learning sites such as Google Earth Blog, Atlas Obscura, and Instructables.


  

Also on this date:






































HummerBird Celebration in Texas (September 13-16, 2018)






(Third Weekend of September)





(Third Saturday of September)







(Third Saturday of September)






Plan ahead:



Check out my Pinterest boards for:

And here are my Pinterest boards for: