Showing posts with label Phd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phd. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

Tracking Job Posts and Announcements on ERN (Economics Research Network)

I have blogged indirectly about this before: using page2rss.com to create a RSS feed that updates the reader a site changes. Among other things, I have been using this for Economics Research Network's Professional Announcements, and this works quite well save for the hard to read formatting. Here is an example of what the RSS feed looks like:

image

This is rather difficult to read, but it serves its purpose of alerting me to new conferences or job postings that went up on ERN. For email alerts, you can use this together with Yahoo alerts – which you can setup to have an email send to you when the RSS feed updates. However, I have been having issues with that Yahoo service (previous blog posting on this topic).

The two ERN links I check are:

http://www.ssrn.com/update/ern/ernann/ern_ann.html (http://page2rss.com/rss/1cc62dfaf49c436e2da76ef98ed4c53e)

http://www.ssrn.com/update/ern/ernjob/ern_job.html (http://page2rss.com/rss/33f5a81d12a753bc9c2bf9b99602ee87)

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

AEA (ASSA) Twitter Feed to RSS

For those that’s

  1. going to the AEA meeting,
  2. want to follow the ASSAMeeting twitter feed but do not use twitter, but
  3. have a RSS reader (like Google reader),

use this as your RSS feed URL:

http://api.twitter.com/1/statuses/user_timeline.rss?screen_name=ASSAMeeting  .

This works for any twitter feed - just replace ASSAMeeting with another twitter screen name.

Reference: How to Find Your Twitter RSS Feed [SEO Alien]

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Emailing from Gmail using your School Email Address

I route emails from various accounts (yahoo, school, hotmail) to Gmail, so I only have one account to check.  However, for school-related business – like requesting a room to hold exam reviews, or emailing a professor to request (beg for) data, you would want to use your official school email address.

Fortunately, Google's Gmail makes this easy by allowing you to change the “send from” email address in your emails. To do so:

  • Go to the settings option in Gmail (upper right corner)
  • Go to the "Accounts and Import” tab:

Pic1V1

Under "Send mail as" section, click the "Send mail from another address" button.  That will open up a new tab with the following fields:

Pic2

  • Specify the name and address, click next step, and Gmail will send you a verification email to verify that you own the address.  Complete the verification process.

After the setup, the next time you compose an email message, you'll notice a drop down menu allowing you to select the email address to use:

Pic3

Two caveats you should note is that:

  1. Google does not spoof the source of the email. So while the “From” field will list your work email address, the full email header still specifies that the email is being originally sent from you Gmail account.
  2. Remember that the email is send through Gmail, so like all public email, it can be read by people you do not intent. If you were emailing about sensitive information/company top secrets, you would still want to send through your company or school server.

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Adobe Reader's Text to Speech Feature for Proofreading Papers

You are reading over your third year paper that will be due in 2 days. It is 9pm at night and your twenty-fourth time reading the paper. Adding a paragraph here and adding a paragraph there, each set of edits introduces grammar mistakes and word flow issues. In a moment of weakness, you briefly regret not taking more English classes during your undergraduate years, and instead take math, computer science, and economic classes. While you are sure the paper is still full of mistakes of the literary kind, you do not see them anymore. You are tempted to ask your girlfriend to proofread, but she has already read the paper three times - on a topic she does not understand and does not care. You can sense that you will be sleeping on the couch if you ask again - if you get to sleep at all. Is there a better way?

As alluded in a previous post, the current versions of Adobe Reader have a text to speech feature that takes any paper that they recognize as text, and read it. So, what I often do is to output the file as PDF, and use this feature to have the computer read my paper back to me. This helps me tremendously as I often find this way far easier to pick up grammar mistakes and find sentences and paragraphs that either sounds long and boring or makes no sense at all.

If I am working with LaTeX, I would output the paper as a PDF. If I am working with Microsoft Words, I will print it out as a PDF. To do this, I use PDF Creator, which is a free open source program. The program takes anything you print to it and output it as a PDF. Many similar programs exist, and the two that comes immediately to mind are CutePDF and PrimoPDF.

The controls for using the text-to-speech feature are located under the "View" menu, and the "Read Out Loud" sub menu. Here is a screen shot of the options for Adobe Reader 8:


The controls are rather crude. After opening the PDF in the Adobe Reader , you first activate the feature by selecting "Activate Read Out Loud." Once activated, Adobe could read portions of the text you click with your mouse. When I click on a paragraph, it often reads the word I click instead of the paragraph. As result, I can never quite control what it reads, and therefore use the "Read This Page Only" option, and go have Acrobat Reader read one page at a time. The issue might have to do with the way the PDF is generated, because I get the read a paragraph behavior sometimes when I use PrimoPDF.

As I listen, I would note the sentences that need changes in my draft, and go back and look over the trouble area after the page is read. Alternatively, you can pause the reading and edit your paper mistake by mistake.