Pointers: Recommended readings 08-25-08

Check out these Web sites and other online resources.

Source: In a podcast interview, Gloria Mark, a professor at the Department of Informatics at the University of California at Irvine, discusses her research into the effects of workplace interruptions.Mark found that typical information workers are pulled away from their work every three minutes — either by a cell phone ringing, an e-mail message popping up or someone walking into their office or cubicle.Workers clearly suffered from the stress of the high mental workload that comes with these frustrations, Mark said. Source: takes a long look at the emerging privacy and security threats that come with global Internet connectivity.For one article, a reporter demonstrated how easy it is to steal someone’s identity with a little digging on social networks, blogs and search engines. Another feature examines the Web’s role in war and terrorism.The special report also takes an international perspective by highlighting how Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom and other countries are dealing with these same problems.Source: In a recent blog post, Linda Cureton, chief information officer at ’s Goddard Space Flight Center, shares some insights into the essentials of team-building.She echoes the thoughts of business consultant Jim Collins, who said the first step is getting “the right people on the bus” — those who have the knowledge, skills and drive. But it is also important to provide the team “with a clear and compelling purpose,” Cureton writes.Cureton notes that her first lesson in team-building came not when she was a CIO but when she was a young French horn player at the Duke Ellington School of the Arts in Washington, D.C. Check it out. Source: During the past 11 years, three universities have been working together to create a 3-D tour of Rome as it appeared in the fourth century — June 21, 320 A.D. to be exact.1.0 reflects what historians know about the city’s topography, urban infrastructure and individual buildings and monuments, according to the project’s Web site, which is hosted by the University of Virginia, which worked with the University of California of Los Angeles and the Politecnico di Milano to develop the program.Besides providing a useful tool for educators, virtual Rome will enable researchers to run urban or architectural experiments.
Don’t touch that cell phone!
BNet






Technology’s toll on privacy and security
Scientific American
Scientific American





Building the right team
NASA blog
NASA





Rome reborn
University of Virginia


Rome Reborn