Bioengineering

Bioaugmentation

Bacterial Products

Produits Biologiques

Beneficial Reuse

Table of Contents

New Training CD's

 

 

 

 

New Training Manuals

 

 

 

 

Benchmarks

Industry

FYI

Consulting

Training

Additional links

Miscellaneous

Audits

Troubleshooting Tips

Microscopic Analyses

Case Histories

Additional Troubleshooting Topics

Duckweed

Algae

Lift Stations

Wastewater Microbiology

Microscopic Analyses

Photomicrographs

Filamentous Identification

Biological Products

 

 

 

 

 

Wastewater Treatment Seminar

Sign up now for our Monthly Newsletter

Request for our new Brochures

Call now to set up a Wastewater Biomass Analyses or Filamentous Identification of your plant!

Finally new Release

Filamentous Identification

"the Easy Way"

New training program

 

Internet  searching, please give me a break, it will take all day! I don’t have the time, it is too hard, I don’t know how to get around, am I really going to find what I need ?. . . . .sound familiar.

What if you need to find a part for a broken piece of equipment, search for new chemistries, find a supplier or find out information about a particular customer? What are the latest environmental issues that can impact your plant? All of these questions arise sometimes on a daily basis when doing business. How do you get that information, fast and easy without all the frustration and hassle.

Luckily many people have already explored the internet and have helped to list some of the great sites available. Information can be great, but if you can't locate it, or it is a huge hassle to try to find it, it becomes useless. Hopefully, some of these sites may offer just what you are looking for.  If you have some favorites that you know of that you think we might like posting, drop us a line, we will be more than happy to add them to our Internet Links page.

This page will try to help you use one of the fastest growing information tools available. The Internet- but hopefully without all the hassles or delays that you may have encountered in the past.

First is a brief introduction into the search engines and how to use them in case you are not familiar. If you already are an experienced Internet surfer, skip to the best part- the addresses of all the goodies. Half the battle is knowing the address and how to get there quickly! The second section will go over some excellent sites with specific information to focus in on. I have stumbled across many excellent sites that will save you significant amounts of time and frustration!

Below are some brief excerpts taken from the Internet on how to get started

Just like the size of the Internet itself, no one knows exactly how many documents there are on the World Wide Web, or how many servers there are providing access to these documents.  The Internet constantly changes, the links changes and the information on your favorite sites changes also. Remember when you finally find something you like, copy it to a word document for later use or print it out. It may not be there later!!

In February, 1996, the Alta Vista site ("the largest web index" at the time) claimed it indexed 21 million documents containing more than 10 billion words, and in March, 1997 most of the large index sites claim to index at least 100 million documents. It is likely that the total size of these documents exceeds several thousand Gigabytes. Needless to say, this growth is astronomical, and while certainly impressive, the downside is that all if it is useless unless you can find what you need. Searching for endless hours becomes frustrating and leads to less use of a very powerful tool.  Just plug in Search engine and  24,900,000 hits come up alone just  for search engines!!!!!

Finding what you want is not impossible, but it takes a bit patience and a little guidance. There are many sites on the Web that provide tools for doing searches. Some of these sites are comprised of searchable indexes created by automated web search programs, sometimes known as spiders, others are actually subject lists created by humans, similar to traditional library catalogs. A third category is Meta-Sites, combining access to numerous individual search programs--sometimes allowing simultaneous access--and often providing enhanced capabilities.  Another way is to copy lists of links that other people have created based upon their favorite sites.  You can add these to your favorites in your own website carrier, or save them to a word document for later use. 

  Subject Catalogs and other Indices

Subject Catalogs tend to be organized by their collectors hierarchically. These tend to be quite easy to use and to navigate through, although the shear amount of information may be astronomical.

bulletYahoo
One of the best subject indexes available, very high quality results. Often the best place to start. There are 14 top-level categories and hundreds of sub-categories. The only downside can be finding which category your subject is in. Using the Yahoo Search Engine can help. Use some of the sections already created on their front guide pages also as a starting point.
bulletPoint
Lycos-owned "Best of the Web"
bulletSearchmill
A "live internet search service" done by "professionals" -- not free.

**There are tons of search engines, use one that you are most  comfortable with and know how to navigate! What you use is not always as important as how you use it.

The most useful search engines:

bulletHotBot
Claims to index 50 million documents. No browsable index but purely a search engine. Expert-mode searching supports field-level searching by filetype (e.g., audio, images), date, and geographic location.
bulletThe Info Service
Search 40 or so subject cateogories, plus loads of other search engines and other reference sources.
bulletLycos: The Catalog of the Internet
Developed at Carnegie Mellon, now gone commercial. It acquired Point Communications, a reviewer of Web sites. Claims to have the biggest database indexing over 90% of the web (questionnable). Fast with flexible search language, but no Boolean. Search results area highly informational, but sometimes confusing. Browsable 15-category list is available.
bulletAltaVista from Digital. Can be quite accurate if you are an able searcher.
A good-sized database that includes full-text indexing of newsgroups. Provides different output options and allows both simple and complex search queries. Very fast, Very good. Allows for Boolean, adjacency, proximity, truncation, and specific field searches. Results are often overwhelming. No browsable index supported.

The type of search strategy you utilize and the search engine you use depends on what you are looking for. It may seem obvious, but there is a difference between locating a specific piece of information and trying to collect all the information you can on a given subject area. This difference can affect your choice of search engines.

You also want to consider if you want to search on a phrase (such as Federal Reserve) or two or more keywords that are not a phrase (such as Equity Mortgage). Search Engines commonly treat these two types of searching differently, and defaults as well as capabilities vary.

What should you do if your search came up empty or without anything close to what you were looking for? Check your spelling and the defaults of the Search Engine. For example, a phrase default setting is common; if your keywords are not a phrase you'll want to turn this off by selecting an all of these words option. When doing this latter form of search, you might want to limit your keywords. Or, if all else fails, try alternate keywords. Remember to use alternate spellings or forms of a word. For example if you are looking for B.O.D, you might need to look for Biological Oxygen Demand instead.

What should you do you do if your search provided too many links? Go back to your original search and make use of the  capabilities of the engine to reduce its scope, or, try narrowing it using more precise terms. Avoid using overly general terms (you'll know when you do this because you'll get 40,000 hits!). Also start at the beginning of the hit list. Do not worry that you have to search all the hits that come up. Sometimes the hits that come up in the first few pages have the higher percentage of having what you are looking for.

Another thing to note, when you perform a search, you can open up the links that  you find in another page without losing your search.  Sometimes it is best to open two, three or four links and let them load, while you continue your search if you computer has the memory capabilities.  It  saves time to be able to jump from one site to another and to close the links quickly if the lead does not offer what you are looking for and yet still keep searching.

Parts of this are from Laura Guy Data and Program Library Service University of Wisconsin--Madison
Email: dpls@dpls.dacc.wisc.edu  
Last updated 12 April, 2000. http://dpls.dacc.wisc.edu/www_searchers_choice.html

 Downloadable PDF file with hundreds of links and explanation on Internet usage

http://www.epa.gov/enviro/index_java.html

http://www.epa.gov/owm/  

http://cfpub1.EPA.gov/npdes/

Office of Industrial Technologies

P2 Database (Envirosense) is a website that offers links to P2 research and other related information.

USEPA Pollution Prevention is a website offering general P2 information.

State Agencies Offering P2 Help:

The Illinois Waste Management and Research Center (WMRC) (phone 217/333-8940) is headquartered on the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign campus. WMRC is a division within the Office of Scientific Research and Analysis of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources. WMRC offers P2 information, P2 Facility Assessments, technology evaluation testing, research funding & laboratory analysis.

The Illinois EPA Office of Pollution Prevention (phone 217/782-8700) is headquartered in Springfield, Illinois and offers general P2 information, P2 Facility Assessments and a no to low cost graduate intern program.

http://www.activatedsludge.info/

activatedsludge.info is the place to come for information on new developments, processes and technologies in activated sludge, as well as providing a fresh look at established topics. We also welcome your input, tell us about the topics you would like to see and we will do our best to put them in place, either from our own resources or from our colleagues.  It is a group with expertise in a wide range of areas in biological wastewater treatment that have a goal to use the web for technology transfer.

http://web.deu.edu.tr/atiksu/toprak/ani409.html

TOPRAK- Wastewater engineering, design, construction and operation. This website contains useful information on training, operational problems, troubleshooting, design examples, wastewater math examples,  process, control measures, physical treatment method.

Chemical

http://www.acs.org/portal/Chemistry?PID=acsdisplay.html&DOC=localsections\index.html

American Chemical Society

Government Sectors:

http://www.epa.gov/sectors/cisi.html

Government Agencies and Environmental Sites

bullet Bureau of Labor Statistics - BLS Home Page with links to current data.
bullet Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) - Up-to-date coverage of regulations in force.
bullet Consumer Price Indexes - Direct link to the CPI Home Page from BLS (above).
bulletU.S. Department of Commerce - General resource for trade information.
bulletU.S. Environmental Protection Agency - Links to EPA pages and bulletin boards.
bullet Environmental Resources - Links to Government Environmental Databases.
bullet EPA's Office of Pesticide Programs - Pesticide registration, special reviews, and more.
bullet EPA Sector Documents - Comprehensive reports on environmental profiles, industrial process info, pollution prevention techniques, regulatory requirements, govt/industry partnerships, and more.
bullet European Environmental Agency - Reports, news releases, indicators, and country information.
bullet Europa Union Online - The environmental sector.
bullet Federal Register - Search for government notices and proposed regulations.
bullet FedWorld Information Network - Mega-Site if you don't know where else to start.
bullet FirstGov.gov - Your "first click to the US Government".
bulletNational Institutes of Health (NIH) - Great source for information on funded research.
bulletU.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration - Links to OSHA regulations and programs.
bullet Producer Price Indexes - Direct link to the PPI Home Page from BLS (above).
bullet SEC EDGAR Database - Filings of publicly-held companies.
bullet STAT-USA/Internet - Dept. of Commerce trade data (subscription required).
bullet THOMAS: Legislative Information - Access to full-text of bills, etc. in Congress.
bullet United States Code - Includes text of all enacted Federal titles (laws).
bulletUSPTO - United States Patent and Trademark Office home page.

Country / International Information

bullet CDC Traveler's Health Hotline - Country specific information for travelers.
bullet CityNet Travel - Worldwide links to regional information.
bullet Currency Converter by OANDA - Rates of exchange for over 164 monetary units.
bullet Export-Import Bank Home Page - Links to sources on U.S. trade data.
bullet France home page - The french information center.
bullet International Trade Administration - With links to other import/export information.
bullet International Salary Calculator - Calculate cost-of-living worldwide.
bullet Time Zones - Track time zones around the globe.
bullet United Nations - Plus other international organizations.
bullet The World Factbook - Country profiles from the CIA.

The Industrial Technologies Web site is
http://www.eere.energy.gov/industry/

The Office of Industrial Technologies works in partnership with U.S. industry to develop and deliver advanced technologies that: Industrial Technologies Program (ITP) Web site.

Increase energy efficiency
Improve environmental performance
Boost productivity

 wwwlogo12.gif (7840 bytes)

www.ravenep.com

  Sludge Interface detector

  

The Common Sense Environmental Fund is a global wildlife conservation organization based in Washington, DC. We are working to achieve a world where wildlife conservation is a priority and trained conservation professionals in every country are engaged in ensuring species survival. We work to accomplish this through cooperative relationships with a myriad of international partners. Our experienced team conducts the necessary research and analysis to determine which environmental charities have the most effective strategies to address our planet's needs. We examine their mission, values, ethical principals, management, budget, overhead, access to revenue and percentage of funds allocated to projects. We only invest in organizations that demonstrate the highest levels of value and integrity and spend 80% (at a minimum) of their revenue directly on biodiversity, forest, international, sustainable agriculture, wetlands and water/marine research, conservation and restoration projects.

 

The Common Sense Environmental Fund is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Your contribution is tax-deductible to the fullest extent of the law.  For more information visit:  www.csshome.com/501c3.htm

 

 

Copyright ©2003 Environmental Leverage Inc. All rights reserved.
Revised: May 02, 2006.

[Under Construction] This page under construction and will periodically be changed and updated with new industry links