Why use current information?
Look at the Web page showing Tropical Cyclone
Hudah as it approached Mozambique prior to the serious floods
in April, 2000, and consider the following questions:
- How could this satellite photograph have been
used on the 2nd or 3rd of April 2000 to make decisions about issuing
flood warnings?
- Would this same satellite photograph still
serve the same purpose today?
On the 2nd and 3rd of April, 2000, this information
was current. When did it stop being current? (You could discuss
this with your group) Sometimes current information is extremely
useful. It can be used to make important decisions. In this case
it would have saved many lives, because weather forecasters in Mozambique
could have used the satellite photo to predict the floods.
Connect to the Internet, and click here see a
current
satellite image
of the same coastline on the Web.
What makes information current?
From the previous example, we saw that information
is current as long as it is useful for predicting events and making
decisions. A more everyday example would be using the weather bureau's
current weather information to decide what to wear today.
Generally, information is current if it is updated
constantly. Today's news would seem to be the obvious example of
current information, but some information can change within the
day and websites are useful tools for publishing this kind of information.
Other current information sites
Weather
Data 
Earthquake
Data 
Currency
Converter 
Global
Measurements 
Webcams

News Sites
WorldNews

CNN

BBC
News 
Magazines/Journals
New
Scientist 
Time

Finding Current Information
Use
Google
and search, using current data and adding
the topic of your interest
e.g. current data flood
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