UCD graduate students start water resources website
Site allows users to post articles and interact.
Graduate students from different departments at UC Davis launched a social bookmarking website in May called WaterSISWEB, which stands for Scientific Information Syndication Websites, and is dedicated to the water resources.
Kaveh Madani, a Ph.D. candidate in civil and environmental engineering, helped create the site, along with other graduate students from various departments and people on campus.
"I started this WaterSisweb because I had the knowledge of water resources and I thought this is the best one to start with," Madani said.
The site is an information center for water resources where users can control the content. Users can post links and share their favorite bookmarks of other sites, articles, images, media and other sources for topics relating to water.
"The difference between a blog and a book marking site is that a blog has a moderator to decide what is good and what is not," Madani said. "Here, the users control the content. If they are interested in something, they post it there because the taste of one person may be completely different from the taste of the entire community."
The website itself has been expanding with popularity since its debut in May. To date, users from 77 different countries have visited the site, some of the most common being the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Iraq, Italy and Australia. Searches can be filtered to specific countries, states and even cities, Madani said.
Users can post links under various categories with keyword tags to allow easy search access, as well as rate links by voting for them. Popular entries are kept in the top links section while articles that are completely irrelevant or that contain false information are removed from the site.
Michael Campana, a regular user and professor from the geosciences department at Oregon State University believes allowing the content of the site to be determined solely by users does have a downside.
"I wish there were more categories and that they reflected water resources, not just hydrology and water resources engineering," Campana said in an e-mail interview. "There are a lot of tags, but because everyone assigns their own tags the classification is often inconsistent. That's the downside of having the users control the site."
Campana has a blog site called WaterWired and recommends his readers visit WaterSISWEB often.
"I rely on the site mainly for serendipity," Campana said. "Lots of 'Gee, I didn't know that!' There are some things I never would have found on my own."
Dane Behrens, also a Ph.D. candidate in civil engineering at UC Davis, is a site administrator who frequents the site regularly. He has been working with the site since its beginning and recognizes its potential.
"This site is important because it provides information on water-related topics that no other type of site can," Behrens said in an e-mail interview. "It allows anybody who is interested to post water-related items that they find interesting - so it works really well as a forum for current news and science."
Madani said he hopes the site will serve as a model for more scientific resource sites.
"We do not want to have something with low quality," he said. "Not having it is better than having it with low quality. The goal is to make other SISWEBs. As soon as we have people who qualify and who are interested in dedicating their time and are credible, then we are willing to start."
Future SISWEBs could be dedicated to electrical engineering, dentistry, transportation and climate change, Madani said. He said he hopes future teams of new SISWEBs will consist of a mix of professionals from around the world.
"We can bring the professionals and users in this field from all over the world together," Madani said.
For more information, go to siswebs.org/water or WaterSISWEB.org




















We have a lot of users from "Iran" (Ea-run or Ea-raan not Eye-ran) but not "Iraq" (Ea-Raaq not Eye-Raq). Still people have problems hearing and pronouncing these words, although they are all over the media these days.
There are some typos in the text and I have emailed them about it. There is nothing they can do about the paper print but hopefully they can correct the online version of thearticle.
To date, we have had visitors from 88 countries not 77.
Although http://www.sisweb.org/water works but the official website address is http://www.watersisweb.org or http://www.siswebs.org/water .I can see that Ryan has corrected the address at the bottom. Thanks.
I appreciate the comments we got from Aquadoc (Michael). We have more categories than hydrology and water resources but certainly we need more categories in future. We started with few categories because we did not want the users to get confused. In next round we will add more categories and subcategories. We have had some goof suggestions from David Zetland regarding this as well.
Another thing which the media misses all the time regarding watersisweb is the role of Kosha Mahmodieh (a graduate of UC Berkeley) who was the first one who trusted my words and liked my idea and joined me to found SISWEBS (http://www.siswebs.org). I know Berkeley and Davis are competing all the time but sometimes we can collaborate with them and do some work. A good thing about collaboration with them is that if anything goes wrong we can blame Berkeley! :)
Cheers to all WaterSISWEB users
We are forming a great community. Let's keep up the good work and invite others to join.
The water community should be proud of watersisweb. We rule!