Outercurve Foundation Adds ChonoZoom to Research Accelerators Library

The Outercurve Foundation has accepted the ChronoZoom big history project, an open source effort designed to make historical connections easier to grasp, after the project was offered to the foundation by the University of California, Berkeley, Moscow State University, and Microsoft Research.

Big history is an interdisciplinary field of study that looks for themes and patterns throughout the history of the universe. The project is designed to help big historians understand historical themes in the sciences and humanities by using a cloud-based timeline function that utilizes HTML5.

"Up until now, it's been very difficult to understand the vastly different timescales of cosmos, Earth, life, and humanity," said Roland Saekow, ChronoZoom community project lead, University of California, Berkeley. "With ChronoZoom's unique zoom capability, we can seamlessly zoom from billions of years, down to a single day right in a standard Web browser."

The non-profit Outercurve Foundation has accepted the project, which is currently available in version 2, into its Research Accelerators Gallery.

The gallery, sponsored by Microsoft Research, features various technologies and open source tools designed to support academic researchers as well as those engaged in scientific research, according to the foundation's Web site.

ChronoZoom is designed to make chronological relationships more apparent and provide a framework for specialized electronic resources by linking those resources to fixed time scales in a way that's organized and logical.

A demo of the project was recently given at the technology education conference held in Seattle, WA under the auspices of the Northwest Council for Computer Education.

"The assignment of ChronoZoom to the Outercurve Foundation will allow this important project to flourish," said Paula Hunter, executive director of the Outercurve Foundation. "ChronoZoom provides a step toward sharing and analyzing historical data to overcome the challenges of visualizing Big History. We are pleased to work with Microsoft Research, the University of California at Berkeley and Moscow State University to continue to foster improvements in the development of this project."

More information about the ChronoZoom project is available at chronozoomproject.org.

Featured

  • white clouds in the sky overlaid with glowing network nodes, circuits, and AI symbols

    AWS, Microsoft, Google, Others Make DeepSeek-R1 AI Model Available on Their Platforms

    Leading cloud service providers are now making the open source DeepSeek-R1 reasoning model available on their platforms, including Amazon, Microsoft, and Google.

  • illustration with geometric shapes, digital circuitry, and subtle icons of an open book, graduation cap, and lightbulb

    University of Michigan Launches Agentic AI Virtual Teaching Assistant

    At the University of Michigan's Stephen M. Ross School of Business, a new Virtual Teaching Assistant pilot program is utilizing agentic AI to provide students with 24/7 access to support and self-directed learning.

  • robot waving

    Copilot Updates Aim to Make AI More Personal

    Microsoft has unveiled a range of updates to its Copilot platform, marking a new phase in its effort to deliver what it calls a "true AI companion" that adapts to individual users' needs, preferences and routines.

  • modern college building with circuit and brain motifs

    Anthropic Launches Claude for Education

    Anthropic has announced a version of its Claude AI assistant tailored for higher education institutions. Claude for Education "gives academic institutions secure, reliable AI access for their entire community," the company said, to enable colleges and universities to develop and implement AI-enabled approaches across teaching, learning, and administration.