The following are nine of the top blogs or websites (we think) to share with students and colleagues:

Bubbl.us
www.bubbl.us
By Corinne Iozzio
This free Web application helps you organize your thoughts into easily readable and colorful mind maps to print or post online. Bubbl.us lets you interact with your team to pool and sort out your thoughts in a clean, crisp way that leaves the usual conference-room mishmash and endless e-mail threads behind.

Evil Mad Scientist
evilmadscientist.com
By Lance Ulanoff
Learn about wacky, interesting, and unusual inventions and devices from technology, food, mechanics, industry, and so forth on this incredibly entertaining blog. There are neat invention dissections, and projects that help you re-create great “mad scientist” inventions from years gone by.

Footnote
www.footnote.com
By Lisa Ruefenacht
For genealogists, history buffs, and even the average passerby, Footnote is the quintessential Web-2.0 example of how to use your Web-browsing time wisely. This site has a deal with the National Archives to digitize and upload every document housed in the archives. You can find anything from handwritten notes from the Continental Congress to Project Blue Book UFO sightings. Users can even upload their own content, so you may be able to find your own high-school yearbook plastered on one of Footnote’s pages.

Futurismic
futurismic.com
By Carol Mangis
This forward-thinking blog divides its focus among news and opinions on current cutting-edge science andtechnology, its impact on culture and people, and extrapolations on how all this will affect our future. Futurismic also features enjoyable “speculative fiction”—sci-fi stories. It’s a feast for those who love to think about the future in all its manifestations.

Librivox
www.librivox.org
By Sean Carroll
Audiobooks are ridiculously expensive: The latest “Harry Potter” title lists at $80 on CD. Librivox, however, provides pod fodder for free. The site features a collection of public-domain books read by volunteers—and anyone can volunteer. The audio quality is good (MP3s at 64 or 128 Kbps, as well as OGG Vorbis files). Some narrators are better than others—some may have listened to a little too much NPR—but almost everything is at least decent, and some performances are quite good. The collection (a bit more than 800 Project Gutenberg works so far) is a bit of a hodgepodge, with everything from Walt Whitman to Edgar Rice Burroughs. You’ll have to wait about a hundred years for The Deathly Hallows, though.

MAKE: Blog
makezine.com/blog
By Carol Mangis
Are you a hands-on type who can’t resist taking gadgets apart, figuring them out, and trying to make them better? An offshoot of the quarterly print magazine of the same name, MAKE: blog features tech-focused content from the mag and lots more in the way of projects, contests, and fun reading in general-enough to keep any DIYer busy for years.

ScienceHack
www.sciencehack.com
By Jennifer L. DeLeo
ScienceHack is a video search engine dedicated to the world of science, including physics, green energy, and space. What sets it apart from the rest is that every indexed video is screened and approved by real scientists. Search for a video by keyword or by selecting a tag. Clicking on “Chemistry” led us to over 20 videos on the topic, such as “Jay Leno and Josh Duhamel Sniff Sulfur Hexafluoride.”

Ugallery.com
www.ugallery.com
By Christopher Ewen
Ugallery.com helps college artists find recognition; it includes artists from more than 60 universities nationwide. They’re not all Picassos, but the site vets artists’ work before letting them in and claims to accept only 25 percent of applicants. Whether you’re a seasoned veteran or a complete newbie when it comes to buying art, Ugallery is worth a look. It’s a pleasure to browse and anaffordable way to get your hands on a beautiful piece of original art.

Wikisky.org
www.wikisky.org
By Kyle Monson
Much as Google has figured out how to harness user-submitted content to improve Google Earth, Wikisky.org turns the collective wiki-eye on the vast reaches of space. Check out the draggable space model with constellations highlighted, learn more about distant stars (or submit your own info) or you can even see a model of the stars that are above you right now.
SMART thinking!