Category Archives: Blogging

Science 2.0 at SILS

Yes, I’ll be there this Friday. Come by and say Hello if you are in the building or close at lunchtime.

Open Laboratory 2008

Openlab 2007
Now that the registration for the Science Blogging Conference is open, it is time to remind you that the new edition of the Science Blogging Anthology, “Open Laboratory 2007”, is in the works and is accepting your suggestions.
Although the entire process, from the initial idea all the way to having a real book printed and up for sale, took only about a month, the Open Laboratory 2006 was a great success. This year, we have much more time so we hope we will do an even better job of it.
More than 100 entries have come in so far (see under the fold) and we are looking for more. I have read them all and written my annotations about each, while Reed Cartwright is in the process of reading them closely as we speak. In the end, he will be the final aribiter of which 50 posts, plus one poem and one cartoon, will make it into the anthology. Think of me as a ‘series editor’ and Reed as the ‘2007 editor’.
As we are bloggers, we like transparency. As much as the automated submission form makes our lives easy, we decided that it would be best if, like last year, we made the list of entries public. That way, you can all see them, read them, comment about them, and see what is missing and needs to be entered before the deadline comes (December 20th 2007).
Please, use the submission form to enter your submissions (i.e., putting a link in the comments of this post will not do you any good) and pick up the code for the cool badges (like the one on top of this post) here to help us spread the word.
As I wrote earlier:

Clicking on the button will take you to the submission form. Reed and I will get e-mail notification every time there is a new entry and we will read them all and jot down some ‘notes to self’. Since we have ten months to do this, we will not need a jury of 12 bloggers to help us read all the entries, but do not be surprised if we ask you to vet/factcheck/peer-review a post that is in your domain of expertise (and not ours) later in the year.
So, go back to December 20th, 2006 and start looking through your archives as well as archives of your favourite science bloggers and look for real gems – the outstanding posts. Many have been written recently for the “Science Only Week”, or for the “Basic Terms and Concepts” collection.
Try to look for posts that cover as many areas of science blogging as posssible: mathematics, astronomy, cosmology, physics, chemistry, earth science, atmospheric/climate science, marine science, biochemistry, genetics, molecular/cellular/developmental biology, anatomy/physiology, behavior, ecology, paleontology, evolution, psychology, anthropology, archaeology, and/or history of science, philosophy of science, sociology of science, science ethics and rhetorics, science communication and education, the business of science, the Life in Academia (from undergraduate, graduate, postdoc, faculty or administrative perspective), politics of science, science and pseudoscience, science and religion, etc.
Also, try to think of different post formats: essays, personal stories, poems, polemics, fiskings, textbook-style prose, etc. For now, let’s assume that color images cannot make it into the book (I’ll let you know if that changes) and certainly copyrighted (by others) material is a No-No. Posts that are too heavily reliant on multiple links are difficult to turn into hardcopy as well. Otherwise, write and submit stuff and hopefully one of your posts will make it into the Best 50 Science Posts of 2007 and get published!

Under the fold are the entries so far. About half have been submitted by authors, the rest by readers. I hope you don’t need to ask us to remove an entry of yours, but if that is the case (e.g., you intend to include it in your own book), please contact me about it.
Reading all the entries so far will help you think of other posts, yours or others’, that may fit in here. Perhaps a big story of this year is not covered in any of the submissions so far. Perhaps you remember a post which covers a story better than the entry we already have. Have we missed a really popular post that everyone loved and linked to?
Also, if you are an expert in an area and you have BIG problems with one of the entries in your field, please let us know soon so we can send it out for further peer-review. As was the case last year, only English-language posts are eligible. If you have written an awesome post in another language, please make a GOOD translation available before submission.
I will occasionally update this post as new entries keep coming in, so keep coming back every week or so to see what is new. The entries are arranged in alphabetical order of the name of the blog (because all attempts at categorization failed), which makes it easy to get my own out of the way first, and let you go on quickly to see all the really cool writers of the science blogosphere. If a blog has multiple contributors, the author of the submitted post(s) is named in parentheses.

Continue reading

Cool Animal Meme

This was Anton’s idea, at the dinner the other night, but I will get it started here anyway.
An interesting animal I had
I never owned an unusual species of animal. As a little kid I had small turtle named Aeschillus. Later I had two horses, half-brothers, whose names meant the same in two different languages – Meraklija in Serbian and Kefli in Hebrew both mean “one who truly enjoys life and good things in life”. My wife was a better namer of horses – her last one, the one she brought into the marriage, she named Double Helix and his barn nickname was Watson. A cat and a dog also became “mine” through marriage. We had a Love Bird briefly, and some tetras, a couple of great dogs and, of course, the three cats that sometimes grace the pages of this blog: Biscuit, Marbles and Orange Julius. Probably the most interesting animal I had, but could not really claim full ownership of (it was probably owned by someone, but was considered to be communal) was a skewbald Cameroon Pigmy Goat that served as a stall-mate to Meraklija as he was a highly strung Thoroughbred who needed company to calm him down. There were several goats in the barn, each living where needed, no matter who owned the horse in question. One of the goats was not a pigmy, but a normal-sized white goat who had to be milked every dawn and dusk by whoever was feeding the horses that day. So, on Thurdsays – my feeding day – I got to milk the goat and keep the milk for my own consumption if I wanted to.
An interesting animal I ate
Everyone has tried a taste of their lab animal at least once, so yes, I had eaten marinated and fried breasts of Japanese quail once. Delicious! Also, whenever we gelded a colt, I’d take the ‘prize’ home, marinate for a day or two, then everyone from the barn would come over to one of our houses for some great fried horse whitebreads.
An interesting animal in the Museum
George – the ancient python at the Museum of Life Science in Raleigh was everyone’s favourite for many years. Seeing a stuffed dodo is always an emotional moment.
An interesting thing I did with or to an animal
Sure, I did some stuff to my lab animals, e.g, surgeries. That is not such a big deal. More interestingly, I once participated in the Christmas slaughter of three pigs at the farm where I kept my younger horse. It is hard work and makes you really appreciate your food afterwards.
An interesting animal in its natural habitat
Bumping into a snake is always exciting. Deer, possums, raccoons, rabbits, turkey vultures and red-tailed hawks are common around here and not that exciting to see. I once saw an octopus that came too close to the coast, minutes before it was harpooned by the owner of a local seafood restaurant for dinner. Standing in the dark in Florida at the beach and watching a whooperwill on a perch from just a few feet away for almost half an hour was quite a thrill.
OK, let’s get this started. I am tagging:
Anton
Anna
Brian
Anne-Marie
Danica
Chris
Craig
Jeremy
Eric
Update: Responses are coming in fast!
Ted adds another great question: “a favorite literary animal” – mine is Charlotte (no, not Wilbur) from Charlotte’s Web. And most recently Hemi the Mule.
Here are Chris Clarke (and Tigtog who was tagged by Chris) and Brian Switek (aka Laelaps), the fastest out of the gate. Very cool stories – I’ll try to track it into the future, the tagged and the taggees, as much as I can. Oh, I did not know that Kate also rides horses and she also has a question for Spanish-speaking naturalists. And definitely check out the responses by Theriomorph and Julia Heathcote.
Both Eric and his daughter answered in parallel. Oh, I knew Anne-Marie was going to show off some cool animals she encountered in the field!
Jeremy Bruno comes through. And then, there are cool entries by John Dennehy,
Zach Miller and Dita.
Chris Taylor has seen it all. Nanette is not an adventurous eater. Rana insightful as always. Sherwood Harrington is hillarious. Also check responses by Dr. Violet Socks, Timothy Shortell and Flash.
Neil of Microecos divided each question into vertebrate and invertebrate section which is very cool. Also read Helen, Bernice and Foilwoman.
PZ Myers is waxing poetic..and erotic…about fish!
Update 2: Steve put the announcement up on the latest Friday Ark, so now everyone is tagged!
Check out the latest additions:
Will Bairs
Ed Yong
Fresh Brainz
Self-designed Student
Jessica
Jennifer Forman Orth
Dan Rhoads
Mary Ann
Meta and Meta
The Lizard Queen

Foodblogging – the Dinner last night

The highlight of this week’s foodblogging event must have been last night’s dinner at Piedmont restaurant in Durham.
Anton has several posts about the events of the past couple of days, including a detailed description (including the menu, and exactly who was there – about 30 people) of the dinner itself. I came a little late (because I always get lost in Durham as the layout of that city always stumps Google Maps), but as soon as I started chatting with the wonderful people there and eating the wonderful food, my mood changed for the better and I really enjoyed the evening (yes, while someone was taking a hub cap off of the wheel of my new car outside).
Michael Ruhlman is a great guy – ha taught me exactly how to serve myself the head cheese, and here is the photographic evidence:
Michael%20Ruhlman%20and%20me.jpg
While Anton’s post lists all the people present, I’ll just mention those I know from before, including Anna Kushnir, my fellow science blogger (and Scifoo camper) who came down from Boston for the occasion, old friends Ruby Sinreich and Brian Russell (happy birthday Brian!) and Rob Zelt. A new friend – Dean McCord!
There are more pictures on Flickr (add your own if you were there and took pictures). But, what do I say about the food? How does one use language to describe taste? I can describe the jovial atmosphere, or hope that someone took pictures of the food as it was presented, but the gustatory experience? That is tough! All I can say is that every bite was a special experience and a special treat to my taste-buds. I ate slowly, paying attention to the taste and texture of the food. Anton has posted the entire menu, and everything was delicious, but the dessert was just amazing – at first sight, it was just a cup filled with crushed ice, mildly colored. But each bite of it took 20 seconds to experience fully, as one taste followed another which followed another, revealing themselves sequentially as the ice melted in the mouth! Totally amazing!
But probably the best part of the evening was seeing Anton fully in his element, savouring every bite, loving every person there, and just being super happy every single moment of the evening! It was worth being there just to see that! Cheers, Anton! And thank you for doing this for all of us!

Come to ConvergeSouth

This is why you should attend ConvergeSouth. OK, Anton will lead a session, and so will I, but check out the entire program – it is just getting more and more amazing every year! And it is probably the most pleasant and enjoyable conference in any given year.

Brian Russell is now a Social Software and Multimedia Consultant for Hire

And it is hard to find anyone better than Brian:

I am now available for hire to consult on the creation, care, and feeding of online communities. Plus I can create audio and video for the web. To get an idea of my professional experience you can check out my resume here and my portfolio here.
————————-
I’m interested in working for non-profits, businesses, and progressive political campaigns. I can help you make your own media and demonstrate how it will strengthen your mission and benefit your organization financially. But most important is communicating with customers, members, and constituents. Please contact me and I’ll help you accomplish your goals.

Foodblogging and the post-foodblogging science-blogging dinner

The three-day Foodblogging event has started, with a reading/booksigning by Michael Ruhlman at the Regulator bookshop in Durham.
Among those in the audience were Reynolds Price, local bloggers Anton Zuiker and Brian Russell, as well as Anna Kushnir, foodblogger who drove all the way from Boston (OK, via Virginia) to attend the event.
I bought The Reach of a Chef and asked him what is the best way to get a kid/teenager who is interested in cooking started. He said that hands-on experience is essential and that one should carefully pick a course that focuses on basics and not on fancy gimmicks to begin with. Then, asking to taste a dinner at home and praising the result is the next step. Anton wrote a more detailed account of the evening.
After the reading, a bunch of us went accross the street to Baba Ganoush for dinner (and even later to the sushi bar on the corner for some Guinness) – but this time we quickly switched the topic from food to science as everyone at the table was a science blogger! Anna Kushnir, who I mentioned above (and linked to her food blog) is also a science blogger on Nature Network, so check out her Lab Life blog. You also know the other locals, Sheril Kirshenbaum and Abel Pharmboy, but the special guest of the evening was Craig McClain who came all the way from California to do some work at NESCENT. Much marine science talk ensued, all interesting and I learned a lot of stuff I did not know before.
Here is one of the pictures from the dinner:
Post-foodblogging%20science-dinner.jpg

Raleigh News and Observer on Anton Zuiker, Triangle bloggers, Science Blogging Conference

I was out and offline all day yesterday, so I missed this wonderful article by Dan Barkin in yesterdays’ N&O (I just took the paper out of its plastic bag a few minutes ago):
Bloggers to talk science.
It tells you where Anton Zuiker comes from and where he is going next. The killer paragraph is this one:

The Web has evolved into a tribal Internet of passionate bloggers like Zuiker, and he has become a sort-of local brand. He’s a quiet visionary. He’s a low-key doer. He’s a let’s-get-together-and-see-where-this-goes guy. It’s the Zuikers of this new, interwoven world who may play a significant role in determining how far Web 2.0 goes from being a sociable network to a social force.

That is so true! Without Anton, there would be no Triangle blogger meetups, no BloggerCon, no Podcastercon, no Foodblogging, no Storyblogging and no Science Blogging Conference. Sure, Brian, Paul, myself and others may come up with a cool idea here and there, but those ideas would go nowhere without Anton’s calm persistence (and don’t get me wrong, Anton has a dozen cool ideas before breakfast every day himself) – he makes things actually happen in the real world.
Definitely go and read the entire thing! And also read what Paul, Brian and Abel wrote about the article as well. Of course, go say Hello to Anton himself, and see all the things he’s been doing lately on BlogTogether.org.
And I hope to see you at the Foodblogging event tonight.

Great news from PLoS for Bloggers

Yesterday, PLoS ONE moved to the newest version of the TOPAZ platform. Rich Cave explains all the improvements that this move entails, including the citation download for articles, but one new feature that should really be exciting to bloggers are Trackbacks.
From now on, if you link to a PLoS ONE article in your post, that article will display a link back to your blog post (go to an article and look at the right side-bar, nested between the Discussions and Ratings). Thus, in addition to the conversation already going on in the commentary attached to the article itself, the readers will be able to access the responses from the blogosphere as well. And that should also bring additional traffic to the bloggers.
I have been testing the feature over the past 24 hours or so, but I need your input in order to refine and improve the Trackbacks feature.
First, for the time being, the link you use in your post has to be in the format of the full URL of the full text (i.e., not the shorter, DOI-only compression), so this is how it should look like (replace 0000000 with the actual number of the article):
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2f10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0000000
Unfortunately, for the time being (and we are working on it), this shorter form of the URL will not work:
http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0000000
Likewise, links to other parts of the site, e.g., to the PDF of the article, will not generate trackbacks.
So far, it appears that Trackbacks are working automatically on Drupal and MoveableType, i.e., there is no need for manual trackbacks.
In WordPress.com, it is necessary to type the trackback URL into the appropriate field in your posting form. The trackback URL is in this form:
http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0000000/trackback
At this moment, it appears that links from Blogger/Blogspot blogs do not generate Trackbacks, but we are working on it. Test it anyway and let me know if there is a “trick” I missed so far.
Also, please let me know how it works on other platforms (e.g., Typepad, Radio Userland, Blogsome, LiveJournal, etc.)
I am not 100% sure (so tell me if I am wrong), but links posted “under the fold” will also not generate a trackback.
Also, and this may differ between platforms, I am not sure that republishing a blog (or an individual post) will trigger trackbacks from links made before yesterday. Give it a test run and let me know, please.
You can give me feedback in the comments here, or by e-mail, or by contacting the Webmaster on the PLoS ONE site itself.

Welcome the new newest SciBling!

Go say Hello to the very latest addition to the Scienceblogs Universe – Coby Beck of A Few Things Ill Considered.

Happy Birthday!

To Chris (an no, I am not the commenter who signed with “a sea cucumber” handle…).

Welcome the newest SciBling!

Go say Hello to Sciencewoman!

Facebook, after weeks of pressure, still bans breastfeeding photos!

I thought the LiveJournal debacle taught them a lesson. I guess not. Melissa posted about this a couple of weeks ago, and Tara did it today again because the issue has not been resolved yet. So did PZ Myers (Janet Stemwedel and Dr. Joan Bushwell also chime in). Facebook is deleting pictures of breastfeeding and banning users who post them. Now that Facebook is not just for college crowd, there are more and more moms and dads on the network, proudly showing off their offspring to the world. Including offspring in the moments of feeding bliss.
But, you know that in this country there are a lot of dirty old men who find that scene somehow sexual (what kind of sick upbringing results in such sexual perversion, I wonder?), including, apparently, someone in the upper echelons of Facebook. Join the fast-growing Facebook group and send them a message. Blog about this as well. Force them to reverse this medieval decision.

Panda’s got some teeth!

Have you seen the new design of Panda’s Thumb?

The Best Life Science Blogs in The Scientist

The good folks at The Scientist asked a few of us to recommend some of the best and most interesting life science blogs. We have done so and the article is now online:

So, we at The Scientist are asking you to help compile the first list of the best life science blogs. Tell us what your favorite life science blogs are and why by clicking the button and leaving a comment, and we will publish a list of the most popular choices across the different areas of life sciences. With your help we hope to provide a list of who is currently hot in the science blogosphere, and why you should be reading them.

The best thing is that you can have your say as well – recommend your own favourites at this form. If a discussion about this goes on your blog, feel free to paste the URL in the form as well:

To start things off, we’ve asked some of the best known science bloggers to nominate some of their favorite blogs. Add to the list by posting your choices here, and these will appear below the list in the comments section.
In the spirit of blog-like openness, we hope people discuss their favorite science blogs elsewhere. If people on your blog are having an interesting discussion thread about this, then post a link to that page, and we’ll count those suggestions too.

So, fire away – what are your favourites?

Update:
Attila Csordas (also here), PZ Myers, Phillip Torrone, Abel PharmBoy, Alex Palazzo, Chris Patil, Mo Costandi, Tara Smith, Alan Cann, Deepak Singh, Brian Switek, John Hawks, Carl Zimmer, Orac, Terry, Bug Girl and others link to the article and in some cases suggest additional blogs.
Chad Orzel notices that not everybody is clear that the listing is of LIFE science blogs, not all science blogs. Biology and medicine only, this time around.
As expected, somebody suggested ‘Uncommon Descent’, ‘Evolution News and Views’ and ‘ID the Future’ which are, by definition, not science blogs.
Grrrlscientist, Sheril Kirshenbaum, Karmen Franklin and Zuska notice that none of the people asked are women. I wish I knew that this was going to be the case when I was asked. Although two out of my three suggestions are blogs written by women (The Anterior Commissure and Pondering Pikaia), I would have added more, starting perhaps with Notes from Ukraine, Bootstrap Analysis, Biology in Science Fiction, Dr.Petra, Bioephemera, Invasive Species Blog, Cyberspace Rendezvous, Science Made Cool, N@ked Under My Lab Coat, Easternblot, Well-Timed Period, Intueri, Emergiblog and Eye on DNA, just to begin with.
So, go there and add some female bloggers in the comments!

I heard that badmouthing Microsoft is good for traffic…

The program of the Microsoft/RENCI conference is now up. They would not let me give a talk, but I’ll have to make a poster (using the darned MS Power Point, I guess #$%^&*) which makes me pretty mad. Heck, there is some unknown talking about science blogs instead of me. Who made this decision?
Compared to the organizers of every other meeting this year, from SciFoo, to ConvergeSouth, to ASIS&T, to the panel at Harvard (and yes, our own Science Blogging Conference), these guys are positively Palaeolitic in their attitude – from the haughtily-official looking site, to the very idea of submitting ‘abstracts’ (not to mention that this is done via a cumbersome submission form), it appears they barely scratched Web 1.0, yet they want to discuss Web 2.0.
Perhaps I should withdraw my poster and just go and schmooze with the likes of Timo Hannay and Jean Claude-Bradley instead, and try to actually teach some people there about Science 2.0 in the hallways.
Or perhaps I am just in a really bad mood today….and should be back to my usual sunny self by tomorrow.

Scienceblogs taking over Europe!

Seed Media Group, publisher of the Seed Magazine and the Seed Scienceblogs (the site you are on right now), made an announcement last week (PDF) about its new international partnership with Hubert Burda Media conglomerate:

The partnership will initially lead to the European development of ScienceBlogs, the largest online science community (www.scienceblogs.com). Since its launch in January 2006 by Seed Media Group, ScienceBlogs has grown to include 65 blogs across all areas of science, and attracted more than 1.7 million visits in August (Google Analytics), its twentieth straight month of growth. ScienceBlogs has seen its traffic grow by more than 500 percent since launch, with 30 percent now coming from outside the United States.
“We are excited to be entering the European market with Hubert Burda Media, a company that shares our values and that we consider to be among the most visionary and forward-thinking in the media industry,” said Adam Bly, founder and CEO of Seed Media Group. “Today marks an important first step in Seed Media Group’s international expansion.”
“We see this partnership as a chance to help grow a global digital community of high social relevance. We share Seed Media Group’s belief that ‘Science is Culture’ and are delighted to now be associated with an organization at the forefront of this cultural shift,” said Dr. Marcel Reichart, Managing Director, R&D, Marketing & Communications, Hubert Burda Media.

This is great news! First – don’t worry: nobody is getting fired or “downsized” and you will not see any obvious changes here any time soon. But there will be great changes in the future, i.e., more European blogs (perhaps even in languages other than English at some point in the future) and even more European readers. Stay tuned.

Bloggers for Peer Review icon finals

Dave alerts us that the number of entries has ben winnowed to the top three finalists. Check them out and suggest modifications at the BPR3 blog. And vote:

Science Blogging Survey

There is a new online survey up, designed by some of my SciBlings, about the background and online habits of science bloggers and science blog readers (not just scienceblogs.com, but all science blogs). Please take a minute to respond:

This survey attempts to access the opinions of bloggers, blog-readers, and non-blog folk in regards to the impact of blogs on the outside world. The authors of the survey are completing an academic manuscript on the impact of science blogging and this survey will provide invaluable data to answer the following questions:
Who reads or writes blogs?
What are the perceptions of blogging, and what are the views of those who read blogs?
How do academics and others perceive science blogging?
What, if any, influence does science blogging have on science in general?
Please consider participating in the survey as an act of ‘internet solidarity’! It will likely take 10 minutes, and a bit more if you are a blogger yourself. We thank you in advance.

Just click here and answer a few questions, please – it is for a good cause, but you’ll have to wait a little until everything is revealed.

New on….

Too busy with the pseudo-moving right now, so just a quick set of links to other people’s good stuff:
An amazing, fantastic post on Laelaps about horse evolution (also noted by Larry Moran). While at first glance, this post on Pondering Pikaia on naturally occurring hybrids in fish is not related, I beg to differ – she does mention other instances of hybridism in nature, including those in Equids – the well-known mules and hinnies, and not so well-known zebroids and others. And I just finished reading a book Hemi: A Mule, which, IMHO, compares quite favorably to Black Beauty – after all, it was written in early 1970s USA (instead of in Victorian England) and is quite blunt on a number of topics, including sex and war. And the overall message is much more pleasing to me…but you’ll have to read it yourself.
Kate looks at a new study in Animal Behavior about the trade-offs between social/affiliative behaviors (e.g., embracing, grooming) and access to infants in New vs. Old World monkeys.
Archy looks at a new technique developed to read the old books and manuscripts without the need to open them.
There is an ongoing series of posts about the science museums and how much they have gone downhill in recent years, starting with Doctor Vector who is angry (and there is a great comment section there to read). Brian Switek responds.
The ethnobiology of voodoo zombification on Neurophilosophy.
RPM caught some wheel bugs in flagrante delicto…
T. Ryan Gregory, Larry Moran, Anne-Marie and PZ Myers discuss the so-called C-Value and why it has been thrown onto the trash-heap of history a long time ago.
Quixote on trained rats (sniffing explosives and such stuff).
Action!
Bring back the Office of Technology Assessment!
Blog Action Day 2007 focuses on the environment this year.
Restore habeas corpus.
Help make NIH-funded research findings freely available to everyone.
Stop the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) from cutting reimbursements for two radioimmunotherapy drugs to less than their cost.

Student Science Blogging, Part II

A few days ago I wrote about the Zoo School in Asheboro, NC. It is even better than I thought – I got in touch with their lead teacher and she told me that all of their students have laptops in the classroom with wireless access. Their classrooms also have Smartboards and other cool technology. And they are very interested in their students utilizing the Web in a variety of ways, including blogging.
And obviously, some of them already are, as one of the students discovered the post on her own and posted this comment that I want to promote to the front page:

I am a Senior at the North Carolina Zoo School and it is a wonderful experience. You get to work with some of the latest technology, work on projects by yourself, and also work on research papers that will take you inside the Zoo. I would recommend the Zoo School to everyone who lives near one of the four Zoo Schools in the U.S. -Anne Mayberry

I invited the teachers and students to the Science Blogging Conference – Asheboro is barely an hour away from RTP. There, they can schmooze with other students, scientists, science blogging stars, publishers, science teachers, science writers and journalists and participate in all the sessions, including the two education-focused sessions, the first about using the Web in teaching led by David Warlick, a nationally recognized expert on the use of online technologies in teaching, and the other one on ‘Student Blogging: K to PhD’, moderated by a group of undergraduate and graduate students, but we certainly hope that the students from K-12 will also participate in the discussion.

Student Science Blogging, Part I

A few days ago PZ Myers announced he will have some special guest bloggers on Pharyngula soon. While the first commenters were guessing Big Names, like Dawkins, my comment was: “I am hoping for your students….”. A little later, PZ Myers updated his post to announce that yes, indeed, it will be his Neuroscience students who will be guest-blogging this semester.
And today, they started. They were thrown into a lions’ den, but they are doing great, holding their own against the famously ruthless Pharynguloids who call them ‘kids’ and then slam them anyway in many, many comments (they are all among the ‘most active posts’ on scienceblogs.com today!). Talk about Baptism By Fire (or is it Counter-Baptism?)! It’s nice that PZ Myers is protective of them (and ruthless with the commenters who cross the line), but it seems the students are doing just fine on their own so far.
Anyway, check their first posts and keep an eye on them the next few weeks or so – they are bright young people :
New kid on the block by Bright Lights
An Introduction by Blue Expo
I’ll give this a shot… by Lua Yar
A Very new kid on the block! by Bright Lights
Hey folks by Mark Antimony

Meetup tomorrow night

The Triangle blogging season has started, so I hope many of you locals and visitors join us for the first meetup of the year:

The Durham bloggers meetup will be the second Wednesday of each month at 6pm at Tyler’s Tap Room in the American Tobacco Warehouse District. First meetup will be Sept.12th. Anton will coordinate. Duke is rapidly taking to blogging, and we’ve discovered some cool food bloggers in Durham — and Pam Spaulding has represented the city well — so we hope this meetup gets good attendance.

I bet there will be a lot of science and health bloggers there! What with Anton’s new job, and the recent growth of Duke student blogging: see these young, new bloggers for instance, as well as the already established bloggers like Abel, Sheril, Eric and Sarah, to name just a few (see more on top of this page), this is going to be a fun evening, so join us tomorrow night at 6pm.

Blogger Meetup season to start this week

The first blogger meetup of the season will be this Wednesday, September 12th, at 6pm at Tyler’s Tap Room in the American Tobacco Warehouse District. Come in large numbers, bring your friends!
To stay informed about this and other local bloggy events, sign up for the BlogTogether mailing list.

Don’t catch up at Quechup!

Danica:

If you receive the invite from friends or anyone to join social networking site Quechup, don’t do it! Disregard that Quechup email and don’t visit the website. Last night I was caught up by invitation of reputable friend, didn’t know for this spam, and this morning I got alert email about this. I tried now to log into the site and delete my account – but I failed. Such a fraud. I don’t know how to delete my account as I am afraid that my address book will be spammed by this Quechup site!

Eat, eat, eat and live to blog about it!

Before we focus on science, and while the weather is still nice, we (and by “we” I mean “bloggers in the Triangle area of North Carolina”) will have some other kind of bloggy fun, the one that involves taste buds!
Yes, join us for a three-day Foodblogging event on September 23-25, 2007, with the special guest-star: the famous chef-author-blogger Michael Ruhlman. We’ll eat, drink, read, chat and blog while celebrating and promoting the locally grown food prepared by local chef celebrities.
Anton has all the details – the seating is limited so sign up quickly. Yummy!

New on….

Far too busy today, so just news in brief….
New on science blogging:
You can now subscribe to the ScienceBlogs Weekly Recap:

Bonus: people who sign up now will be automatically entered in the ScienceBlogs 500,000 Comment contest, for a chance to win a trip to the greatest science city.

Our friends on The Intersection are looking for a new banner. There are prizes to be awarded! Can they possibly get a banner prettier than mine? Give it a try!
Another blogging contest! Win real money for student blogging. Nominate your favourites today. Let’s have some science bloggers up in the running!
There are already 33 registrants for the Science Blogging Conference. We’ll cap at about 230 so hurry up to claim your spot!
We have over 120 entries for the Open Laboratory 2007 and we want more!
TheLancetStudent.com:

The LancetStudent.com is a beta site for medical students from around the world and in keeping with The Lancet, it has a strong focus on global health. We want this to be your site and you can get involved in a variety of ways: write about global health issues, submit your elective reports, read a weekly summary of what’s in The Lancet, comment on our daily blog, vote in our polls, download our podcasts, and use our global health resources. As we will also be linking to content on TheLancet.com–most of it free–you may find it helpful to register there now. We would really appreciate your feedback so that with your input, we can develop TheLancetStudent.com further. Thanks!

Check out the student blogs!
New on beauty (attractiveness):
The FoxNews title may be a laconic Non Sequitur, but Kate and Dave explain why men really prefer beautiful women.
New on panadaptionism:
The Tree of Life:
Adaptationomics Award #1 – Wolbachia DNA sneaking into host genomes
Evolgen:
I’M IN UR GENOME, ADAPTING UR HOST-SYMBIONT RELATIONSHIP
Sandwalk:
Dennett on Adaptationism
The Evolution Poll of Sandwalk Readers
Pondering Pikaia:
Thoughts on the future of ears
The Anterior Commissure:
Why we bond – individual recognition, evolution, and brain size
New on Open Access:
Association of Research Libraries (ARL) on the PRISM coalition (pdf).
Gavin Baker is guest-blogging on Terra Incognita: Open Access Journal Literature is an Open Educational Resource
Roarmap is a Registry of Open Access Repository Material Archiving Policies around the world. Is your institution/country on there?
Peter Murray-Rast has a whole series of posts on his saga to access his very own paper that was supposed to be Open Access, but apparently is not – the beginning is here and the summary is here.
New on Journalistic Ethics:
When bloggers painstakingly cite and link to their sources when uncovering an important story, they get slammed for being unreliable. But when a “real” newspaper, like New York Times, “forgets” to give proper attribution, that is supposedly OK. Or is it?
New on political blogging
Should bloggers endorse candidates? Why not? I am certainly not pretending to be an unbiased commentator on the primary race. You all know who is my man so consider this the official endorsement.

Blogs are Weapons

Sunlight is the best disinfectant. And many bloggers’ eyes and typing fingers bring a lot of sunlight to whatever anyone is trying hide. This makes bloggers dangerous to many entrenched and powerful interests.
Not that bloggers are Martians, recent arrivals on this planet, to be treated as a ‘special interest’ group. Bloggers are people. And the Web gives people the ability to say what they think, to report what they see, to fact-check the PR outfits, to use their own individual expertise to parse others’ arguments and, yes, to point fingers at the guilty.
And in many countries around the world, this is well understood. And acted upon. Harshly.
Here in the USA, some efforts have appeared here and there to place bloggers under some tougher laws, but that did not fly here. Op-eds against bloggers appear with some regularity, with the only result that the author has his/her reputation stained forever (google: Skube; google: PRISM; for just the two most recent examples of the power of blogs to uncover the truth, make it available to millions forever, and in the process make everyone know who the bad guys are).
Bloggers elsewhere have a much tougher time. As in “much, much tougher time”. Just read this post by Mo.
Web is global. If a blogger somewhere gets imprisoned and tortured for telling the truth to the power, we need to speak up in defense and shame the entire country for it. It worked on Libya (google: Tripoli Six). It should work on others as well.
Remember: bloggers are people. And for the first time in history, people have a voice that can be transmitted to the entire planet in a matter of minutes. This is an immense power. We need to use it to do good.

Coworking

Telecommuting is a great concept, providing flexibility of work-hours, availability when there is a family crisis, etc. But it is difficult to be self-disciplined at home. So many other things vie for attention, including that most excellent invention of all times – the bed.
That is why I spend many hours every day in my ‘office‘ in La Vita Dolce. I love the place – it is quiet most of the time (though I do find myself softly singing along the oldies, including the inevitable “If you’re going to San Francisco” and infamous “Only You”), coffee, bagels, cakes and gelato are the best in town, and the atmosphere is friendly.
But I cannot go there late at night (I am an extreme owl after all) or on days like today, a holiday, when the place is closed. So I sit at home and try to be disciplined, or just take a day off. But it would be great if there was a place I could go to on any day at any time.
Brian has been working for a while now on a business plan for just such a venue – a Coworking place:

Carrboro Creative Coworking is a professional shared working space with a cafe-like atmosphere. It is designed to be a welcoming environment for freelance professionals, home-office workers, entrepreneurs, startup business owners, tech workers, graduate students, writers, and others. Subscribers of the Carrboro Creative Coworking space will receive access to a reliable office space inside a unique modern community.

If there is sufficient interest (and there should be in this town), Brian would rent a place – a house, a set of appartments, or an office space, and all of us would pitch in our piece of “rent” that would keep the place running. There would be Internet connection for all of us, those with “full-time” subscriptions would have rooms with doors that can be locked, and there would also be a common space where one could meet and talk with the others – a fridge, a microwave and a GOOD coffee machine are necessities there.
So, if you live in the Chapel Hill/Carrboro area and are interested in this, please fill out a short survey here (pdf) and sign up for the Google group while there (that way you can get more information about the business plan, etc.).

Have you turned a rock today?

rock%20flipping%20badge.jpgRemember? Today is the Rock Flipping day!
It’s so dry and hot here, it is even dry and hot under the rocks in the woods. It took my daughter and me a long time flipping rocks to detect any sign of life and then it would be just a couple of ants quickly scurrying away, too fast to take a picture. Then we went down to the pond – and nothing there either, it’s THAT dry! Finally, we gave up and said, OK, just one more rock. And that’s where we found this frog. My camera cannot really do the close-up photography needed for this. I hope that someone here can still be able to recognize the species and play with binomial nomenclature in italicized Latin in the comments.
Rock%20Flipping%20001.jpg
Rock%20Flipping%20002.jpg
Rock%20Flipping%20003.jpg

Triangle Bloggers

The August blogger BBQ traditionally kicks-off the new blogging season (see the pictures from the BBQ on Flickr). So, we now have a new schedule for the 07/08 meetups. Instead of having all the meetups in Carrboro, we will rotate between two venues each month: the second Wednesday of the month in Durham, the fourth Wednesday of the month in Chapel Hill/Carrboro.
Anton has all the details on places, dates and times.
So, if you live in the area, or are just visiting, please come by. It is informal and fun. You don’t have to write a blog of your own – you can just be a reader or a fan. If you want to start a blog, we can get you started right there and then – that’s happened before.

Where in the World is Coturnix?

If you were amazed the other night to find I was not online for a long time, not blogging, not commenting, not responding to e-mail, not on Facebook, now you know where I was – spreading Brotherhood and Unity in the Triangle area blogging community. And if the same phenomenon happens tonight, here’s a hint where I can be found.

Blog Day 2007

Blog Day 2007
Today is the third annual BlogDay. Pick five blogs and tell your readers why they should check them out. It is nicely undefined, i.e., what constitutes “new”, but I guess DailyKos is out of the running. Also, instead of pointing you to any of my Sciblings, just go to the scienceblogs.com front page, and check every single one of them on the blogroll there as every one of them is worth your time and energy. Anyway, I have been far too busy lately to go around exploring new blogs, so here are five of my more recent favourites that I manage to check on every day anyway:
Pondering Pikaia is a fresh voice and a master in distilling complex science into very simple, easy-to-understand English.
The Anterior Commissure always has something nice to say about sex.
The Tree of Life covers (mostly microbial) genomics, evolution and Open Access.
Notes From Ukraine kept the summer exciting with reports from research in Chernobyl.
Laelaps requires fixing coffee first, kicking the shoes off, and digging in.
Technorati tag: BlogDay2007

Bloggers For Peer Review Icon Contest

The BPR3 icon contest just got even richer. It’s worth your time and energy!

Wi-fi for the people

Brian Russell, the tireless fighter for public wireless in the Chapel Hill/Carrboro area, recently wrote two blog posts on the widely read local blog Orange Politics: Chapel Hill WiFi Pilot needs different Hotspots and Where is the WiFi?
This received quite a lot of attention both before and during the Chapel Hill Town Council meeting where public wi-fi was discussed. Some pilot locations may get altered due to Brian’s advice. Today, Brian has a front-page article in Chapel Hill News on the topic. He has been building a Google Map of local wireless (on which I made sure to include a good word for my ‘office’). Brian writes:

On Sept. 1, or when the new pilot goes live, I will plot their locations on a Google map at http://www.chapelhillwireless.org. Then I will publicly announce on Orange Politics a series of Wireless Tailgate Parties. Each day we’ll be at different Chapel Hill Wireless hot spot. Bring your folding chair, a fully charged laptop, food, drinks, a video camera, wi-fi phone, or whatever. If you don’t have a laptop don’t worry. We’ll share.

Morning in Carrboro

This morning bright and early, I went to Weaver Street Market (the one in Carrboro, not the one a block away from me), where I met Paul Jones for coffee and a session of people-watching – a Saturday morning tradition.
Carrboro is like a miniature version of San Francisco in a sense. While Chapel Hill is populated by Birckenstock liberals (hey, I am one, so I feel comfortable), in Carrboro you can wear, figuratevily, anything you want: Birckenstocks, sure, but also sneakers, clogs, slippers, high-heels, army boots, cowboy boots, loafers, sandals, Tevas, or go barefoot and, no matter what, nobody cares. Just like in San Francisco, it is a live and let live place, where one can be whatever one is (or whatever one wants to pretend to be) freely, without anyone batting an eye-lash. What a wonderful feeling!
Apart from meeting a bunch of other people (everyone knows Paul around here) and planning the Science Blogging Conference, we also talked about the Web a lot. After all, Paul teaches a course on Online Communities. Geez, my job description is “Online Community Manager“! I got there by the seat of my pants, doing what I like doing and observing how others behave online. It is now time to start reading and learning about what researchers have found out about this as well. Hopefully this will be helpful for my work as well.

New on…

New on Seed Scienceblogs:
The ScienceBlogs 500,000th Comment Contest
PZ Myers explains
Now, where are the comments on this blog? Just type! It’s easy!
New on PLoS – new articles have been published today on:
PLoS Genetics
PLoS Computational Biology
PLoS Pathogens
New on Hirschsprung’s Disease:
Short Bowel Syndrome – And the Potential Benefits of Omega-3’s
Save the babies!
You can help, perhaps.
New on the blog carnival front:
Should there be a new geology carnival?
Friday Ark #153 is up on The Modulator
New on the Skube debacle:
Nick Anthis: Jay Rosen: Blogs Do Quality Reporting Too
Jay Rosen: Blowback: The journalism that bloggers actually do…
Jeff Jarvis: A game of wack-a-curmudgeon
Ed Cone: Skube speaks
Paul Jones: News and Record’s Skube vs Bloggers Summary
Lanita Withers: Essay lights up blogosphere
Scott Rosenberg: Skube vs. Marshall and the LA Times’ editorial kabuki
New on the Science Blogging Conference and Anthology
The registration for the Conference opens in one week – September 1st.
Send in yor suggestions for the posts that should be included in Open Laboratory 2007
New on Open Science:
Cameron Neylon: Open (adjective)
Bill Hooker: What do we mean by open science?
Peter Murray-Rast: What do we mean by open science?
Jean-Claude Bradley: Cameron Neylon on Open Notebook Science
Bill Hooker: Another note on terminology
New on spoiled kids growing up into Kindergarden bullies:
Blake Stacey
SA Smith
Chris Mims
Jim Lippard
Andrea Bottaro
John Lynch
Lindsay Beyerstein
PZ Myers

Bloggers for Peer-Reviewed Research Reporting

Dave announced that the contest for the icon for denoting posts covering peer-reviewed research is now open. Use your creative skills and/or spread the word.

Sarah is back from Chernobyl

So, this is a perfect time to take another look at her Notes From Ukraine and check out the last several posts from there. I hope the blog will continue as Notes From Durham including the coverage of her science at Duke and all the local blogger events…

Leave No Rock Unturned

On September 2nd this year go out somewhere: into your backyard, or the woods, or the bottom of the sea, and turn a rock or two or three. Take pictures of what you find underneath. Perhaps you’ll find earthworms, or pillbugs, or beetles. Or a starfish. Maybe even a snake. Perhaps even a snake guarding the entrance to Dick Cheney’s Undisclosed Location. If you turn a rock in Iraq and find WMDs please let us all know as that would be the biggest scoop in the history of the blogosphere (good luck with that one, though).
The idea was hatched by Dave Bonta, Fred Garber and Bev Wigney. Dave explains in detail.
Post your pictures on your blog and send Bev the URL, or post them on this Flickr tag, or send them to Bev at bev (at) magickcanoe (dot) com (with “Rock Flipping” in the subject line). Then sit back and watch the collection grow. See what others find under the rocks on that day. Post a link on your blog as well.

Blogger Blowback

On Sunday, LATimes published a viciously uninformed piece about blogging by some Skube guy (who appears to be here in NC though I have never heard of him before). The blogosphere, as expected, responded with laughter and dismay.
Today, LATimes published a response by NYU J-school professor (who I have most definitely heard of, and even met in person once) Jay Rosen – The journalism that bloggers actually do:

Blowback! That’s what you’re in for when a great American newspaper runs a Sunday opinion piece as irretrievably lame as “Blogs: All the noise that fits” by Michael Skube…

The article lists a few examples (collected in the most blogospheric manner possible – in the comments thread on Jay Rosen’s blog, subsequently fact-checked and vetted before publication), including one distinctly science-related example – the George Deutch affair in which my Scibling Nick Anthis did some investigative reporting which resulted in a highly visible resignation of Deutch from NASA.

Welcome the New Sciblings!

Everybody go say Hello to the Bleiman Brothers at the most recent addition to the Scienceblogs Empire – Zooillogix. Andrew Bleiman appears to be a Crustacean of some sort, while brother Benny has distinctly mammalian characteristics, but you have to be an expert (is Darren Naish in the house?) to figure out which Order to put him in….

To read or not to read…

I have discovered that I sometimes suffer from paralysis by analysis on the blog. I write the best stuff when I concoct a post in my head during a dog walk and then immediately pour it into the computer while it is still hot. Whenever I set out to do some real lit research on the topic I realize that other, smarter people have already written all that, and did a better job than I could ever dream of doing, so I abandon the post.
So, I am getting really nervous now, as I am thinking of writing a post about the history of the scientific paper and how the Web and the Open Access will change it in the future. Then, I see that several smart people wrote about the topic already. To read them all or not? I am curious and I want to know, but I am afraid I’ll never write my post if I read these papers now. Advice?

How to deal with HIV denialists online

My Scibling Tara Smith together with Steven Novella, published an article in PLoS Medicine last week that all frequent readers of science blogs will find interesting:
HIV Denial in the Internet Era:

Because these denialist assertions are made in books and on the Internet rather than in the scientific literature, many scientists are either unaware of the existence of organized denial groups, or believe they can safely ignore them as the discredited fringe. And indeed, most of the HIV deniers’ arguments were answered long ago by scientists. However, many members of the general public do not have the scientific background to critique the assertions put forth by these groups, and not only accept them but continue to propagate them. A recent editorial in Nature Medicine [32] stresses the need to counteract AIDS misinformation spread by the deniers.

A very, very good and important article! Especially if you are struggling with various kinds of denialists on blogs all the time.
And you can also see other cool papers published today in PLoS Medicine.

Michael Skube: just another guy with a blog and an Exhibit A for why bloggers are mad at Corporate Media

Here are a few pertinent quotes, but read the entire articles as well as long comment threads.
Ed Cone:

Skube published an opinion piece about blogs that, with the help of his editors at the LA Times, failed to uphold the journalistic standards he preaches.
It’s not the first time that Skube has opined out of ignorance on this subject. I called the Pulitzer winner’s previous column for the N&R a “virtually content-free rant, citing no blogs, showing no signs he did any research by reading blogs…crap.” Then I phoned Skube and found he had said little because he knew little and cared little about them. That doesn’t seem to have changed.

Jay Rosen:

Retire, man. I’m serious. You’re an embarrassment to my profession, to the university where you teach, and to the craft of reporting you claim to defend. It is time for you to quit, as you’ve clearly called it quits on learning– and reporting. Ring this guy up and ask him to go bass fishing or something. You’re not doing anyone any good– you’re just insulting your own bio. And when you’re done lecturing us on “the patient fact-finding of reporters,” tell the godforsaken LA Times they’re going to have to run a correction. The Post hasn’t won a Pulitzer for its reporting on Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Jeez.

Paul Jones:

In December 2005, Michael Skube wrote a poorly researched (or more properly not researched at all) oped about blogging for the News and Record (Greensboro, NC). [Oddly this article cannot be found in NewsBank or online]
Ed Cone was so shocked that he called Skube to ask him about his experiences reading blogs and found in a very interesting conversation that Skube admitted to having no experience reading blogs at all short of a couple of Andrew Sullivan pieces.
In the process, Ed mentioned Josh Marshall and Talking Points Memo. Skube owned up to knowing Marshall from print but had never heard of TPM.
Fast forward to yesterday and a new diatribe against blogs published in the LA Times. Here Skube reheats his arguments, but this time points to TPM as a place where facts aren’t checked. Only one problem, Skube still admits to not having read TPM — this time to Marshall himself.
Instead, Skube claims that his editors altered his article to insert TPM and others. Skube signed off on the article having yet to have done any of the research required to have written it.

Jill of Feministe (scroll down as Permalink is funky):

Dear Michael Skube,
Take a deep breath and repeat after me: Bloggers do not want your job.
You seem to be under the impression that bloggers want to do away with the journalistic establishment, and that we want to replace it with an internet free-for-all. That may be what the right-wing, Fox-worshipping dingbats over at Instapundit or TownHall are fighting for, but for the most part, progressive bloggers don’t want to see the end of CNN or the New York Times or Newsweek. We just want you to do your job. Bloggers are a lot of things, but for the most part, we aren’t reporters. We don’t have the resources that you have, or the institutional support. We’re critics, commentators, vultures who pick apart and criticize and sometimes build on the work that you do. We occasionally break stories, and sometimes we cover events, but many of us are decidedly partisan and don’t bother to feign neutrality. Some of us do report, and do try to adhere to traditional journalistic ethics. Most of us don’t. That’s ok. And, God help me for quoting Markos, but he’s right when he says that “We need to keep the media honest, but as an institution, it’s important that they exist and do their job well.”

Amanda Marcotte:

The idea that liberal bloggers are too blinded by partisanship to touch the robes of the unbiased press is un-fucking-believably insulting to me, on a personal level. While the mainstream media brainlessly played puppet for Republican smear-masters, pretending that “Catholic leaders” were attacking Melissa McEwan and myself, liberal bloggers kept the truth alive, writing and petitioning endlessly for the reality that we were the victims of baseless attacks from conservative organizations that exist pretty much only to undermine Democrats.
—————–snip—————
As Jill notes, it seems that Skube and others in the “MSM” seem to view comments from bloggers like this as a direct attack on their jobs, as if we are storming the gate and want to take over. To a degree, this is true–one of the issues that was kicked around during Yearly Kos, for instance, is how to percolate up some bloggers to the next level and get our voices into the mainstream media, which is no more seedy than the efforts undertaken by those already there to get their jobs. (The LA Times regularly runs pieces by Ezra Klein, so it’s only fair to point out that they’re often on the side of the angels on this.) But when it comes to journalism, Jill is 100% right–on the whole, liberal bloggers don’t want to oust the media. We just want it to work like it’s supposed to. If the media had worked like it was supposed to, the nation would have known from the get-go what was obvious to those of us with a healthy dose of skepticism, that there were no damn WMDs in Iraq and the Bush administration was orchestrating a misinformation campaign to trick the nation into going to war. The blood of thousands of American soldiers and hundreds of thousands of Iraqis is on the hands of every journalist who suspended good judgment and breathlessly passed on BushCo lies about the war.
That said, I do have a caveat to introduce that makes the whole thing distressing. Bloggers most definitely do not want your job. But I can see how it might seem, from the point of view of those who do have high perches in the “MSM”, that we’re trying to screw up their lives. It gets back to the whole acronym “MSM”–what Markos was probably getting at and Skube hysterically skipped over, was that the problem with the media is not that it’s mainstream so much as that it’s under the thrall of right wing elements, no doubt in part because it’s corporate-controlled.

Jay Rosen:

I know an editor at the LA Times who saw my post. He asked me if I wanted to write a Blowback piece (see this example) for the opinion section of the site.
A reply of sorts to Professor Skube.
I am not interested in investigating him, but I am interested in including in my reply 7-10 diverse and interesting examples of blog sites doing original reporting. The kind of thing he wouldn’t know about because he didn’t check it out before oh-pining.
That is, I am trying to be constructive and informative in my response, which will also be quite critical.
I have three to start off with that I think I will use, two well known, one less so.
1.) Talking Points Memo’s pursuit of the US attorney’s story this spring and over time.
2.) Firedoglake at the Libby trial March 2007.
3.) Daily Kos community and the Sinclair Broadcasting dossier in October 2004.
I know of others but I welcome your suggestions. The more different they are the better.

Anything from science blogosphere we can include?
Dan Gillmor:

Here’s the gist. Michael Skube, a former newspaper editor and Pulitzer Prize winner who’s now a journalism professor, wrote an opinion piece for the LA Times in which he flays bloggers for alleged violations of journalistic principles. In this case, Skube writes, bloggers show little willingness to do serious reporting: devoting “time, thorough fact-checking and verification and, most of all, perseverance” to the topic.
But the piece cites Marshall, whose work is among the best journalism — by any standard — that you can find on the Web in any form, in a passing reference, as if he’s one of the offenders.
Marshall takes this with careful calm, but then he reveals a stunning fact about Skube’s “reporting” style. An editor inserted the mention of Marshall, and Skube — who admitted to Marshall that he hasn’t “spent any time on your site” — let that run in the op-ed column. Marshall writes:

Josh Marshall:

Now, whether we do any quality reporting at TPM is a matter of opinion. And everyone is entitled to theirs. So against my better judgment, I sent Skube an email telling him that I found it hard to believe he was very familiar with TPM if he was including us as examples in a column about the dearth of original reporting in the blogosphere.
Now, I get criticized plenty. And that’s fair since I do plenty of criticizing. And I wouldn’t raise any of this here if it weren’t for what came up in Skube’s response.
Not long after I wrote I got a reply: “I didn’t put your name into the piece and haven’t spent any time on your site. So to that extent I’m happy to give you benefit of the doubt …”
This seemed more than a little odd since, as I said, he certainly does use me as an example — along with Sullivan, Matt Yglesias and Kos. So I followed up noting my surprise that he didn’t seem to remember what he’d written in his own opinion column on the very day it appeared and that in any case it cut against his credibility somewhat that he wrote about sites he admits he’d never read.
To which I got this response: “I said I did not refer to you in the original. Your name was inserted late by an editor who perhaps thought I needed to cite more examples … ”
And this is from someone who teaches journalism?

Mike the Mad Biologist:

Granted, sometimes I report on a science article that’s been released. But I hope no one thinks I’m doing straight reporting–at most, I engage that god-awful hybrid ‘news analysis.’ As I’ve written before, I’m just another guy with a blog offering opinions and something approaching analysis. Sometimes I even apply myself and reference stuff.
It’s too bad that Skube doesn’t realize that, at least based on his op-ed, that he too, is just another guy with a blog.

New York City Meetup – Saturday Night Fever

OK, this will be the last series of pictures of my Sciblings from the shindig of the past weekend. As you may have noticed, several others have posted their recollections and pictures on their blogs. You can also see some pictures on Flickr and Facebook and please add and tag more if you have them.
I have noticed it several times before, but this is something that really came out in full force at the Meetup as we really feel like an online family – meeting people online can produce real freindships. Then, when you meet offline for the first time after years of cyberchatter, there is nothing else to do but hug and continue the conversation over a beer as if you personally have known each other for year. There is no need to spend any time ‘getting to know’ each other.
In many ways, I know some of my blogfriends better than I know some of my real-life colleagues and acquaintances, as personality and some deeper secrets come out in people’s writings, even if they are really good at concealing those in person. The good thing is that I actually really like all of my Sciblings and meeting them all in person just reinforced this feeling – what a fantastic bunch of people!
And, in addition to them, we got to meet a couple of our readers/commenters on Saturday night which was just so great! Pictures under the fold.

Continue reading

New York City Blogger Meetup – brunch pictures

OK, so a bunch of us sciencebloggers went to New York City this weekend. This is something that we were trying to do for almost a year now. Sure, many of us Sciblings have met one-on-one on occasion, but this was an opportunity to get many of us together all in the same place at the same time, to have fun together and see what happens.
So, on Friday, most of us managed to meet at Seed magazine’s (and scienceblogs.com) offices. That is where we started on our first beers….(see my pictures from the event posted on Saturday, as well as other people’s pictures)
Then we went to a Brewery on Union Square…and had some more beer…
Then we went to Adam Bly’s House (he is the Editor-in-Chief of Seed), where we had, you guessed it, some more beer (or wine, plus some great food). A number of Seed editors and staffers were there as well. A few more Sciblings managed to arrive by that time. I realize I have no pictures of Carl Zimmer, Dr.Signout and Orli van Mourik (perhaps some other people do, so look around).
Then, we went to a karaoke bar, where we had more beer…and yes, several of us sang….
On Saturday, we went together for breakfast in smaller groups (see my pictures I posted earlier today), followed by a brunch (pictures under the fold), where they filmed us (actually, about two thirds of us sitting at two tables, there was another non-camera table for the anonymous third, staffers and significant others). We talked about sciencey stuff and hopefully some clips of that will appear on the Seed site in the near future. That was also a good opportunity (while we were waiting for the cameras to get set up) for me to go around and promote PLoS and to promote the Science Blogging Conference.
That afternoon, a group of us went to the AMNH and saw two special exhibits – Galactic Collisions and Frogs (pictures still to come).
In the evening we went to BBar for dinner and beer for about 3.5 hours, followed by much more (and much cheaper) beer at a place called Colliseum. A few of our readers joined us for the occasion (pictures to follow, here, on Facebook and on Flickr).

Continue reading

New York City Blogger Meetup – breakfast pictures

Under the fold, Saturday morning pictures from New York City Sciblings meetup, at Union Square Inn and a pastry/coffee place where we had breakfast

Continue reading

NYC Meetup – pictures 1

A bunch of Sciblings meeting at the Seed offices in New York City on Friday Afternoon….updated with a couple of more pictures and links….(several more people came late, after my batteries died…)

Continue reading

Happy Blogiversary

To me.
My very first post was on August 18, 2004 – seems like a century ago.
Anyway, the wifi at the hotel is very week so I will have to wait until Monday to post a couple of hundred pictures from the Seed scienceblogs meetup. In the meantime, I have placed a few of the pics on Facebook, and the Flickr tag is ‘sciblings07’.