Category Archives: Blogging

Any artists in the house?

Karen is looking for a nice new banner for her blog. Biochemistry, science, medicine and journalism are the themes. Go wild with your creativity!

Class

Online and Offline. Obligatory Readings of the Day.

An Inspiring Story!

I dropped by Anton’s blog as I tend to do every day and saw something that caught my eye in his side-bar SugarCubes – an amazing story about William Kamkwamba, a 19 year old boy in Malawi who had to quit school because his family did not have money. So, he started teaching himself from books. And he learned how to do things and used whatever materials were available to design and construct a windmill, a transformer and other stuff. A bunch of African bloggers picked up a story about him and one thing led to another – he spoke at TED conference, got funds for schooling, and, just a few weeks ago, as soon as he first laid his hands on a computer, started his own blog.

The Eight Random Facts Meme

I got tagged by Steve Poceta -(if you are more interested in sleep disorders than circadian clocks in funny animals, his blog is more interesting to you than mine) to participate in the Eight Random Facts Meme. Here are the rules:

1. Players start with 8 random facts about themselves.
2. Those who are tagged should post these rules and their 8 random facts.
3. Players should tag 8 other people and notify them they have been
tagged.

So, here are the eight random, late-night-after-a-busy-day-and-a-strong-beer facts about me:
1. I used to wear a goatee. When I arrived in the USA, I was told a few times I looked like Jesus Christ, so I shaved it off before getting all the new documents.
2. I just traded in a clunky old Ford Winstar for a nice Toyota Corolla earlier today.
3. I used to translate Disney comic strips (yup, Mickey, Donald etc.) from English into Serbo-Croatian. Not a well-paying job, but certainly fun!
4. I have no tattoos, never wanted one, and probably will never get one.
5. My favourite city in the world is Stockholm – I wish it was more South….I was there during the record-breaking heat of summer 1990. My best friend from middle school lives there.
6. Once I played guitar for 12 hours straight (4pm – 4am) without a break and without repeating a single song. It was on a camping trip with a bunch of aikido folks who knew how to massage my wrists to keep them working through the night. They also helped with some of the lyrics.
7. The name of my second horse was the Hebrew translation of the Serbian name of my first horse (the first was Meraklija, the second was Kefli – both mean something like “a person who really knows how to enjoy life”). The two were half-brothers and I bought the second horse one day after he was born (and paid when he was six months old and ready to be weaned and shipped away).
8. The first and only pet I had as a child was a little turtle named Eschillus. Now my mother realizes I finally achieved my biggest goal in life: a house full of animals.
People I tag:
Jenna
Archy
Zuska
Sheril
Laelaps
Jennifer
Karen
Orli
Update: Laelaps, Zuska and Orli have responded so far. And Jenna. And Archy. And Karen.

Lessig moves on, to even bigger and more important battles

After 10 years of fighting for open source, net neutrality, free information and open education, Lawrence Lessig has decided to change his career and to seriously attack the problem of corruption in the U.S. politics. It’s not going to be easy, but having Lessig on our side in this battle is a great assett. Read his explanation (though you know I disagree with him on Obama and corruption) as it is very telling and well-written.
Hat-tip: Danica (where you can also see the movie of Lessig giving a speech in which he made the announcement).

SciTalk.com

On the heels of this post, I was informed of another Web2.0 site for scientists that just launched – SciTalks collects talks and lectures by scientists on a variety of topics. There are already many clips available on the site, which you can rate, or add some from your own collection. You can find out more about the site here and at the site’s blog.

Bay Area Bloggers!?

I know Bay Area is a big blogging center – almost as dense with bloggers as Greensboro, NC – but I am not exactly sure which of the bloggers I know actually live there. Since I’ll be in San Francisco in July, I’d like to meet some of the local bloggers. Is there a MeetUp? An aggregator? Do local bloggers attend Drinking Liberally? Is there anything happening during the summer at all?
The NC expats in San Francisco, Josh Steiger and Justin Watt, I’m sure I’ll meet as we are friends and we’ll be in touch. Perhaps I’ll get to meet danah boyd (I missed it when she came here to UNC).
And of course, there are science bloggers, including Jennifer Wong, Janet Stemwedel, Craig McClain and Rick MacPherson. Anyone else?
Anyone wants to go see Iron Science Teacher with me? Or the opening of the new Harry Potter movie on July 11th?
Let me know (comments or e-mail) if you will be in the SF area in July and if you’d like to meet in person.

Strange Search Queries…

Matt at Behavioral Ecology Blog is asking what strange searches bring readers to my blog. I was too lazy to go to Google Analytis (changing passwords and stuff), so I just checked the last 100 referees on Sitemeter and I found these:

Continue reading

Science 2.0

I think I have a profile on Friendster – I don’t know, I haven’t checked since 2003. I have bare-bones profiles on MySpace, LinkedIn and Change.Org and I will get an e-mail if you “friend” me (and will friend you back), but I do not have time to spend on there. I refuse to even look at all the other social networking sites like Twitter – there are only so many hours in the day.
But I am interested in possible ways of making science communication more interactive and more Webby 2.0, beyond just blogs. Pedro, Carl and Phillip have recently written thoughtful posts about this topic as well.
So, I am looking around to see what works. I set up profiles on Knowble and Nature Network. I check out the Sci/Tech section of NewsTrust and the Science tag on DailyKos every now and then. I check, as regularly as I can make myself, what’s new on Connotea, Postgenomic, Scintilla and JeffsBench. And of course I read tons of science blogs.
All of those are interesting experiments in different aspects of Web2.0 and, considering my soon-to-start job, I’ll be tracking all those experiments very closely to see what works and what doesn’t and why.
But my own personal favourite – and I’ll have to figure out why I like it so much – is Facebook. Some of my old NCSU students put me on there as soon as it was launched (only a few have un-friended me since) and I can see as they get jobs, get married, etc., which is quite nice. I set up a profile (yes, you can ‘friend’ me – just say you are my reader) and have been hooked ever since.
Then, I started reading what Fred Stutzman writes on his blog – he is doing a PhD on social networks here at UNC, with a special emphasis on Facebook. I repeated for the NCSU network a study he did in the UNC network.
Then, as an experiment, I started friending hundreds of ex-Yugoslavs all around North America and realized how the youngsters appear to have no animosity towards the “other” ethnics groups: Serbs, Croats, Slovenians, Macedonians, Montenegrins, Bosnians, Kosovo Albanians, etc. – all are friending each other, joining various “Yugo-nostalgic” groups, etc.
When Facebook opened its doors to non-‘edu’ addresses, the first result was dismaying. I suddenly started getting friends requests from various scantily clad women who wanted me to support their modeling agencies, or to vote for them on Maxim or some such stuff. My thought at the time was “Oh my, there goes Facebook, following MySpace into the junk territory…”
So, I deleted several hundreds of “friends” and left only those I knew personally very well, either online or offline. That was also the time when others – more serious types – started discovering the Facebook. Now, you can join fan-club groups of such blogs as Pharyngula, Pandagon (also I Am Amanda Marcotte), Shakesville, Pam’s House Blend, Feministe, Firedoglake and Blue NC, or a broader North Carolina Bloggers group. And you can make friends with those blogs’ owners, contributors, commenters and lurkers.
Since yesterday, you can also join the fan-club group of A Blog Around The Clock. Or you may prefer to join the fans of Scienceblogs.com.
There are many fun groups there, like Sleep… it’s the new sex. But there are also a growing number of science-related groups, e.g., Order of the Science Scouts of Exemplary Repute and Above Average Physique, Prof. Steve Steve is my Hero!, The Skeptics’ Guide to the Universe, STS (Science and Technology in Society) and Charles Darwin Has A Posse.
Some groups are more action-oriented, e.g., Access to Research Now!, I want national wireless Internet!, Net Neutrality, Abolish Abstinence Only Sex Education, Support Stem Cell Research or Stop the U.S.Army from bombing Pinon Canyon dinosaurs.
One can follow the links and links-within-links from group to group, from friend to friend, and find all sorts of stuff. Last year, I made an ‘event’ for the NC Science Blogging Conference and will do so again a little later in the year for the Second conference. I may try to promote the Anthology there, or build a fan-club of PLoS. And with the new ability to add all sorts of applications built outside of Facebook, the possibilities for online connections of scientists are endless. Will there be a Connotea app there soon? Postgenomic? All we need to do is get more scientists to sign up and who knows what may come out of it in the end!
Update: I just noticed that Euan also thought about Facebook in terms of Science 2.0
Related: Bertalan Meskó – 10 Tips for How to Use Web 2.0 in Medicine
Has anyone looked at Erudix yet?
And for the YouTube of science, check JoVE and Lab Action
More on Facebook:
Dave Winer:

When someone lists you as a “friend” on Facebook you get to confirm it. That’s good.
When you click on the “Confirm” button, you get a list of choices that almost never seems to have the right choice. Does that mean you don’t have a relationship with the person? No. It means that the list of possible choices hasn’t been updated since Facebook was opened to people outside the education system.

Dave Winer again:

Everyone is going ga-ga over Facebook, but like the people who hold out on Twitter, I’m not ready to give my life to a service that views me as a college student. My relationships are adult relationships. Okay, I probably won’t even use Facebook when they offer me some realistic choices on labels for the arcs that connect me with people in my network, because what we really need is an architecture that allows anyone to add a tag to an arc, the same way we add tags to pictures on Flickr.

BTW, one does not have to choose from one of the given options, but can invent a new one (perhaps they listened to Dave and fixed this).
Fred Stutzman:

I think my thoughts on how higher ed could use the platform warrant another post. I might even mock up a few ideas. Your ideas and feedback welcome in the thread.

Danica:

I love Facebook and all the apps that are popping up each day. This is not anymore the second, but third life…

Scoble:

Conclusions: if you held a gun to my head and made me choose only one of these services I’d pick Facebook. Especially if I already didn’t have a blog as a platform to communicate with other people.

Is It Plagiarism? I Think So…

You may have noticed a site called “New York Articles” (http://nyarticles.com/) which “aggregates” content from a bunch of different blogs, including this one as well as a number of other scienceblogs.com blogs. It copies and pastes everything that is in the RSS feed, i.e., everything that is above the fold. As you know, I only occasionally place stuff under the fold, and some people never do.
Sure, it does provide a link at the bottom, so in that way, it is a tiny little bit better than some sites that don’t (you may recall this case – see Part I and Part II). But how much better? What does it accomplish? Who is actually going to read the stuff on that crappy-looking site site instead of the originals?
Is it as bad as this pathetically uncreative guy and his notion of “creative editing”?
Unfortunately, the NYA site brings in Google and Yahoo searches, it shows up on Google Blogsearch and Technorati, and someone somewhere is making money from Google AdSense by stealing other people’s content.
But, what personally irks me the most is that our content is mixed up with content coming from places I don’t want to be associated with, e.g., that den of racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, femiphobic jerks at Little Green Footballs. That is not the kind of neighbors I want to have. I like my neighbors at Scienceblogs.com and that is why I am here – it was my choice (and Seed’s) and I’d like to have some say in where my content appears online.
So, if you are reading this at a place that is NOT http://scienceblogs.com/clock/ you are at a wrong place and you are unwittingly helping some lowly parasite earn undeserved money from advertising. Skip it. Come here and get my real RSS feed instead.
And….

Continue reading

Healthcare 100

Here is the ranking of Top 100 (actually top 176) blogs that cover medicine, nursing and healthcare. Check it out.

Behavioral Biology Blog has moved

Matt at Berkeley has just moved his Behavioral Biology Blog from the old URL to a new URL. Please change your bookmarks, blogrolls and feeds accordingly.

The Open Laboratory and science blogging

Attila (read the entire transcript of our chat) alerted me to a new book review of ‘The Open Science 2006‘ science blogging anthology.
MC and Reed have already blogged about the review.
Let me know what you think. And keep the submissions for the 2007 edition flowing in.

New SciBling and other science blogging news

Sheril Kirshenbaum has officially joined Chris Mooney on “The Intersection” (the first science blog I have ever seen in my life, almost three years ago). Hey, one more North Carolina SciBling can’t hurt!
Inkycircus has moved: The Brit ScienceBlogging Trio Fantasticus has moved from here to here. Fix your blogrolls, bookmarks and feeds.

We’re All Journalists Now

Scott Gant is on NPR’s Diane Rehm show right now, valiantly defending bloggers from grouchy journalists. They will have a podcast up later.

Blogiversary

On this day a year ago, A Blog Around The Clock was born. Twenty-something other bloggers moved to the Scienceblogs.com empire on that same day. My old blogs are still up there, gathering cyberdust, slowly losing Google traffic and rankings, because all of the action is right here. During this year, I posted 2941 posts (that is about 8.12 posts per day) and received 5233 legitimate comments. While my new job is likely to somewhat change the tone of the blog (more science, less politics, most likely), I have no intention of slowing down. I hope you are all still here for the second anniversary next year.

Koufax Awards

So, it appears that Koufax Awards will happen. These are the most celebrated blog awards of them all (unless you are a wingnut). I am not exactly sure when all the lists of nominations will be finalized (or if any additions will be allowed at this date – these are 2006 awards, after all) and when the voting will begin.
But I found my blog nominated in several categories, including Best Blog (no chance in hell), Best Post (for this post, for which I have high hopes), Best Series (the BIO101 lecture notes), Best Consonant Level Blog, Best Expert Blog and Most Deserving of Wider Recognition. Check here for other categories. Lots of interesting blogs to check out.
But most importantly, once the voting is open, I’d like you all to vote for Scienceblogs.com for the Best Community.

Another job application on a blog

Jason aka Argonaut saw how I got the job and decided to try the same tactic. And, lo and behold, check the first comment on this post! I hope it works out for Jason as it did for me.

Blogging For Sex Education linkfest

Renegade Evolution has collected the links for yesterday’s Blogging For Sex Education day.

Danica Needs a New Job!

Graduate of the University of Belgrade (Serbia), City University (UK) and UNC-Chapel Hill (USA), with a Masters from University of Belgrade, Danica Radovanovic is currently in Belgrade without a job and she is looking for one either in Serbia, in Western/Northern Europe or in the USA.
Danica is the tireless Serbian pioneer in all things online: blogging, open source, Linux, science blogging, open science, social networking software, online publishing, eZine editing, etc. She is the force behind putting Serbian science online and making it open. She has done research on Internet use in Serbia in comparison to the UK and the USA and has been a tireless advocate for the Internet, open source computing and Open Science, travelling around Serbia and the world talking about it. She is also a cybrarian and has experience working at the Library of Congress.
You can learn more about Danica here and check her LinkedIn CV/Resume (expanded). She will send you the real Resume on demand.
This is your opportunity to snag someone with boundless energy and enthusiasm, coupled with knowledge, skill and experience. Do you or your organization need someone like that?

Tomorrow

Remember to Blog For Sex Education. Put this logo on top of your post if you like. Then paste your permalink in the comments of this post and Renegade Evolution will put together a linkfest.

Steve Gilliard

One of the very first bloggers I have ever read, and always one of the best, Steve Gilliard has died. He was exactly the same age as me. His powerful voice will be greatly missed. The last few months of the blog (as of the move to a new domain) appear not to be accessible, but you can check the years of archives of the old version of the News Blog.

For European LifeScience Bloggers

It is high time a blogger wins this prize, don’t you think? If you are in Europe or Israel, and you have a life-science blog, apply for this award:

EMBO Award for Communication in the Life Sciences
Call for entries 2007
DEADLINE 30 JUNE 2007
Description of the award
The award is intended for scientists who have, while remaining active in laboratory research, risen to the challenge of communicating science to a non-scientific audience. The winners of the EMBO Award are nominated for the EU Descartes Prize for science communication.
Prize
The sum awarded is Euro 5.000, accompanied by a silver and gold medal inscribed with the winner’s name.
Eligibility
* Scientists working in Europe or Israel at the time of application, who have made an outstanding contribution to the public communication of science via any medium or activity.
* Candidates must be working in active research at the time of application, and should have done most of their communication work in Europe or Israel.
* If written works are to be judged with the application, these must have been published in printed form by the time of nomination. At least one work must have been published in the period 2005 -2007. Works published in any of the languages of the EU will be considered. However, if a published English translation of the work exists, this should be submitted in preference.
* Scientists who are already widely regarded as professional communicators will not be considered for the award.
Applications
Please Note – Applications must be written in English.
Candidates must apply using the official form by the deadline, 30th June 2007. The complete application must be sent to EMBO by post at the address below.
The application must include:
the paper application form. Please download the form here, complete and send.
a letter of support of not more than 2 sides A4, from an independent proposer.
the curriculum vitae of the applicant.
an annex of not more than 2 sides of A4, in which the applicant may refer to works that support her/his application. These may be any forms of communication and outreach activities (e.g. radio and television broadcasts, documentaries, interviews, work in the community, talks in schools, workshops etc). If any of this work is documented in printed form or on the Internet, appropriate references should be given such that the jury can take it into consideration. If video or audio recordings are available, they may also be included.
if applicable, 2 copies each of the applicant’s written works of relevance to science communication. Up to 3 articles may be submitted for consideration. If a copy bearing the name of the publication and date of publication is not available, the applicant must submit the text, and indicate where and when the article was published.
IMPORTANT: applicants are also requested to submit the electronic application form. Applications will not be considered complete without it!
Selection of a winner
Entries will be judged by a multinational jury including the EMBO Science & Society Committee. One winner will be selected. Further awards or recognitions will be made at the discretion of the jury.
The award ceremony takes place during the annual November EMBO/EMBL Joint Science and Society Conference, Heidelberg, Germany.
Please send your entries to:
EMBO Science and Society Programme
Meyerhofstrasse 1
69117 Heidelberg, Germany
Tel. +49 6221 8891 109/119
Fax +49 6221 8891 200/209
email: scisoc@embo.org

Don’t forget…

…to Blog For Sex Education on June 4th and to blog about the sea (oceanography, marine biology and conservation, cool cephalopod pictures…) by the June 8th inaugural Carnival of the Blue.

Blog Plagiarism Alert

It happens to many bloggers sooner or later, and now it happened to Danica – someone is completely stealing and mirroring her blog (and of course earning money from adSense while doing it).
Unfortunately for the guy, he (I am assuming it’s a he) chose the wrong person to infuriate. Danica is an IT expert and an experienced blogger and she is mad like hell right now (and you don’t want that happening to you!) and she knows how to deal with such cases.
This includes actually posting (in hope the guy is reading his own creation) exactly what she will do to him. Perhaps the pirate will realize it is much less trouble to just delete the whole thing.
Anyway, if you have additional advice for dealing with such cases, please leave them in the comments of that post.

The Neural Gourmet up close and personal

Go and read this excellent interview with Leo Lincourt on Pollyticks.com. Great stuff about blogging, politics and the Carnival of the Liberals.

It’s Official!

Yes. I said I wanted this job. And, in a very new and interesting way, after a fun interview, I got it. Signed and faxed the contract yesterday. Will be in San Francisco for a little while in July, then telecommute afterwards. Can pajamas be deducted as tools one needs for the job? Exciting!

Blogging the climb to the peak of Mt. Everest

Eighteen year old Samantha Larson did it. Here is the story. Here is her blog.
(hat-tip: Ruchira Paul)

Tech Conferences

Sometimes what happens after is much more interesting than what happens during conferences:

If one more person had said that the internets were “revolutionary” and “transformative” I would have required medication.

It felt like watching TV, with smart people telling me things I already knew.

Full of folks who are too young to miss the Ramones but would die to be them.

Science2.0

Chapel Hill is really becoming a big center for bringing together scientists (of which there are so many in the area) and techonology innovators (of which there are also many in the area). Not just the Science Blogging Conference, either!
Renaissance Computing Institute and Microsoft are organizing The 2007 Microsoft eScience Workshop at RENCI at Friday Center in Chapel Hill, on October 21-23, 2007:

It is no longer possible to do science without doing computing.
The use of computers creates many challenges as it expands the realm of the possible in scientific research and many of these challenges are common to researchers in different areas. The insights gained in one area may catalyze change and accelerate discovery in many others. This workshop is explicitly cross-disciplinary, with the goal of bringing together scientists from different areas to share their research and experiences of how computing is shaping their work, providing new insights and changing what can be done in science. The focus is on the research, and the technologies that make that research possible.
We would like to invite contributions from any area of eScience; examples include:
* Modeling of natural systems
* Knowledge discovery and merging datasets
* Science data analysis, mining, and visualization
* Healthcare and biomedical informatics
* High performance computing in science
* Innovations in publishing scientific literature, results, and data
* The impact of eScience on teaching and learning
* Applying novel information technologies to disaster management
* Robotics in science
* Scientific challenges with no obvious computing solutions

If my car breaks down, I could walk over there on that day! And you bet I would.

There is nothing I like doing more than herding cats!

Business customers and children can be tough to manage online, but can you imagine managing scientists! They are already hard enough to satisfy in their native environment offline (e.g., to look beyond the usual metrics when awarding tenure). I know, I am making links in this post so cryptic, you’ll just have to click to see what on Earth I am talking about and make your own connections…

Happy Birthday!

Sure, she did not post about it, but a little bird told me that today is Jennifer Ouellette’s birthday so go and say Hello and Happy Birthday to everyone’s favourite physics writer/blogger!

To Science Foo or not to Science Foo?

Maxine Clark, Attila Csordas, Deepak Singh, PZ Myers, Pedro Beltrao, Jean-Claude Bradley, Pierre Lindenbaum, Peter MR, Andrew Walkingshaw, Anna Kushnir, Timo Hannay, Richard Akerman and yours truly are some of the 200 people invited by Google, Nature and Tim O’Reilly to participate in this summer’s Science Foo Camp. Apparently, the last year’s camp was a blast. I’ll give it another 48 hours to think before I reply, but I hope it is a Yes and that I will go, evangelize for Open Science and learn a lot about the ways it can be implemented.

Lulu 2007 Blooker Prizes

Just announced!

The Inter-Ghost Connection

The other day I was chatting with my brother (the smarter brother of Sherlock Holmes) on the phone, and he said something that may have some truth to it – I was predisposed, from early childhood, to understand and like the Web and the blogs. How? By reading and re-reading a million times the books about the adventures of The Three Investigators. Actually, only four of the early books in the series were tranlated into Serbo-Croatian, but I read them over and over. Later, here in the USA, I managed to find and read a few more in English.
What does that have to do with blogging? Well, back in the 1960s when the adventures were going on, there were no computers and the Internet. Yet, the three intrepid boys had to use their smarts and every contraption they could build from readily available materials, to solve mysteries and catch criminals. Usually, there would be something apparently supernatural happening and Jupiter Jones, Pete Cranshaw and Bob Andrews would figure out the completely natural explanation for it – usually some smokscreen built by the villain in order to cover his tracks (Mary V. Carey, one of the author of later volumes, broke this essential rule and left some supernatural stuff as such at the great consternation of readers who were all budding skeptics).
One of the inventions they came up with was the Ghost-to-Ghost Hookup:

Developed by Jupe in “Stuttering Parrot,” the Ghost to Ghost hookup was designed to get a lot of kids looking for something or someone at once without each person having to be personally contacted by the Three Investigators. Jupe, Pete, and Bob would each phone five friends and ask for the requested information. If none of those fifteen boys could help, then they would pass the message along to five each of their friends. The sheer numbers involved made it possible to mobilize the kids of Rocky Beach in a short time to be on the lookout for whatever person or object the boys were hunting. Jupe named it “Ghost to Ghost” because they would most likely not know who would be calling with information, and the voices on the phone would appear like “ghosts” to the boys, plus the name has flavor and color. The down side to the hookup was that all the phones in Rocky Beach would have busy signals while the messages were being passed along. The Ghost to Ghost Hookup helps out in several cases, including “Stuttering Parrot,” “Whispering Mummy,” “Crooked Cat,” “Shrinking House,” and others.

Or, from here:

Perhaps you remember the moment in The Mystery of the Stuttering Parrot when Bob and Jupiter, together, invent the Ghost-To-Ghost hookup? As Jupiter points out, the scheme could be used for contacting people “all the way from here to the Atlantic Ocean, if necessary. That would make it a Coast-To-Coast Hookup. But such a phrase has been used in the past by the television and radio networks. I prefer to be distinctive. So we will call ours a Ghost-To-Ghost Hookup.” In the Ghost-To-Ghost Hook-up, each of the Three Investigators calls five friends and asks each of the friends to call five more friends, and asks those in turn to call five more, and so on, until as Jupiter puts it, “we get results.”

You can find more about the books (and the movie coming out in a few months – I am excited!) here, here and here.
First, let me say that the ‘Ghost-to-Ghost Hookup’ was translated into Serbo-Croatian as “medjuduhovski spoj” whcih then translates back into English as “Interghost Connection”, a term I prefer to the original.
And, that is what we want whenever we post something online. If I want to get some informaiton out, or ask a question, I do not call five friends, but write a blog post. The post will be seen by about 1500 people on the first day, then cumulatively by as many or more over the subseuqne days and weeks. If the information is deemed important or interesting by the readers, they can take any kind of action. Know the answer? Post it in a comment or send me an e-mail. If not, you can print out the post and show the hardcopy version to your computer-shy friends. You can click on the “e-mail this article” button and send it to your friends. Or, you can click on one of the buttons on the bottom and send the information to places like Digg, Reddit, Slashdot or Stumbelupon. You can place a link to it in the Notes on your facebook profile or MySpace. You can post the information and the link on your own blog. Unlike telephones – the lines are never busy. Unlike telephones, there is no game of broken telephones: copy+paste coupled with the link to the original post makes the spread of information in high fidelity. So, instead of covering the small town of Rocky Beach in a few hours, I can, theoretically, cover half of the world in a few minutes, especially if he informaiton is really important.
So, once I saw my first blog, I subconsciously realized that this is the superior and modern version of the Interghost Connection. Remembering its effectiveness from the old books, of course I was immeditaelly drawn to use this way of communication for my own nefarious purposes. And I am still doing it, apparently….

The importance of being an expert on …something, anything!

Today’s Obligatory Reading of the Day is this essay by Kagro X:

Have you ever read, seen, or heard a mainstream media account of some event in which you’ve been personally involved? Or in which you have developed, under whatever circumstances, some sort of expertise? Ninety-nine times out of hundred, people with that sort of personal or specialized knowledge of the events covered will come away with some sort of substantial complaint about the quality of the coverage…
——-snip———–
Why, though, should the general audience settle for “sufficient?” Or perhaps more to the point, why should audience members with specific knowledge of the nuances, shortcomings, omissions, etc. have to settle for it, or keep it to themselves? As I said above, the Internet and the blogosphere now make it impossible to predict with certainty where true expertise lies….

Read the whole thing….

On this day in history, part 2 (or is it 3?)

Happy birthday to Melissa McEwen aka Shakespeare’s Sister, a great blogger and friend!

The Work-Place, or, Catching a Catfish Online

I will be offline for a couple of days so I will not be able to post at my usual frantic pace. Instead, I decided to write something that will take you a couple of days to read through: a very long, meandering post, full of personal anecdotes. But there is a common theme throughout and I hope you see where I’m going with it and what conclusions I want you to draw from it.
Pigeons, crows, rats and cockroaches
I was born and grew up in a big, dirty city and I am not going back (my ex-Yugoslav readers have probably already recognized the reference to the good old song Back to the Big, Dirty City by my namesake Bora Djordjevic of the uber-popular Fish Soup band). I spent the first 25 years of my life in Belgrade, population 2 million. No, I did not feel uncomfortable there. I knew every nook and cranny of the city. I walked around town most of the time, even if that meant two hours at a brisk pace in the middle of the night from the northernmost part of Zemun all the way home south of center.
And I still think that it is a great city – a wild mosaic of architecture from Roman and Ottoman times, through the Austro-Hungarian time, the pre-WWII Serbian and early Yugoslav kingdom era and the Tito communist period, to the Milosevic decade and Wes Clark’s enriched uranium. Steeped in history, yet not trying to live in it. Some cities try to keep looking the same the way they did a century or two ago when they were at the hight of their influence. Stratford-upon-Avon keeps trying to look as if Shakespeare is still living there. Not Belgrade. Far too confident in its 11 centuries of history to care about anything but youth and future. It can be dizzying walking around – there may be an old mosque from the times of Turkish occupation embedded into the remains of the Roman fortress, looking down the street of houses built in Austro-Hungarian style in one direction, in soc-realist style in another direction and overlooked by a huge green-glass modern hotel. There is great art and the ugliest kitch standing side-by-side, European hyper-intellectuals walking side-by-side with peasants, bookstores sinking under the weight of philosophy books and Gypsies collecting scrap metal – and all equally poor.
But it hurts one’s throat to arrive in Belgrade (at least it did in 1995, the last time I went to visit, when my father was still alive). Clean air is not the first priority when the retirees are waiting for months to get their pensions. That is why I escaped whenever I could – summers in our small weekend house at the base of the Mt.Avala just about 20 minutes south of Belgrade when I was a little kid, a couple of weeks at the Adriatic coast every summer when I was little before that became too expensive, teenage years spent on the Danube river in Eastern Serbia in the village my father grew up in, and many years, day after day, at the Belgrade racecourse and the surrounding woods.
~.~.~.~.~.~
Back in 1989 or so, the rats at the racecourse got really numerous and big. Ten-pounders, some of them, I bet. They were not afraid to walk around in the middle of the day. They chased, caught, killed and ate our barn cats. Our terriers were afraid to approach the feed-rooms. We forbade the kids from going to get horse feed. Even we adults banged on the doors before going in. But gradually, we moved all the grain into bins and barrells, plugged all holes, reinforced the walls, and kept the floors as clean as possible. There was just not enough food around any more to sustain such a huge population. As it always goes, after a boom, there is a bust. The rat population collapsed and dissappeared as suddenly as it initially appeared.
~.~.~.~.~.~
I grew up in a small appartment on the 7th floor. My school (K-12) was a walking distance from home. I took a bus to school anyway, being an owl and a late riser, but I had plenty of time to walk home after classes and stop by various food establishments, or parks, or the Natural History Museum, or the library, or stealing cherries and appricots from trees along the route…

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Mike has a great idea

Three out of ten Republican presidential candidates raised hands in the recent debate indicating they do not believe in evolution. Jason has an excellent round-up of responses (Arianna Huffington rocks!) with some good comments by readers as well. How can you help combat scientific ignorance? If your blog is NOT a science blog, try to do what Mike suggests and link to five science-related posts every week.
There is plenty of stuff here at scienceblogs.com, but you can also use this page when you are looking for science posts, especially the science-related carnivals listed at the very bottom of that page. Carnivals act as filters, showcasing the best that science/nature/medical/environmental blogosphere has to offer on any given week.

Another review of the SBC-NC’07

I know it’s almost halfway between the first and second Science Blogging Conference, but reviews of the first one are still coming out. Check out the latest one, written by Eva Amsen and published by ‘Hypothesis’ yesterday.

Web, politics and everything else….

Writing actual science posts takes a lot of time, research, thinking and energy. I assembled a large pile of papers I want to comment on and I actually started writing posts about a couple of them already, but Real Life interferes…and it is so much easier and quicker to post a short opinion-post or a linkfest.
Also, my mind has lately been mostly focused on Science Blogging, more Science Blogging, Open Science, Open Notebook Science, organizing the next Science Blogging Conference, Framing Science, Teaching Science and similar stuff I’ve been reading about a lot lately due to the excitement about the potential job. I’ll be in San Francisco interviewing on Wednesday and Thursday and I’ll try to write and schedule a couple of straight-up science posts to appear here while I’m gone.
I always blogged in phases, i.e., my interests shift week after week, so I just realized that it’s been a very long time since I last wrote anything about electoral politics or wrote a pitch for John Edwards. Perhaps I’ll do that again next week, but here is something brief about the way current campaigns are using (or not) the power of the Internet wisely. There is a tension in all campaigns between the dinosaur campaign managers who grew up in the age of flyers and thought TV ads were the next best thing and the new generation of Web-savvy folks who actually do grok the power of the Web.
As Andrew Rasiej says in Jose Antonio Vargas’ excellent article in WaPo (via, via):

“But you have to look at where the power lies. How much influence do their online people have? Not much right now. Fact is, most campaigns, on both sides of the political aisle, think that the Internet is just a slice of the pie. They don’t realize it’s actually the pan.”

Or, as Ed Cone summarizes:

Traditional media remain powerful and relevant, and it’s easy for those of us who live online to forget that a lot of Americans aren’t (yet) right there with us. But as the 2008 campaign gets serious, it looks like the net still isn’t getting the respect it deserves from some of the folks in charge.

I’ve argued before (and I am far from being the only one) that the Edwards campaign gets the Internet better than any other campaign, or at least that their star-studded online team pulls more weight inside his campaign than their equivalents working for other candidates of both parties. Recent hiring of Joe Trippi adds to that impression. Here is the most recent example of their embrace of Web 2.0 in a smart combination with the rusty, old media:

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Blawg, Netroots, Blaudience, Fisking, Instalanche…?!

Which of these new terms you particularly like or dislike? Do the Lulu.com survey:

“BLOG”, “BLOOK”, “BLEADER” AND “BLAUTHOR”
– WHICH IS THE UGLIEST, OR COOLEST, BLOGGING TERM OF THEM ALL?
WIN A FREE ISBN OR PRIZE-WINNING BOOK BY TELLING US WHAT YOU THINK!
This year marks the tenth anniversary of the invention of the word “blog”, the fifth of the word “blook” (books based on blogs or websites), and the second of the Lulu Blooker Prize-the first literary prize for blooks. To mark this historic occasion, we’re asking what YOU think of all the wonderful-or gruesome?-new words spawned by the “blogosphere” (there’s another one) and by the web as a whole.
Do you love ’em or hate ’em? And which ones do you love or hate most?
Let us know by answering six pairs of mulitple-choice questions-and qualify to be one of FIVE LUCKY WINNERS picked at random who’ll be able to choose to receive either:
a. A copy of each of the three winning blooks in the 2007 Lulu Blooker Prize-named 14 May, 2007 (total value to be determined).
Or…
b. A free ISBN for their own Lulu-produced book ($99.95 value).

Hey, it takes less than a minute (unless you think too hard), so go and fill out the survey now.
Hat-tip: Paul

Must-reads for bloggers

Weekend is coming so you’ll have some time (at least at night) which can be spent in much less useful activities than reading these three articles:
12 Important U.S. Laws Every Blogger Needs to Know
A Blogger’s Disclaimer
The Definitive Guide to Semantic Web Markup for Blogs

Going all Web 2.0 on you!

Yes, the Scienceblogs.com is invading the Facebook! You are free to join the ScienceBlogs Fan Club, the Order of the Science Scouts of Exemplary Repute and Above Average Physique and /or The Skeptics’ Guide to the Universe. See ya there…. Next step: MySpace!

SBC-NC’08 – we have the venue!

2008NCSBClogo200.pngMaking the second Science Blogging Conference even bigger and better, we are happy to announce that the January 19th, 2008 meeting will be hosted by Sigma Xi (publishers of American Scientist) in their gorgeous new building in the Research Triangle Park. Their conference facilities can house more people (225 as opposed to 170 we had last time) and provide more space for shmoozing between and after the sessions.
For those who arrive early, there will be Friday afternoon events, sessions and meals on or close to the UNC campus. We have tentatively secured two excellent session leaders so far and are negotiating with several others. Please check the program and help us build it by adding your ideas (edit the bottom portion of the wiki page or post a comment there). And we are still looking for sponsors – are you interested?

Global spreading of science blogging – is too slow?

Arunn and Selva are wondering why more Indian scientists don’t write blogs, while Danica wonders the same about Serbian scientists. I guess every nation will have its own idiosyncratic ways of getting there, but it is also important to note that in the USA where most of the popular science blogs are located and where there are LOTS of scientists, only a tiny percentage writes blogs or considers doing so in the future. Canadians, Western Europeans and Australians are already catching up in proportion to their own scientific populations. The rest of the world will probably catch up in a few years as well. It’s just that the Americans started first. Also, it is a matter of perceptions as English-language blogs will be much more likely to become well-known outside the borders of their countries. Are there many science blogs in Chinese or Japanese languages? Perhaps, but we don’t know.

The Cell on science blogging

There is a new (nice and long) article by Laura Bonetta about science blogging in today’s issue of the journal Cell.
Bloggers on A Blog Around The Clock, Pharyngula, Aetiology, Framing Science, The Daily Transcript, Sandwalk, In the Pipeline, Nobel Intent, Useful Chemistry, De Rerum Natura and Panda’s Thumb are mentioned and/or interviewed. A couple of carnivals, e.g., Tangled Bank, Mendel’s Garden and Gene Genie are also mentioned.
For those who have no access to The Cell, I am assuming that each one of us will egotistically quote the part about oneself (like we did last month with The Scientist article), so here are the parts that are about me and then you can go around the other blogs to see their excerpts – once you put that all together you’ll have the whole article, I bet:

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Science Blogging Conference ’08 and The Open Laboratory 2007

2008NCSBClogo200.pngAs the 2007 Science Blogging Conference was such a great success, we are already in full swing in organizing the 2008 conference and hoping to make it even bigger and better than the first one.
Our beta-version wiki is up – check out the homepage and the first, rough outlines of the program (feel free to edit the page and add your idea at the bottom or in the comments). At this point we are trying to get more sponsors so if you and your organization/company/magazine is interested, let us know soon.
Check out our blog for updates.
Open%20Laboratory%20cover%20image.jpgLast time, almost in time for the conference, we edited and published the first-ever science blogging anthology, the Open Laboratory 2006, which was an instant hit. Thus, we are already collecting nominations for the next years’ edition. Send us your best posts (or best posts written by others) of the year by using this submission form and help us spread the news by adding this code to your blog or website.

Open Classroom – learning about Holocaust by making a podcast

Survivor Testimonies Engage Students in Holocaust History:

Through a program funded by the Claims Conference, a group of 8th graders in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania who had never before learned of the Holocaust found themselves deeply affected by these first-person narratives during a month-long educational unit on the Shoah.
Victoria Monacelli, a teacher of reading and language arts at the Warren G. Harding Middle School, incorporates technology into her curriculum in order to engage students. As part of her literacy program, her students produce a monthly “podcast,” a recorded oral presentation on a specific topic for which the students conduct extensive research in order to produce a script. The podcasts are reproduced on websites and can be downloaded into MP3 players.

Click here to listen to the podcast. More info here.
Related: Storyblogging
Hat-tip: Mom

Welcome a new SciBling!

Go say Hello to Mark and Chris Hoofnagle at Denialism blog.