Category Archives: Blogging

Additions to your Blogrolls

I’ll have to sift through Neurophilosopher’s long, extensive and growing lists of Natural History blogs and Neuroscience/Psychology blogs – I know there are some blogs there that are not yet on my blogroll and deserve to be.

NC Blogging: No Blogger MeetUp today

Apparently, neither Anton nor Brian nor me can make it to the Chapel Hill/Carrboro meetup tonight – watch BlogTogether for announcements for the replacement date.
Also, get your graphic design juices flowing and submit your suggestion for the BlogTogether logo – there is a cool prize to be won.
Finally, next edition of the Tar Heel Tavern will be hosted by Scrutiny Hooligans, so send your entries promptly:

The Tarheel Tavern’s 107th incarnation comes to life this weekend at Scrutiny Hooligans dressed in calculus, symbolism, and accounting.
In the year 107 c.e. that Titus died. Titus was a bigtime apostle of Paul. He traveled with all those early Christian bigwigs like Barnabas and Timothy and became a bishop in Crete.
“OLIVE RILEY HAS has been declared the world’s oldest blogger, having begun to bog at the ripe old age of 107.”
State Highway NC 107 splits Jackson County roughly in two and offers some of the most beautiful sightseeing in the state.
Numbers have power, and that’s the theme of this week’s Hooliganesque Tavern. What have numbers revealed to you? What’s your lucky?
Send your numerological treatises and other mathematical meanderings to scrutinyhooligans@yahoo.com by Saturday at 10pm. I’ll post it on Sunday. You can count on it.
Also, please push for more participation from other bloggers. The Tavern ought to be gaining strength, and it’s going to take our increased participation to make that happen.

ConvergeSouth 2007

ConvergeSouth website and blog went live today. You bet I’ll be going – this is a Not-To-Miss annual event in Greensboro. Just check the program!

Welcome the new SciBling!

Go say Hi to Chris Rowan of Highly Allochthonous

ANNOUNCEMENT: Get ready for the NEXT year’s Science Blogging Anthology and Conference

2008 Science Blogging Conference
Not to be bragging, but the ’07 Science Blogging Conference was a great success, and most attendees voiced their approval of Chapel Hill as a permanent venue for the event, so Anton and I are starting early in planning for the next one.
There are rumors of a mid-summer equivalent event to be held on the West Coast (Seattle or somewhere there) which would be great – more the merrier – but we will also try to find some way to help a few West-Coasters make their way to North Carolina in winter as well.
We pored over all of your feedback forms and read all the blog posts about the conference in order to identify the strengths and weaknesses and make the next meeting much better.
We are already in talks with sponsors (and potential new sponsors) about the next year. Many have promised greater involvement for the second meeting than they did for the first, which will allow us to have a bigger conference – and that is what most of you asked for.
While several attendees suggested we expand the conference to two days, we are not sure it is feasible yet. Instead, we will make a bigger, richer program for that one day. This should include sessions targeted at new or non-bloggers (e.g,. scientists, teachers), sessions for old science bloggers who want details on fancy technical stuff or questions about copyright, as well as sessions designed to bring the two groups together.
We definitely need a bigger space so we can accomodate more sessions as well as have more space for people to just sit and chat in the hallways between the sessions – always the most important part of a conference. Thus, we will likely have to move away from the UNC campus. That also means that we will be too far away from Franklin Street to go to local eateries for dinner. Instead, we can have the program last a little longer into the afternoon and have the dinner catered (a banquet!) on the site, which will also ensure that we do not all have to break up into little groups but can all stay together (going to town for drinks afterwards will still be possible).
We will announce the exact date shortly. We are trying to avoid conflicts with other popular science, tech, blogging, skeptical and science-fiction conferences, so the date is likely to fall somewhere in-between the SICB Annual Meeting (January 2-6, 2008 in San Antonio, TX) and the AAAS Annual Meeting (February 14-18, 2008 in Boston, MA). As soon as we set the date, we will start contacting potential speakers and session leaders and I’ll keep you updated from time to time on this blog.
The Open Laboratory 2007
You may all remember the fast and frenzied way the first anthology was assembled – from the initial idea to sales in a little over three weeks! The Open Laboratory – The Best Writing on Science Blogs 2006 is selling quite nicely (for an online-only book with no marketing) up on Lulu.com. After the annual retreat and some initial glitches, the complimentary copies are, I hear, now travelling to their destinations to all the authors included in the anthology. Also, the book should start getting marketed and will show up in independent bookstores pretty soon, and on online booksellers (e.g., amazon) in a few weeks.
So, we are getting ready to start thinking about the next edition. And, having ten months instead of three weeks, we do not need to rush. This way, we can do a much better job. Oh, when I say “we”, it is not a Royal We – I really will not do it alone this year. Reed Cartwright and I will do it together. And we enjoy the experience, we may do it again and again and again.
To make it easier for everyone, we have put together an automated Open Laboratory Submission Form. Use this form to nominate a blog post for The Open Laboratory: The Best Writing on Science Blogs 2007. You can nominate as many entries as you wish, written by you or others. Each needs to be originally published as a blog post between 12-20-06 and 12-20-07 to be elligible.
Reed and I will place one or the other of these two cute buttons in the sidebars of a variety of blogs (e.g., on Panda’s Thumb, De Rerum Natura, A Blog Around The Clock, BlogTogether, perhaps my old blogs as they still get some traffic, and whoever else wants to spread the word – feel free to steal the button and use it):[Update: You can pick up the code for these buttons here as well as for the buttons declaring that you aready ARE in the 2006 book]:
Open Laboratory Submission Form
Open Laboratory Submission Form
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!

Welcome the newest SciBling

Go say Hello to Rob Knop of Galactic Interactions

Triangle Bloggers Happy Hour

I’m back and ready to go to bed. After a couple of days of being sick as a dog (hence hit-and-run blogging) I managed to get myself up for tonight’s event which was great fun, but now I am drained, so instead of trying to write a long-winded account of the evening myself, I’ll ask you to go and get all the information – what it was all about, who was there, how good the food was (yummy!) on BlogTogether.

Bloggers Tonight

Are you coming to the Triangle Bloggers Happy Hour tonight? Sponsored by DukeEngage. There will be free food, free drinks and free wifi, courtesy of Duke University.

Happy Blogiversary

Happy First to Northstate Science! Go say Hello.

The Old vs. New in campaign-management

Ed Cone has a new op-ed up: The way we politick now:

Use new media to influence old media, for example, and read the Web to find out what people are talking about outside the campaign bubble. Understand that the news cycle is dead and that stories don’t just fade away anymore; the Web operates in an eternal present, where information gets posted in close-to-real-time and remains a click away forever.

Welcome the new SciBling!

Go say Hi to Enrique Gili over on Commonground.

Pilobolus galore

You know I love Pilobolus (the fungus, not the danced troupe), as I wrote a very long post about it before, the cutely titled Postscript to Pittendrigh’s Pet Project – Phototaxis, Photoperiodism and Precise Projectile Parabolas of Pilobolus on Pasture Poop.
Then I returned to it later to point out some cool pictures of it.
Now, via Bouphonia, I discovered a great article with a time-lapse movie over on the Cornell Mushroom Blog, which I somehow missed although it was a part of the December edition of Animalcules.
And through trackbacks on that post, I discovered a new Slovenian mycology blog Glive (this means “Fungi” in Slovenian which I can somewhat, but not too well, understand if I read slowly and carefully). The new blog has, in its blogroll, both MIKROBioLOG(‘Microbiologist’), which I have mentioned and blogrolled before, and Nove biologije (‘New Biology’) which is new to me.
Like Pilobolus itself, the blogging about Pilobolus shoots far and sticks well.

Nature News, Blogs and Forums

Nature Network website just had a major rehaul and redesign. Corie Lok explains the details.

Bowling Bloggers

Not every bloggers’ meetup has to be talking about blogging. We can also just get together and have fun. And so we did last night. A bunch of us went bowling.
On Wednesday nights they have great family rates. We got four lanes – one for kids, three for adults. My daughter tends to start out slow and get better and better as the time goes. In the end, she got some tens.
Bora%20bowling.JPG
I am the opposite – my very first practice shot was a strike and I won the first game, but I get progressively more and more tired. Anton won the second game easily. In the end, my wrist and fingers were hurting so much, I was dropping the ball. And I am hurting all over today! You can see some more pictures here.

Spartacus

Oh, and we are all Spartacus
shakes13.JPG
(driftglass started the blogswarm)

Busy bloggers for a week or more

Tonight at 6pm, bloggers go bowling. Bring your lap-top – the bowling place has wifi.
Monday, some of us will go and get the NBC ascertainment.
Next week (2/21/2007) at 6pm free food and drinks for bloggers, courtesy of Duke University and its new DukeEngage initiative. Read more about it here and about the Wednesday happy hour here.

Cute herps

After a whirlwind trip to Thailand and a love affair, Jenna is back in school and her mind is focused on science again. Check out her new pictures from the Herpetology class.

Get him a job….

I mentioned before that Archy is about to get laid off. Now, he explains his educational beckground, work history and acquired skills so, if you are reading this, and you are in a position to find him a new job, please take a look.

The ‘Bloggergate’ and related links

Under attack, Pandagon has been down all day. But you can see here (and re-posted here) what scum of the Earth resides on the political Right in this country. This is a good time to read this again. And please find time to read all ten parts of this series on eliminationism in America. Sensing a long-term, if not permanent loss, the wounded beast of the Right is lashing at everything in sight and they are not shy to use physical force if needed.
Also on the topic, three must-read posts by Liza Sabater: Hell hath no fury like a feminist scorned, Aldon Hynes: In praise of Icarus, and Kagro X on DailyKos: Getting separated from the herd.
Two important and thoughtful posts by Chris Bowers on MyDD: Politics and the Inhuman and Why Attacks Against Bloggers Fail
Interesting discussion in the comments on this post on DailyKos: Has anyone seen Pandagon?, on Ezra’s blog: Competence Matters and on Pharyngula: Edwards for President!. In all three cases, the comments are much more informative than the original posts.
Dave MB: Amanda Marcotte’s Departure.
And if you haven’t already done so, you can read my takes on the initial response by the Edwards campaign – On Edwards, Bloggers, and Religion, and on Amanda’s resignation – Amanda now free to expose the Donohue creature
Also today, Shakespeare’s Sister posted her Announcement:

I regret to say that I have also resigned from the Edwards campaign. In spite of what was widely reported, I was not hired as a blogger, but a part-time technical advisor, which is the role I am vacating.
I would like to make very clear that the campaign did not push me out, nor was my resignation the back-end of some arrangement made last week. This was a decision I made, with the campaign’s reluctant support, because my remaining the focus of sustained ideological attacks was inevitably making me a liability to the campaign, and making me increasingly uncomfortable with my and my family’s level of exposure.
I understand that there will be progressive bloggers who feel I am making the wrong decision, and I offer my sincerest apologies to them. One of the hardest parts of this decision was feeling as though I’m letting down my peers, who have been so supportive.
There will be some who clamor to claim victory for my resignation, but I caution them that in doing so, they are tacitly accepting responsibility for those who have deluged my blog and my inbox with vitriol and veiled threats. It is not right-wing bloggers, nor people like Bill Donohue or Bill O’Reilly, who prompted nor deserve credit for my resignation, no matter how much they want it, but individuals who used public criticisms of me as an excuse to unleash frightening ugliness, the likes of which anyone with a modicum of respect for responsible discourse would denounce without hesitation.
This is a win for no one.

[bold mine]
First reactions are by Benny on MyDD: Shakes Decides to Be Shakes and Sinister Rae on DailyKos: Shakespeare’s Sister Resigns From Edwards Campaign.
Also:
Majikthise: Blogger Marcotte resigns from the Edwards campaign and Edwards’ netroots coordinator Melissa McEwan resigns
Donna Bogatin: John Edwards: Be my MySpace pal!
Matt Browner Hamlin: More Potential Catholic League IRS Problems
Ed Cone: Talking about religion
This guy will run for Congress next time here in NC – Marshall Adame: Why America needs John Edwards as our next President
Phoenix Woman: Sow The Wind, Reap The Whirlwind

The Twelve Commandments of Flaming

Heh. How true.
(Via)

The Humongous Darwin Day Linkfest

[Moved to the top of the page. First posted at 1:43am]
Last year, I collected the links to notable posts about Darwin Day and posted them here. That was fun, so I decided to do it again.
I checked the Technorati and Google Blogsearch and took my picks that you can see below. I will update this post several times today and move the post to the top in the evening. If you want your post to appear here, please e-mail me at: Coturnix AT gmail DOT com.
Also, later today, I will update this post with a special announcement (pending the approval by the person in question) – naming the winner of my ten-day Rebuild The Beagle contest. The winner will get a copy of The Open Laboratory.
Update:
The Grand Winner is (drumroll, please…):
Susan Davies
So, the book will be travelling to the UK later today.

If you are new here, check the ten posts about the Beagle contest (Day 1, Day 3, Day 4
Day 5, Day 6, Day 7, Day 8, Day 9 and Day 10) and see what “The Open Laboratory” is all about here.
I decided to split the posts into two groups, the first focusing on yesterday’s Evolution Sunday and the second focusing on today’s Darwin Day.
Here we go (under the fold):

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I am a sucker for…

thinkingbloggerpf8.jpgmemes. Especially when someone tries to track its spread. Especially when they call me “The Thinking Blogger”, originating from the eponimous Thinking Blog. Tagged by Greg Laden, so it is really quite simple:
1. If, and only if, you get tagged, write a post with links to 5 blogs that make you think,
2. Link to this post so that people can easily find the exact origin of the meme,
3. Optional: Proudly display the ‘Thinking Blogger Award’ with a link to the post that you wrote
I am tagging:
Archy
Jenna
Sir Oolius
Elayne Riggs
Mustang Bobby

Ready for tomorrow?

As I indicated a couple of days ago, I’ll be collecting a big linkfest of tomorrow’s Darwin Day posts.
This is like an annual carnival I like to do.
Make my job easier by letting me know by e-mail when you post one. You know that both Technorati and Google Blogsearch are slow and untrustworthy – get your link in on time!
Update Today’s posts on ‘Evolution Sunday’ are also eligible.

The Third ConvergeSouth is in the Making

ConvergeSouth%20logo-on-white.png

Hold the dates: October 19-20, 2007 for ConvergeSouth ’07 at NC A&T State University. Things are brewing on two coasts to make sure that the 2007 ConvergeSouth is more special than ever.
The Web site and blog will be online by March 1 (crossing fingers).
We are seeking proposals for interactive discussions, DEMOs and how-to sessions in these areas:
1. New media and journalism
2. New creative online models and tools
3. Blogger how-to and blog improvement
4. Music performance (evenings)
5. Original video and film
This year’s ConvergeSouth features a new track: screening original video and and film. Guidelines can be found at the ConvergeSouth ’07 site after March 1, 2007

Simultaneous hat-tips to Sue, Ed and Anton.
You bet I’ll be there.

On Edwards, Bloggers, and Religion

Ah, why do I have to be so busy on a news-filled day (no, not Anna Nicole Smith)? I barely saw the computer today. I’d get home, have about 5 minutes before I have to go out again and so on. NPR did not mention Edwards until 4pm or so (that I heard in the car), so when I first got home I only had time to open e-mail, scan about 50 new messages, home in to the one that had the news, open it, get the links and quickly post without more than a quick skim of the statements by Edwards and others, let alone any time to add commentary (except for what the title implied I felt at the time). And then there were comments I did not have time to respond to. And all the other blogospheric responses I was missing…Ah, well. The family is asleep so I’ll try to catch up now.

Continue reading

Archy

John McKay is about to become unemployed. I hear political campaigns are hiring bloggers with forceful voices who speak truth to the power. Perhaps anti-mammoth attack-groups will object if he gets hired.

Edwards Does The Right Thing, as Expected

John Edwards: Statement about Campaign Bloggers:

The tone and the sentiment of some of Amanda Marcotte’s and Melissa McEwan’s posts personally offended me. It’s
not how I talk to people, and it’s not how I expect the people who work for me to talk to people. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but that kind of intolerant language will not be permitted from anyone on my campaign, whether it’s intended as satire, humor, or anything else. But I also believe in giving everyone a fair shake. I’ve talked to Amanda and Melissa; they have both assured me that it was never their intention to malign anyone’s faith, and I take them at their word. We’re beginning a great debate about the future of our country, and we can’t let it be hijacked. It will take discipline, focus, and courage to build the America we believe in.

Amanda Marcotte: About My Personal Blog

My writings on my personal blog Pandagon on the issue of religion are generally satirical in nature and always intended strictly as a criticism of public policies and politics. My intention is never to offend anyone for his or her personal beliefs, and I am sorry if anyone was personally offended by writings meant only as criticisms of public politics. Freedom of religion and freedom of expression are central rights, and the sum of my personal writings is a testament to this fact.

Melissa McEwen: My Words:

Shakespeare’s Sister is my personal blog, and I certainly don’t expect Senator Edwards to agree with everything I’ve posted. We do, however, share many views – including an unwavering support of religious freedom and a deep respect for diverse beliefs. It has never been my intention to disparage people’s individual faith, and I’m sorry if my words were taken in that way.

NC Blogging plans for the year

Foodblogging, Storyblogging, Healthblogging, Bowlging…this is turning into one busy year in North Carolina online.
But Anton can’t do it alone. Please participate and make the local blogosphere matter!

Busy Blogging Day Yesterday

Hwoosh! What a day! Hit-and-run blogging instead of a nice long post about amylase I was getting ready to write….
I went to Raleigh for lunch and to start planning for the next years’ edition of the Science Blogging Anthology – stay tuned, there will be more news soon.
Of course, I was following the whole Edwards/Marcotte/McEwen saga every time I had a minute to get on the computer (which was not that much today)
Then, in the evening, we had our first Blogger MeetUp of the month. Apparently there was a game (UNC vs. Duke) going on, so not many people showed up, but we had a great time and an interesting conversation anyway.
Of the veterans, Brian Russell and Steve Cory were there.
We were joined by Billy Sugarfix, who, I understand, is quite a legend of the local music scene. He gets most traffic when he posts ads “I’ll put your lyrics to music” than anything else.
Another new face is Anna Lena, poetry editor for the online Fringe Magazine which just had a new issue out with the topic of Feminism.
She is interested in adding a blog to the magazine website, as well as starting a personal blog of her own. She is wondering if she should have one blog or two, as she has two very different interests: biking and poetry. As she is interested in other local bloggers interested in the same stuff, I pointed out two local poets I could immediately think of – Billy and Erin and the local biking blogger Nicomachus.
So, we were talking about a bunch of stuff. We briefly touched on the success of the Science Blogging Conference. Of course, we had to discuss the whole campaign bloggers brouhaha as well. Then we talked about the recent effort by the local NBC affiliate to reach out to bloggers. On that topic, Brian has more and he finds another blogger’s take on a similar effort by the NBC affiliate in NYC. Quite a lot of food for thought.
Next Wednesday, we go bowling. Feb 14 at 6pm at Mardi Gras lanes. There’s wi-fi so bring your laptops so you can liveblog the meetup (livebowling or bowlging?).

Chapel Hill/Carrboro Bloggers MeetUp

Yes, there is a Blogger MeetUp tomorrow (Wednesday) night. New place and time: 6:30 p.m. @ Milltown Bar & Restaurant (map). No particular topic this week (still preparing for all the topical meetings later on this season). See you all there.

The Blogging World….

Wow – what a little tempest! The first response to the local NBC affilate’s invitation to the “Blogger Ascertainmnent” by me, Paul Jones and Brian Russell provoked David Kirk to respond in NBC’s defense. To that, Paul Jones, Brian Russell and Paul Jones again responded, and the NBC guy trying to get this organized commented on each of those threads.
Despite it being on Monday at noon (unless they show they are smarter then we give them credit for and change the time, venue and availability of food and drinks), I am thinking about going anyway (I signed up as “Maybe” for now). The NBC’s folks are right now on a fast and steep learning curve of a dizzying speed, trying to figure out how to deal with bloggers. Perhaps I can help them out by going there (and I see that several more folks have signed up in the meantime). After all, we want to cooperate with the MSM – blogs are not their competitors unless the MSM outlets position themselves that way, and they need help in understanding the new media model.
In other news, I was in a really foul mood yesterday, itching for an Usenet-style fight. I tend to keep my blog pretty clean, so I went and fouled up a friend’s blog which got infested with the slimiest of wingnuts. Sorry, Tom! I’m in a better mood now, so I do not intend to go there again. Will wait for another post of Tom’s to go and say something nice for a change.

Happy Bloggiversary!

Happy First Blogiversary to The Neurophilosopher! Go say Hello!

Sitemeter and Technorati – don’t be shy to use them

Sitemeter and Technorati - don't be shy to use them(November 28, 2005)

Continue reading

Ready for another liveblogged colonoscopy?

A good reason not to de-blogroll blogs on hiatus – they may come back as much as TWO YEARS later. Like the I Love Colonoscopies blog just did. I know you want to click on that link and explore the archives. Go ahead!

MSM: how to get on bloggers’ good side….or not

About two days ago, about 120 local bloggers (their e-mail addresses probably taken from the local – and now obsolete – Triangle Bloggers MeetUp.org page) got an e-Vite to this:

You are cordially invited to attend to the NBC 17 Triangle Blogger Community Ascertainment.
What: NBC 17 holds community ascertainments once a month in our viewing area. A community ascertainment is a casual meeting with representatives from the community and NBC 17. They are also referred to as Listening Tours.
We would like to invite you to our groundbreaking Blogger Ascertainment. We recognize the contributions bloggers are making to their readers and would like the opportunity to make a lasting connection with your important voice.
This meeting will be dedicated to finding out more about the important issues in your community, and suggestions on how we might be able to serve them better.
You talk…..we listen.
These meetings will not be taped. Notes will be taken by our staff. Tours of the station will be conducted.

It’s telling that only a handful people responded so far. Brian and Paul explain why that is so (and Brian also gives an example of the way WRAL does it better).
I finally decided to respond, though the response window allows for only 375 characters so I had to cut my response in half:

I’d like to ascertain you instead of being ascertained. I’d like to know more about what you want and what are you offering us. It is in the nature of bloggers to blog about these things. That staff takes notes suggests the obvious question: Are we going to post our own notes? How “closed door”, secretive and essentialy anti-all-that-blogs-are-about is this entire thing?

Beagle Project, Day 4

Yes, I will remind you about this every day for ten days until we get a winner!

Just Science Week

A number of science bloggers are doing the Just Science Week, pledging to write about science every day, and ONLY about science.
While I was planning to write more about science anyway, I cannot promise not to blog about evrything and anything else that strikes my fancy at any given time – that is just not the way I blog. I could not resist an occasional foray into non-science blogging even back when I did my own “All Clocks All Week” stint, from August 14 till August 25 (check all the cool stuff in-between those two posts I linked to).
So, I am not going to do it this week either, though I’ll gladly read what others write, and, as I mentioned, I have several pure-science posts in the works for this week anyway.

Congrats, Phil

First, PZ, now Phil Plait (aka Bad Astronomer) – the science bloggers are starting to invade the pages (online and hardcopy) of Seed Magazine. The lines are blurring. The old media model is crawling slowly towards the ash heap of history….

You think we are sick and tired of conference organizing?

Think again! Not just that we have already started planning for the NEXT year’s Science Blogging Conference, but Anton is taking the lead in organizing another one this summer. And if all you liked at the SBC was dinner (and please do tell us if that was the case), you are definitely going to love this one: it is a Food Blogging Conference! Check the proposed program – eating, eating, eating (yes, and some tasty drinking as well) and liveblogging it all!
Update: There is more related news here.

Good Blog, Bad Blog

Some politicians fear blogs. They must have something to hide, dontcha think?
Other politicians love blogs and run their own. Unsurprisingly, they are beloved by their constituencies.

To Netroot or to Pretend to Netroot?

A tale of two candidate’s video distribution strategies:

These examples highlight an interesting problem for candidates: while YouTube offers tools to manage posting comments, you cannot control what content your page links to. In going to “where the people are,” you leave yourself open to direct commentary from the people. Counter-commentary may be located directly beside your stumping. Contrast this to Brightcove’s promise of control, an interface that does not link directly to intertextual documents. Additionally, even when you find commentary on Brightcove, it is coming from established sources. While you might get criticized it is coming from the media, rather than the people you are trying to reach.

Brian (on Yesh) comments:

Some old school campaign advisers and PR folks may think that the main stream media has the loudest final word on truth about politicians. Wrong. Perception is an important factor. Word of mouth effects perception more than traditional media. Why? Trust. People don’t trust corporate media as much as they used to.
The democratization of communication has let loose a giant amount of opinions and facts hereto unavailable to so many people. It balances and counterbalances the spin corporate media has on it. The Internet give us choice and teaches us how to be responsible media users. (previously known as media consumers)

Big Plans for NC (and Triangle) Blogging in the New Year

So, whats’ cookin’ in the local blogging world? Quite a lot, actually.
First, our little group, BlogTogether is growing, growing. Instead of being just a little <a href="Anton’s sideproject, we are thinking of turning it into a non-profit organization – so if you have experience with founding non-profits please let us know ASAP.
Also, apart from Anton, several others (including myself) are now able to post there. This will make the blog much more active and interactive this year than it was ever before. We are also looking for a nice-looking logo for it so we can slap it on side-bars of all of our blogs. If you have talent, give it a try!
Second, we are much more ambitious with meet-ups this year. We plan on having, each month, one virtual meet-up (here). We’ll continue with our regular two meet-ups (at Milltown at 6:30pm) where we sit down over coffee or beer and chat, usually starting with a particular topic (see here for some topics we are planning for February and March), before it becomes a free-for-all. Even if you are not a blogger – come by and within minutes you’ll have a blog of your own as we’ll help you set one up in minutes!
Once a month we’ll have a more active meet-up, actually doing something fun for a change (and get our butts off the comfortable chairs). This month, we’ll go bowling (hey, the place has wi-fi, so you can liveblog!). In the past, we’ve had between four and eight people normally showing up at meetups (unless a celebrity comes by – then everyone shows up). Let’s try to have a greater attendance this year. After all, now that both Pandagon (with both Pam and Amanda living here) and Panda’s Thumb are Triangle-based blogs (should our logo have a panda on it?!), the epicenter of power-blogging of the world is somewhere in the RTP area, I’d guess. So come by and meet the blogging stars!
We are already planning the second Science Blogging Conference (and the anthology to go with it) for early 2008!
In the meantime, think about joining us for the FoodBlogging series of events (if eating, drinking, eating, drinking and repeating it all over again can be called ‘events’) this summer. Sure, click on that link and salivate! What great places to eat and drink with fellow bloggers and blog about it!
Anton is hinting about some major activity on the StoryBlogging front this year as well.
And there are more ideas floating around (a design conference, perhaps an EduBlogging Conference, etc.)
Finally, and very importantly, the Tar Heel Tavern #102 will be hosted at Moomin Light this weekend. There is no theme, so send whatever you’d like to: songfinn AT yahoo DOT com by Saturday evening..
Once again, the Tavern was closed last weekend for the lack of a host. Let’s not let this carnival die – it was the first state-based carnival ever and it survived two years and more than 100 editions!
Do you want to host in the near future? Let us know. Do you want to get more involved in managing the carnival (as Laurie, Erin and I are both too busy with other stuff to do so full-time)? In any case, let us know at: coturnix AT gmail DOT com (me) or lponeill AT att DOT net (Laurie).

Help Fund The Beagle Project – and have fun doing it!

I first saw about this on Pharyngula the other day and I think it is a majestic idea! A group of Brits are trying to build a replica of HMS “Beagle” and, on the Darwin Bicentennial in 2009, sail around the world following the exact path Charles Darwin made on his historic voyage. Have scientists, journalists and, yes, bloggers, on board who will do research, take pictures and videos, and write their ship-logs for everyone to read (if a ship-log is on a blog, is it called shlog?). Stop at every port and promote evolution!
Most definitely take your time to check out their website and blog to learn more about the project.
They’ll have wi-fi on the ship. They intend to have webcams on board as well. Oh, how I wish I could be on board! You can just imagine what kind of mad blogging I’d do! Any sponsors out there?
I wonder how long the trip would last? After all, the original Beagle took a lot of time mapping the coast of South America and exploring the inland areas in multi-day and sometimes multi-week parties. The new Beagle does not need to do that and can probably cut the total sailing time down to a year or even less.
But such a big project requires money! A lot of it – $6 million! And this is where you can help. Miss Prism, PZ Myers, Adam Turinas and others are coming up with creative ways to urge their blog-readers to donate to this worthy project. You should do the same on your blog!
Since, unlike MissPrism, I cannot knit, and I am not rich, how can I help? Perhaps I can urge you all to donate and, if you are interested, you can forward me the payment-confirmation e-mail (you don’t have to, of course). I will not reveal your name and link on my blog (unless you insist), but will post every day over the next ten days to reveal what the highest donation was to date. At the end of a ten-day period, I will contact the person who donated the most (to ask for permission to use the name and link and to give me the snail-mail address) and send that person a copy of The Open Laboratory. That’s probably the only thing of value I have and can give!
So, start donating now! And spread the word!

Are you a science blogger?

If so, you should read this, print it out and stick it on the side of your computer monitor. Then re-read it every time you sit down to write a post discussing actual scientific research.

The Most Fantastic Blogospheric News of the Day (or longer) – Part Deux!

How many such pieces of news can one survive in one day!
Now that Amanda has been welcomed by concern-troll-mysoginists who followed her from her blog to the Edwards campaign blog (where, frankly, nobody lets them stir the pot) there is another great piece of news!
Melissa McEwan, aka Shakespeare’s Sister was also hired by the Edwards internet team. Go say Hello to her as well. Edwards certainly has great taste and good sense how to win over the netroots!

If you are a Triangle area blogger…

…I’ll see you here tonight at 8pm.
Which is right now!

Is it possible to collect enough this way?

Graduate school is expensive, even with grants and loans. Perhaps if a lot of A-listers linked to this, it could be possible to collect enough. (via Chickpea Science)

Network-like Mode of Thinking

I am so glad to see that conversations started face-to-face at the Science Blogging Conference are now continuing online (see the bottom of the ever-growing linkfests here and here). While some are between science bloggers, as expected, others are between people who have never heard of each other before and who came from very different angles and with different interests. The cross-fertilization we hoped for is happening (and if you had such an experience, let us know)!
See, for instance, what a casual chat over lunch at the Conference did to David Warlick – made him think about education and about online technologies from a – new to David – perspective of someone who watches the way scientists think:

…He said that science used to be reductionist in nature. I asked what that meant, and he said that science was about drilling down to components, cutting out and examining bits of the world, reducing it to its barest fundamentals. He said that the younger scientists spend more time synthesizing, that they seem much more interested in systems and networks, not so much how things operate independently, but how they operate as part of a larger organism, ecosystem, or cosmos.
I suspect that all kinds of speculation might be made about why science seems, at least in the eyes of this science communicator, to be shifting, and one could probably make a case relating it to younger scientists’ digital experiences. The connection that occurred to me, however, was with schools, which seem to me to be in a reductionist mode still…..
——–snip————-
My own state, for one, has been teaching and testing computer skills for more than ten years. However, it is a reductionist response to the need for digital literacy (what I call contemporary literacy). We have reduced computer skills out into their own list of standards, separated again into objectives, and performance indicators. We’ve reduced it down to components that can be discretely measured.
I don’t think that this happens entirely because of the industrial mechanized environment that many of us come from. I think it’s just easier to separate things out and teach them in isolation, especially when we believe that our job is to simply teach.

Read the rest…then go and comment on his blog with your ideas. Cross-fertilize some more!
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But can you…

…handle the Truth?

Copycats!

Ha! We broke the ice and now others are following our example. The Best of Technology Writing 2007 is being planned (hat-tip: Pimm).
I think this is great! Biotech articles are welcome as well, so send in your faves for consideration. Of course, they are a little timid – non-blog articles can also be included, and they intend to work on it for something like nine months! I guess they are not nuts like me….
What is next? Medical Blogging Anthology? Who is going to spearhead that project?