Scientia Natura: Evolution And Rationality
Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog
Scientia Natura: Evolution And Rationality
Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog
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Posted in Blogging, Housekeeping
Amanda Marcotte of Pandagon, the quickest draw of the Internets, the master of witty blog titles, and the scourge of mysoginists worldwide (like my regulars could avoid my almost-daily links to Pandagon and don’t know who she is…), has just become the Blogmaster of the John Edwards campaign blog. Some of the bestest, snarkiest bloggers are joining Pandagon at the same time. And Amanda is moving to Chapel Hill so we finally get to meet! Waaaaay tooooo cooool!
The ‘Basic Concepts in Science” list is getting longer and longer every couple of hours or so, it seems. Try to keep up with it. You may even want to Google-bomb (by linking using the same words as Wilkins does) some or all of the posts if you think they should come up on top in Google searches for these terms. Dan adds his own contribution on Cell Migration and Jennifer makes a wish-list for the Top Ten Physics Concepts that need to be included. To those, I’d add the series on statistics by ECHIDNE OF THE SNAKES: Part 1: Samples, Part 2: Probability, Part 3: Sample Statistics, Part 4: Sampling Distributions and Part 5: Constructing a Confidence Interval for the Sample Proportion.
If you know of an open-source, open-access journal that is not on this list, let Jackie know about it. Let’s fight the nasty anti-open-science PR!
Are you an Academic? And male? If so, you may be a ‘babe magnet’. Or not (Dr.Petra is an expert in administering cold showers).
Are you going to take the blog course on Joys of Science along with Zuska?
Magical Properties of Water (bought last week in my neighborhood): Part 1 and Part 2. Scooped Orac for the Friday Dose Of Woo series this week!
Vaughn of Mind Hacks is not surprised that ‘sleep’ is on the Wired Magazine’s list of 42 biggest unanswered questions in science. Though I’d say the magazine’s short blurb is at least mammalocentric if not entirely anthropocentric, as well as mildly adaptationist. After all, we have no idea why fruitflies sleep!
Alon Levy nicely rips into Steven Pinker, over on 3 Quarks Daily. Interestingly, he is stil linking back to his old flop-of-a-post on Lewontin that was debunked here.
There is a new group discussing Philosophy with emphasis on religion and Creationism. Catch up with them on their blog and forums.
John Hawks reviews a new paper on signalling in monkeys by Frans de Waal.
Everything you need to know about the Seismosaurus.
Pictures of some science bloggers at the conference last week. Can you recognize everyone? Perhaps this will help.
All the new information is here – four meetings over the next month: one in cyberspace, two in the Real World (sitting and sipping coffee) and one in the Real World (moving about and doing fun stuff).
Comments Off on Chapel Hill-Carrboro Blogger Meetups – new time and place!
Posted in Blogging, North Carolina
You may remember last week I gave a radio interview. It is airing in Asheville area tonight but you can already listen to it on the Brainshrub blog.
Now that the Anthology is arriving at people’s homes, getting read and even reviewed on blogs, I hope that more people will take a minute to post reviews or ratings on the actual book webpage. In one week, it has moved from non-existent to 33rd to 27th on the Lulu.com top sellers of the week list. I am also working on having the book more widely available, e.g., on sites like amazon.com and in independent bookstores.
Yes, I know, I’ve been guilty on occasion of this nasty navel-gazing practice myself, but I was never this funny or this funny. Links discovered by Bitch PhD who also indulges herself in some meta-blogging about 18th century blogging. So, this post is meta-meta-meta-blogging itself, isn’t it?
Posted in Blogging
Go say Hello to the REAL Dr.Dino: Darren Neish at Tetrapod Zoology
Posted in Blogging
In the Inkling Magazine: Science Bloggers Avoid the Spinach Dip Brush-Off, by Eva Amsen.
I am really happy to see how real-world conversations that started at the conference are now continuing online. Check the latest updates on the bottom of the posts here or here.
Also, the people who have ordered the blooks first, have now started receiving their copies (and commenting about their beauty on their blogs). The updated list of people blogging abot it is at the bottom of this post.
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Posted in Blogging
You have to read Conference thank you by Anton – the final word on the Science Blogging Conference, the behind-the-scenes commentary and the plans for the future! Go say Thank you to Anton – without him no conference would have happened last week in Chapel Hill. Anton also runs the Blogtogether site, where you can leave comments.
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Posted in Blogging
For quite a while I was aware of two blogs written by vet techs, and recently I discovered a couple of more written by veterinarians or vet students:
All But One Species
Vet Techs
Pet Connection
Diary of a Depressive Veterinarian
The Happy Healthy Horse
Dogged Blog
Discovering Michelle
Ambitiously Inquisitive
Not all of them write about animal health all the time, but, hey, if you go to a Xena Convention and get to interview Lucy Lawless and Renee O’Connor, of course you blog about it and post pictures of them and get, like, a million hits from Google the next day. You can always go back to dog nutrition tomorrow….
Do you know of any other blogs by vets and/or about animal medicine?
Posted in Blogging
Well, as I said before, the end of the Conference/Anthology whirlwind is also a return to my Dissertation writing (and a lowering of my output here).

But I had to procrastinate just a little bit more – I just gave a very pleasant 30-minute interview for the Asheville (NC) community radio station about blogging, science-blogging and everything else (including the Conference and a pitch for the anthology), as a part of their Tips For Political Bloggers series. The interviewer is Paul of the Brainshrub blog. It will appear on his site next Monday morning and will air on Monday evening – I will post the links at that time.
Also this morning, I received my copy of the anthology and it looks beautiful in real life! I want to read it (after reading and proofreading each of the 50 posts at least four times)! I hope you buy it.
Posted in Blogging
Audio of Dr.Willard’s talk is here
Update: for ease of use, here it is cut in two:
Part I: 16.6mb
Part II: 10.72mb
Slides of Dr.Stemwedel’s talk are here – apparently the mic got turned off after the first 7 minutes of her talk – we may post those later, but slides (and her own pictures and comments) should be sufficient for you to get the idea.
Podcast of the Open Science/Open Notebook sesssion is here.
Check out what people are saying about the conference here (perhaps the best strategy is to go down to the bottom of the page and work your way up until you are exhausted).
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
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Posted in Blogging
If you were at the conference on Saturday, please take a couple of seconds to let us know what you think about it by filling this short feedback questionnaire.
And if you post stuff online (blogs, podcasts, photos, videos), do not forget to use the Tag: sciencebloggingconference
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Posted in Blogging
Nature: Science blogger Bora Zivkovic
Nature Newsblog: Science blogger Bora Zivkovic
Addendum: The author/interviewer, of course, blogged about it as well: North Carolina Science Blogging Conference-pt 2-how blogging saved one man’s science career
Funny, in order to put that picture of me there, they had to cut out Atrios out of it. Atrios who? See the uncropped original under the fold….
Posted in Blogging
You may have missed a mild slam of mine I snuck into the middle of this post yesterday (as well as an earlier one), at a guy who thinks he can dictate to a blogger how to blog and what to blog about. He is reviewing all Seed Sciencebloggers without, apparently, digging through anyone’s archives to see their formidable output over the months and years of blogging, and without a thought that his notions of what a blog should be about are irrelevant to the blogger, the readers of the blog or the popularity of any particular blog.
Well, I would not review a book without reading the whole thing, or review a movie without watching the whole thing, so why does he think he can review a blog (or 55 blogs) without spending many hours reading through the archives of each, plus other blogs’ posts that link to an “talk back” to the blog, etc. And while a book or a movie are static, 2-hour things that stand alone, blogs are dynamic and embedded in teh context of conversation. It is imperative to follow a blog for a few months on a daily basis before getting a really good feel for it. Everyone goes through phases, everyone slows down during busy times (e.g., grading) and everyone goofs off during holidays (the time this guy picked up for his reviews).
Carl, Orac and PZ (so far) and their commenters take him to task and explain a thing or two about blogging in general and science blogging in particular.
As one of the things that comes up in this discussion is his ignorance of blog carnivals, and I am sure he is watching his sitemeter in awe right now, here is a little educational link – Blog Carnivals and the links embedded in there.
Posted in Blogging
I still need from some of you the letters regarding copyright etc., and I need your snail-mail addresses to send to Lulu.com so you can get your free copy shipped to you. Just e-mail me….
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Darren Naish started Tetrapod Zoology a year ago. As a systematist, he does everything systematically, including the analysis of his own year in blogging:
Volume I
Volume II
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Posted in Blogging
A good article in Business Week.
Oh, btw, while I was conferencing, I heard that Clinton and Richardson announced. Anyone surprised?
More pictures under the fold (until my batteries died). Again, tell me if I misidentified or non-identified somebody:
Posted in Blogging
On Friday night we had dinner at Town Hall Grill – the service and the food were excellent! Yum! [For those of you not local, the John Edwards campaign headquarters are exactly above on the second floor]
Under the fold you’ll see the pictures (let me know if I misidentified or non-identified someone – I will come back to these pictures-posts later and add links to everyone):
Posted in Blogging
It must be hard writing a report on a conference where one of the most frequently voiced opinions is that mainstream media reports always get science stories wrong! But, Kristin Collins did a great job describing what just transpired on UNC campus at the Science Blogging Conference in this article (free registration may be required).
Update: The article was re-published in Charleston (SC) Post and Courier: Scientists hope blogging brings discoveries to the masses
Update 2: Syndication works like a charm: Houston Chronicle: Scientists hope blogging boosts public’s interest
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Posted in Blogging
Well, I am back from the Science Blogging Conference, exhilarated and exhausted! After months of preparation, and last few days of frantic last-minute work, the Big Day has come and I could finally relax and enjoy myself. And enjoy it I did! I hope the others did as well.
First order of duty: go say Hello and Thank You to Anton without whose ideas, persistence, hard work and organizational skills, there would have been no conference!
From what we heard in person, everyone was excited about the meeting and voiced hope we will organize it again next year. To make your opinions heard, if you were there today, please take a moment to fill out this brief feedback questionnaire to tell us what you thought was good or bad today, and what we can do better next time (yes, the coffee was late, due to a death in the family of the owners of the cafe that was supposed to provide it, but Brian and Paul saved the day by quickly getting coffee from another place in the neighborhood). I also hope you are happy with your swag bag – the PLoS shirts are awesome!
Both Technorati and Blogsearch Google (as well as my own Sitemeter) are pretty slow and untrustworthy at providing the links to everyone who has already blogged (or liveblogged) about the conference, but I scanned the usual suspects (i.e., blogs of people who were there) and added some of the links to this and this collection of links so you can check out the first impressions (I’ll add more as I find them over the next day or two).
There are already some pictures up on Flickr and Technorati as well, just check the sciencebloggingconference tag. There will be more (I will upload my pics right here on the blog tomorrow – I took quite a few before the batteries died).
The first two talks – excellent talks by Hunt Willard and Janet Stemwedel – were also recorded, and I will link to the audio files as soon as they are available online. Also, I’ll link to my interviews with Nature and News&Observer once they are online, as well as any other media reports that may come out (there were people here from NYTimes, WaPo, Independent Weekly, Charlotte Observer, PBS NewsHour and a couple of local radio stations).
The discussions were lively and I think very fertile – the group was very diverse and there was fast exchange of a lot of interesting and new ideas by bloggers, scientists, teachers, students, journalists and everyone else. Check the livebloggers for details of each session – I am too exhausted now to write a lot of details of each one I attended (but if you check the Program page of the wiki, each session has a link to its own page where people are now adding their thoughts, links etc).
I think I did well for my Seed Overlords and touted Scienceblogs.com as the next best thing after the invention of apple pie! We also promoted the anthology as heavily as was still in good taste (I’ve been adding links to the bottom of that post to everyone who mentioned the book on their blogs so far). Check out what John Hawks wrote about it – quite interesting and somehwat similar to what I wrote in the Preface. On the other hand [edit: see this follow up – thank you!], seeing so many people today who are interested in science blogs but do not know where to start and what it is all about (or may not be very technically savvy), I believe that the book will be useful tool to drive people who are not usually online to the science blogs. For such people, I think that this page (which evolved over the last couple of months or so) is a good starting point for exploration of the science blogging universe.
For those of you who just started your own blogs on Thursday, I’ll be watching you! And as soon as you have interesting content on your blog, I will be sending hordes of my readers to you! Also, keep an eye on the Blogtogether page and come to our regular blogger meetups, where we can help you with all the bloggy questions you may have.
Perhaps, if this guy with the deadline and no ideas what to write about read science blogs instead of pamphlets lying around the cafeteria, his understanding of science as well as his attitude would improve! The same goes for the guy who is reviewing Seed sciencebloggers here, here, here, here, here and here and was even allowed to post here. The reviewer probably never even scrolled down the front page of any of the scienceblogs, let alone dig through the archives, so whatever was the first post on top was the only source of information about the entire blog. If he was at the conference, he would have learned what science blogging is all about (or for that matter what blogging is all about).
It is impossible to list here all the interesting people I have met today (and I wish I had more time to spend with each – but there were, I dunno exactly – about 170 of them), but I am assuming that my blog readers are most interested in other science bloggers who were there. From the Seed Scienceblogging Universe, it was great spending some time with Janet, Zuska, James, Dave and Greta and Abel. Panda’s Thumb was well represented by Burt Humburg, Reed Cartwright and Professor Steve Steve. Larry, Eva, Rob, Bill, Cathy and Corie are even nicer in person then online (if that is possible). I wish I had more time to chat with Rob, Lorraine, Josh, Bharat, Jean-Claude, Jacqueline, Liz and Christina – next year (or next meetup if you are local)!
Everyone else can relax now – no more posts here titled “SBC – NC07”! Give me a couple of days to recuperate and I’ll be back to my normal SCIENCE blogging for a change!
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Posted in Blogging
Inaugural Edition: Brain Fitness Blog Carnival #1 is up on SharpBrains
There were 21 of us at the dinner tonight and it was grand. I will say more once I have the pictures uploaded. Now I better get my intro for tomorrow in shape and get some sleep before the big event!
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Posted in Blogging
I am about to go to the airport to pick up four attendees. Tomorrow for dinner, we’ll be joined by US. Rep. Brad Miller! Never too late to sign up for dinners!
Posted in Blogging
You can hear me talk about the conference on NPR’s Marketplace if you listen to this audio file (the segment starts at minute 2:59)
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Posted in Blogging
Go say Hello to Karen Ventii of ScienceToLife, the newest addition to the ScienceBlogs.com Universe!
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We (Anton, Brian and I) packed hundreds of beautiful bags full of goodies for the conference-goers.
Then, when we were done, we celebrated with a brand new bottle of Croatian slivovitz, tasting just like home, courtesy of Anton’s Cleveland friend. Thanks, Anton, the bottle safely made it home and is not empty yet!
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Just finished with the Skills Sessions. About a dozen new blogs were started there. Everyone works at their own pace, so I’ll give them a few days to get their feet wet before I link to them, blogroll them and ask you all to give them some commenting love! They look really promising so far!
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Posted in Blogging

Jason Lundberg, Janet Chui, Kipp Bodnar and Denise Haviland are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Posted in Blogging
Criticize Congress go to jail?
“In what sounds like a comedy sketch from Jon Stewart’s Daily Show, but isn’t, the U. S. Senate would impose criminal penalties, even jail time, on grassroots causes and citizens who criticize Congress.
“Section 220 of S. 1, the lobbying reform bill currently before the Senate, would require grassroots causes, even bloggers, who communicate to 500 or more members of the public on policy matters, to register and report quarterly to Congress the same as the big K Street lobbyists. Section 220 would amend existing lobbying reporting law by creating the most expansive intrusion on First Amendment rights ever. For the first time in history, critics of Congress will need to register and report with Congress itself.
Update: Conversation continues:
Someone’s Trying to Play Us
Why astroturf disclosure legislation is needed
Was I duped by Astroturf?

Steve Gunn, the Metro Editor at the Charlotte Observer, Erika Wittchen and John Beimler are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
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Posted in Blogging
I will mirror this post on the Science Blogging Conference homepage. Let me know if I missed you (i.e., if you ever mentioned or intend to mention the conference on your blog). This will be updated until everyone is exhausted! Because it is going to be so long, I’ll keep most of it under the fold (click on “Read more…”):
Posted in Blogging

Charles Harris from Natural History Magazine, Lorraine Cramer of Microblogology and Mary-Russell Roberson are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
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My blogfather Publius is moving! Legal Fiction is over (though it appears the valuable archives will remain available). He is joining the excellent crew at Obsidian Wings – Congratulations!
And PZ is promising to reduce the volume of his blogging as he is writing a book, which we will all eagerly await. His announcement was followed by another seven posts immediately after! Self-control did not last long, I guess….
Posted in Blogging

This is what I posted on February 23, 2006, about eleven months ago. As you can see, both from my post, and from the comments, the idea was to have some kind of BloggerCon devoted to science blogging, almost like a giant MeetUp where a bunch of science bloggers can get together, finally match the names (and online handles) with faces, chat and gossip, show off their work, and have lots of beer.
But, what’s the point (apart from the great fun that would be)? How does one sell this idea to sponsors? It seemed that this idea was doomed for a quick death.
But then, Anton Zuiker came into the picture. At one of the local blogger meetups, we talked about this idea and he, being wise and experienced about organization of conferences, had a much, much better idea: to mix science bloggers with others who are interested in science communication – scientists and students, science teachers, librarians, writers and journalists, journal editors and local elected officials, software developers and science museum staff. This way, we could have a very fertile and exciting exchange of ideas – bloggers showing what can be done with this technology and hearing what others want to see more; non-bloggers learning about the blogging potential and showing how they use the Internet in their endeavors.
Eleven months later, the idea is becoming a realization. Anton did the lion’s share of the work (especially the nasty financial aspects of it), but Brian (who designed the beautiful logo displayed on top of this post), Paul and I pitched in as much as we could and knew how.
The first (and we hope annual) Science Blogging Conference is this weekend. We are really starting tomorrow with a Skills Session, where 30 of the conference participants will start their own WordPress blogs.
As people start arriving from distant places (like Canada, UK, New York City, Seattle and California), we’ll get together for a dinner on Friday (sign up – we need to know the exact numbers).
The big show is on Saturday – check the exciting Program we have put together – it combines a formal (talks), semi-formal (mediated break-out sessions) and informal (a true Unconference session to be formed on the spot) parts. Of course, some of the best ideas come out of chats in the hallways between sessions and during meals, including the Saturday night dinners (sign up for dinner by editing the Wiki if you have not yet done so).
If you have ever written about this conference in the past, or intend to write in the future (including liveblogging), or take pictures, podcasts or videos, let me know so I can link to all of that in one place for easy access. Whenever you write (or post pictures on Flickr etc.), please use always the same tag: sciencebloggingconference.
As you can see, we expected 150 participants, and, even after purging the list from people who said they could not come after all, we are still up to 170 participants right now (everyone over that number is on a waitlist). If you dig through the list of registrants, you will see that only about a quarter are bloggers and that we have achieved the diversity we wanted to see.
For those of you who are new to science blogging, you can use this page as your starting point for exploring. For those of you who are coming to the conference, there will be a great Swag Bag full of goodies waiting for you at the registration table on Saturday morning (if you already have something that’s in your bag, please share it or exchange with others, as we have more participants – 170+ – than bags – 150!)[Update – just in: we will have 225 bags, though not all will have every single item].
Just in time for the conference, we managed to pull off, at a breakneck speed, the first ever Science Blogging Anthology. Due to so many people linking to the announcement post (see the bottom of that post for reciprocal links which often contain interesting ideas or useful criticisms) has already been seen about 3000 times and the book page at Lulu.com has been seen 2217 times, has, after just 24 hours risen to the Lulu Sales Rank of 10,934 and got three 6-star reviews (yes, we also managed to sell a few copies so far). Keep spreading the word!
First few copies will be here at the conference, for show-and-tell and to try to get people to buy a copy. Next batch of prints, I understand, will go to people who were the first to order the book online. The next batch (some time next week?) will go to the authors of the 50 essays showcased in the anthology – for that, I need you to e-mail me your snail-mail address to give to Lulu.com so they know where to send your complimentary copy!
None of this would be possible without the generous support of our hosts and sponsors, including Ibiblio, Endeavors, UNC School of Medical Journalism, Lulu.com, Sigma Xi, The American Scientist, Blogads, Seed Scienceblogs.com, Seed Magazine, Ecco, Harper Collins, NC Museum of Life and Science, JMP Software, RTI International, Burroughs Wellcome Fund and Blogburst and PLoS-One.
This is so exciting! I hope you will enjoy the conference as much as I know I will!
And after the conference, I will sleep for a day or two, then get back to my dissertation and, hopefully, to a more serious style of blogging. It is not surpsising that recent visitors do not see why is this blog supposed to be a science blog as I have not written a substantive science post in weeks! I am itching to get back to that myself. Many posts are just waiting to be written and I hope you will still be here waiting for me to write them
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Posted in Blogging
So, RPM, Razib and Chris are promoting the idea of Just Science, meaning that from Monday, February 5, till the end of Sunday, February 11, we should write only about science itself, and not about pseudoscience, quackery, religion, politics of science etc.
This is my 1864th post on this blog. Out of that, there are perhaps 4-5 debunking some kind of Creationism, and 4-5 debunking some other pseudoscience. A drop in the ocean! There is a little bit more politics (but usually not of science), and several posts on religion/atheism. Everything else is either science or “chatter”, i.e., links to other people, personal stuff, meta-blogging of some kind, the conference/anthology announcements, etc. Thinking that people here would be quite unhappy if I blogged daily about politics (especially with my open support for John Edwards), I do most of that on my old blog.
Right now, I am in the midst of the last-minute preparations for the Science Blogging Conference. After that, I’ll sleep for a day or two. Then, I will eagerly return to my Dissertation and that is where my serious science writing will be focused.
For the blog, I’ll do whatever hits me on any particular day/hour/minute. I can refrain from bashing Creationists during the designated week, but I will not promise anything. I may write serious science or I may not. I have a few books I still need to write reviews of (including Dawkins and Dennett – so that violates the Just Science principle right there). Perhaps I can write one of the Basics posts during that week. I can try. But no promises. I blog at a whim.
But you tell me what you want to see…
Posted in Blogging, Housekeeping

Michelle Langston, John Streck and David Ketelsen are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Go say Hello to Signout! And send your entries for next week’s Grand Rounds right there.
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Brad Herring of the Museum of Life and Science and John Blake of P2LS are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
Here is the list of posts in this series so far:
Mean, Median, and Mode
Normal Distribution
Force
Gene
Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
Evolution
Clade
What do you want me to write about? Circadian stuff? Group selection? Animal physiology and behavior?
Posted in Blogging

Catherine Clabby, the science reporter for Raleigh News & Observer and Rob Zelt are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
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Trisha Crutchfield and Joy Widmann are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
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Kirk Ross, columnist for (and former editor of) The Independent Weekly, as well as hard-blogger on Exile on Jones Street, The Mill and Cape Fear Mercury is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
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Yes! It is finally here! What you have all been waiting for, impatiently, for three weeks! The Science Blogging Anthology is now for sale. Go to Lulu.com by clicking here (or click on the picture of the book to your right) and place your order! You can choose to buy a PDF to download (but do you really want to print out 336 pages!?) or order the book with its pretty cover – it takes only a couple of days to arrive at your doorstep.
You can see here how it all got started, just three weeks ago, smack in the middle of the holidays when nobody was online and traffic was down to a third of the normal – and the whole thing just exploded! It was meant to coincide with the inaugural Science Blogging Conference. You can check out all 218 finalists here and the Final 50 here. Don’t forget to check the comments! And if you are interested in the process, there have been numerous updates along the way here, here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here.
First, I’d like to thank everyone who submitted nominations, either their own or for other people’s work.
Second, I’d like to thank the distinguished panel of twelve reviewers who helped me narrow down the field from 218 to 50 posts: Janet, Karmen, Jennifer, Jenna, John, Bill, MC, Carl, Leo, Heinrich, John and one anonymous reviewer, as well as Anton who tremendously helped on the technical side of this endeavor.
Next, I’d like to thank all those who have helped spread the word about this so far, by posting links on their blogs: Arunn, MC, MC again, MC again, Ema, Ed, Ed again, Ed again, Archy, Archy again, Afarensis, Afarensis again, Larry, Bee, John, Dan, Martin, Sya, Sir Oolius, Florine, John, Rob, Curious Cat, Nuthatch, Aydin, Clare, Radagast, Pedro, Pedro again, Jenna, Anton, Luca, Liz, et alli and bbgm (did I miss anyone?).
And I thank in advance everyone who buys the book, e-mails their friends about it, links to this post from their blogs, or places this post on one of the social networking sites (see the buttons at the bottom of the post).
What about next year?
This anthology was designed to coincide with the first Science Blogging Conference – and we made it in the nick of time – the conference is this Saturday. We are hoping to make the conference an annual event, so why not the anthology again, to be published in late January of next year, and the year after that…? I have already heard (and read on blogs) the sentiment that there should be one every year.
I have asked for volunteers to be the editor of the next edition, but nobody raised their hand, and a few people suggested (mostly in the comments on the ‘Final 50’ post) I should do it again. Frankly, I enjoyed the experience as frantic as it was and I’d like to do it again. And next year it will not be so frantic: instead of three weeks between the first idea and the book actually seeing print, I’ll have twelve months to slowly collect quality posts and get a ‘feel’ for the annual output of the science-blogging world.
So, please, at any time between January 1st and December 31st 2007, if you write a kick-ass post, let me know. I’ll bookmark it and jot a few notes to myself and take it into consideration for the next edition. If you see a great science-related post, especially written by a blogger who may be new and not yet the part of the inner circle of us science bloggers, please let me know. If your best post is in another language, have it translated into English and send me the permalink – let’s increase the diversity!
Also, send your best stuff to appropriate blog carnivals. I will dutifully monitor posts that appear on the following carnivals: Tangled Bank, Grand Rounds, Carnival of the Green, Skeptic’s Circle, Mendel’s Garden, Bio::Blogs, Encephalon, Animalcules, Circus of the Spineless, I And The Bird, Festival of the Trees, Oekologie, Four Stone Hearth, Panta Rei, Philosophia Naturalis, Change Of Shift, Pediatric Grand Rounds, Radiology Grand Rounds and any new ones that may appear this year.
I hope you enjoy the book and that you will continue to visit the many science bloggers who have been linked in the semi-finals and finals and many more found on their blogrolls.
Buy the book here!
Update: I’d also like to thank everyone who is helping to spread the word by linking to this post from their blogs, including (let me know if I missed you):
Stranger Fruit, Archy, Evolving Thoughts, Nonoscience, Accidental Blogger, The Loom, Intueri, Neurophilosophy, Aardvarchaeology, Bioephemera, Open…, Archaeoastronomy, Panda’s Thumb, Rhosgobel: Radagast’s Home, The Physics of Sex, Bark Bark Woof Woof, The Third Bit, The Real Paul Jones, Bootstrap Analysis, Open Reading Frame, Science And Politics, Stoat, Cognitive Daily, De Rerum Natura , Bee Policy, Liberal Coalition, Words and Pictures, Uncertain Principles, Pharyngula, Aetiology, The Blog Herald, Scientific Assessment, Shakespeare’s Sister, Scientia Est Potentia, Pegase, BlogSheroes, Idea Consultants, Pure Pedantry, Confessions of a Science Librarian, Thoughts from Kansas, Arbitrary Marks, Carolina Blog Consultants, Omni Brain, The Education Wonks, Lean Left, Ed Cone’s Word Up, Skeptico, The Scientific Indian, Retrospectacle: A Neuroscience Blog, Emergiblog, bbgm, Sandwalk, Page 3.14, Neurontic, today’s The Buzz Of The Blogosphere on the front page of Scienceblogs.com, Easternblot, Siris, The Voltage Gate, A Somewhat Old, But Capacious Handbag, The Scientific Activist, 10,000 Birds, digg, stumbleupon, The Daily Transcript, Newton’s Binomium, Pimm, Snail’s Tales, Dispatches from the Culture Wars, Respectful Insolence, Mistersugar, Creek Running North, Alone on a Boreal Stage, Seed’s Daily Zeitgeist, Migrations, SharpBrains, Element List, Et alli…, Syaffolee, Neurocritic, Epigenetics News, Bad Astronomy blog, Science Made Cool, Chaotic Utopia, Afarensis, Abnormal Interests, MSNBC Clicked, The Isle, Hot Cup Of Joe, She Flies With Her Own Wings, A DC Birding Blog, And Doctor Biobrain’s Response Is…, The Blog That Ate Manhattan, East Ethnia, Desipundit, Decorabilia, Yesh, Sereniteit, Lab Cat, Johnkemeny, The Greenbelt, Thomasburg Walks, Milkriverblog, Science!, my DailyKos Diary, Genetics and Health, Cosmic Variance, Darwin.net, Examining Room of Dr.Charles, Cognitive Daily, DocBug, Burning Silo, Brainshrub, Resonance Partnership Blog, Claw of the Conciliator, Bibliothecaris in Blog, De conceptuele ingenieur, Ciencia em dia, Mike the Mad Biologist, Discovering Biology in a Digital World, Tales from the Microbial Laboratory, John Hawks Anthropology Blog, Science Notes, Curious Cat, Galactic Interactions, SciBos – Corie Lok’s blog, Cocktail Party Physics, The Countess, Element List, Petrona, A Blog Around The Clock, Red State Rabble, Pen-Elayne on the Web, Total Information Awareness, Postscripts, Terra Sigillata, Guide To Reality, Pennsylvania Citizens for Science, Ivory-bills LIVE!!, Novelr.com, Daily Kos, The Executioners Thong, Uma Malla pelo mundo, JORGE GAJARDO ROJAS, Ouroboros, Savage Minds, Neural Gourmet,

Greg Corrin and Alex Gunn are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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We had a minor glitch with the cover. It is in the process of getting fixed right now. Stay tuned – the unveiling will be shortly….

Kristen Novak and Bharat Chandramouli are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Alicia Cypress of The Washington Post and
Newsweek Interactive and Sarah Greene of the New York Times are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
Technorati Tag: sciencebloggingconference
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Posted in Blogging