Category Archives: Blogging

SBC – NC’07

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Fred Stutzman, the Facebook expert from Unit Structures is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Internet use in Serbia

There is a new study out on computer and internet use in Serbia (via). Several things immediately jumped out at me: how many people connect by modem, how many connect from home (as opposed to work, school, etc.), how big is the rural/urban divide, and how many people think they have no use for the Internet and expect never to use it in their lives.
I have a feeling that these findings are quite different from other countries (not to mention the US). I’d like to know what are the equivalent numbers in other countries in which such studies have been done.
The numbers in Serbia may be also a result of the migrations over the past 15 years. Hundreds of thousands of people have left the country – mostly young, educated people who speak foreign languages (and thus have the ability and need to use the Internet fully). Thus, the population may have a slight skew at the moment towards older and less educated people. The youngest generations are still at the personal IM-ing stage and may start using the Internet more over the next few years as they grow up, MySpace first, then the rest of it.
Anyway, the numbers are not so bleak as they are rising every year (the study has been conducted annually since 1999) and the new generations will use the Internet more. Once the businesses, schools and “old” media get smarter about their Internet use and there is more broadband/wifi connection available, the use will likely skyrocket. There are certainly somne great blogs there, see here, here and here.

SBC – NC’07

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Roy Hinkley of Moment of Science is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Ndesanjo Macha of Digital Africa is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Science Blogging Conference Update, and THE FILTER

SBC%20logo.pngThere has been an exciting new addition fo the Conference Program – a new break-out session:

Illustrating your posts: Rosalind Reid, editor of American Scientist Magazine, leads a discussion about using photographs, illustrations, video clips and other multimedia to offer blog readers other ways to learn about science.

See what’s new at the conference homepage. See how you can help spread the word about it here.
And speaking of illustrations and multimedia as science educational tools, you should check out THE FILTER, a BoingBoing of science. Learn more about it here.

SBC – NC’07

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Eva of Easternblot is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Lunch with Mike

I had a delightful lunch today with my blog-sparring-partner Mike Munger of Mungovitz End (see how my blog is labeled on his blogroll: “Coturnix’s nonsense”). We had great time discussing politics, academia, Horowitz, blogging and the life in the Triangle. Oh, Mike is also running for North Carolina governor in 2008 as a Libertarian candidate. Check his positions – how liberal!!!

SBC – NC’07

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Geoff Davis is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Interview

All the sciencebloggers are taking a turn being interviewed on Page 3.14. Today, it’s my turn so go and read more about me.

Anton Zuiker’s article in today’s N&O

Anton Zuiker got a nice article (about blogging and the local blogging community) published in Raleigh News & Observer. The article is here and Anton’s personal version can be found here. Smartly, the article contains the URL of Blogtogether, so perhaps people will see it and register for the Science Blogging Conference or show up at the next meetup.
Oh, while there, you can also see two additional pictures of me from ConvergeSouth that Anton took – one with Elizabeth Edwards and the other with Maryam Scoble.
Addendum: Since I did not get my hardcopy of N&O (yet, I will soon), I did not know that there are several more articles on blogging there today. Abel links to them and comments.
Update: Paul Jones adds some thoughts (and useful links that N&O failed to provide), including more ammunition for my excuse not to have seen other peoples’ articles, including an article by another friend – Ruby Sienreich – who I would have linked immediately if only I have known. It took going out and getting a hardcopy to see she was in there!
Also interesting is the choice of blogs they chose to highlight – focusing on blogs with a distinctly local flavor, covering local issues (politics, environment, etc.). No mention of the best local aggregator!? I do not want to put down those blogs – they are all excellent and worth checking out even if you are not residing in the Triangle – but it is interesting they did not mention the area’s most popular blogs, i.e., popular outside the Triangle, nationally, perhaps internationally. So, I visited the Sitemeters of several local blogs I suspect have a large readership and this is what I found (average daily visits in parantheses):
Panda’s Thumb 5,387
Pam’s House Blend 3,649
Is That Legal 808
Silflay Hraka 727
A Blog Around The Clock 715 (and this is my all-time low since moving to Seed’s Scienceblogs – it is usually 800-1200)
Anyone else in the area who has big traffic that I may have missed?

SBC – NC’07

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Beth Ritter-Guth is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Justin Abbott is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Good news for the SBC-NC’07

SBC%20logo.pngHuntington F. Willard, Director of the Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy at Duke University and Vice Chancellor for Genome Sciences at Duke University Medical Center, has been confirmed as a keynote speaker for the first North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Check the evolving program here and see who else has registered to date here.

SBC – NC’07

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Lab Cat is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Are you addicted to the Internet?

Ed and Dave on Internet addiction.
If I go out of town, I am perfectly happy not to see a computer for days – there is so much more other stuff to enjoy. But at home it is a different story – it’s minutes, not days, and I start shaking uncontrollably!
OK, just joking. But I spend less time online than you may think, thanks to the MovableType’s ability to schedule a bunch of posts in advance. I have seriosuly cut on my time spent reading other blogs. My Bloglines does not work any more. I do not go browsing aimlessly or shopping online at all.
I do not watch TV almost at all.
I started to read some newspapers online – only the chosen articles – instead of hardcopy in which one is drawn into reading all sorts of silly stuff, like comics.
I still find time to read books.
So, even if it is an addiction, it is a much more useful and benevolent one than most other addictions. I get informed and spread the information to others – what’s wrong with that?

Happy blogiversary…

…to Ruchira Paul of Accidental Blogger!

SBC – NC’07

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Burt Humburg is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Jason Smith is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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John Ettorre is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Atlanta New Media Un-Conference

If you are still under the influence of ConvergeSouth and cannot wait a whole year for the next one, or if you have missed this weekend and need your fill soon, perhaps you can make it to Atlanta in February.

Chapel Hill – Carrboro Blogger MeetUp tonight

If you happen to be in the Triangle tonight and have some free time, come to the blogger meetup at 7pm at the Chapel Hill Public Library.

ConvergeSouth 2006

Yesterday, I spent a wonderful day in Greensboro, most of it on the NC A&T campus attending ConvergeSouth. I am still trying to recover from the event, so this post is just a big Hello to everyone I met there and another post about buidling online communities inspired by the meeting will follow soon.
First, a big Thank You to the organizers of the event, Sue Polinsky, Ed Cone, Ben Hwang and JW. Great to see you all again! Great job!
Last year, I came in knowing only a few people. Two days later, I knew many more. This year, it was only one day long so it was hard to catch up with everyone I know, as well as meet new friends, and I am sorry I did not have more time to spend chatting with some of them.
I rode with Kirk Ross (former editor of Independent Weekly) on the way there and with Will Raymond on the way home, both times with great conversations in which I have learned a lot (including the fact that Will’s sister and I know each other well).
Of course, Billy was there – the Great Organizer of the Blogsoro community. He drove to the conference riding his biplane bycicle (featured in Make magazine) and just hadf it parked there in front of the building all day long. You can see a movie about Billy and his plane if you click on the link on top of this page.
I managed to at least say Hello to Dave and Jinny Hoggard, Stu, Mr.Sun, Roch, Jay, Sandy Carmany, Sam and David Wharton, Jeff aka Fecund Stench (the best internet handle ever!), Anglico, Dave Anonymoses, Lex, Jude Iddybud, Matt Gross, Pam Spaulding, ae, Mark Tosczak, Janet and Daniel Conover, Matt Hill Comer, George Entenman and Jill (if I forgot someone, I apologize – feel free to remind me in the comments). Many of them have posted their own thoughts on the meeting, as well as pictures and videos, so dig around their blogs for more. And you can see who else was there here.
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The first morning session was on building online communities, wonderfully led by Elizabeth Edwards (and yes, I got another hug!). The biggest news from the meeting occured during this session as Mike Krempasky (the founder of Red State) all but endorsed Brad Miller for Congress, mainly for his fight for campaign finance and blogs, I guess, though who would ever want to vote for Vernon Robinson is going to remain forever a mystery to me. Southern Dem recorded the exchange which you can find on NCBlue:

One thing that I’ve certainly never done is endorse a Democrat. Ever. I am actually quite willing to say this when it comes to politics that we should (a little fuzzy) all just step back a little bit. If there’s an uglier time in Washington than right now, I don’t know. But Brad Miller ought to be re-elected.

(Here’s the picture of the two of them talking in the hall immediately afterwards. Also check the comments here)
The spirit of ConvergeSouth is wonderfullly non-partisan. We may bash each other in blog comments, but we enjoy each other’s company and have beer together in real life.
Anton liveblogged the lively and fun second session led by Maryam and Robert Scoble, who I managed to meet briefly afterwards.
The third session I attended was the one about the Facebook and other social software, moderated by Bill Wood who really impressed me with his thoughts on the topic. The best part of the session was the active participation of several students, real users of Facebook and MySpace. In the spirit of the unconference, I was really interested in hearing what they had to say instead of us old geezers pontificating to them. The session gave me a lot of food for thought, something I will have to ruminate on for a few days befor I turn it into a post here.
Also, the social networking showed its great real-life potential right there during the session. It took less than five minutes to match together people who have computers they don’t know what to do with, and people who need free computers to teach immigrants and refugees to read English.
As it apparently happens at every conference, a new blog got started right then and there.
Local media did not ignore the event either. You can read articles in News & Record and Yes Weekly.
After an afternoon chatting over beer with a bunch of bloggers, we had a great conversation at dinner in Ganache (great food – divine desserts!), with Elizabeth and Zak Exley, Austin Chandler, Anthony Piraino, Wendy Warren, Dan Rubin, Jim Buie, Cara Michelle, Lisa Scheer, Ed Cone, Kirk Ross and Will Raymond. Dan Rubin was a correspondent from Yugoslavia at the time when Milosevic was deposed, so we had a lot to talk about, as you can imagine.
Anton came prepared with a bunch of leaflets advertising the NC Science Blogging Conference which we gave out and left around the place for people to pick up. Several people showed great interest in it.
You can check out other peoples’ impressions here.
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Happy blogiversary…

…to the Lab Cat!

SBC – NC’07

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Garrett French is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Anton Zuiker is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Brian Russell is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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ConvergeSouth, Hopefully, Tomorrow

No posting tomorrow. I will (or should be) at ConvergeSouth all day tomorrow. That is, if I make it there. My ride suddenly quit. I e-mailed a few local bloggers but have not received any responses yet. Perhaps I’ll make it, perhaps I won’t. If I do, I’ll post my thoughts on the conference on Sunday.
Upodate: Got a ride. See ya on Sunday. I have scheduled several posts for automatic posting before bed tonight, a picture of a cat, some science news, etc, just to prevent the blog from rotting away and falling apart…

SBC – NC’07

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Josh Wilson is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Abel PharmBoy is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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New Microbiology Blog

If you are not a North Carolina blogger you may have skipped over this earlier post in which I mention, among else, that a new blog was started right there and then, at the Blogger MeetUp.
Now, the blog is up and running and there is new content there. So, go say Hello to a new science blogger, Lorraine Cramer of Microblogology.

Oh, no, you are not to think for yourself!

Thus, you should not be blogging if you are a good Christian child. Because blogging promotes thinking!
(Hat-tip: Justin in the comments here)

SBC – NC’07

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Daniel Collins is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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I guess I am prolific

I missed it when it happened, but this post was my 1000th since the move to Seed. My average is 8.2 posts per day. How about you?
Fortunately, MovableType has the ability to schedule posts for future publishing. Thus, I usually write a bunch of posts at night (it may take an hour or two to write 5-10 posts) and schedule them to show up during the next day (every 30 or 60 minutes until I run out of posts). The longer, more involved posts are usually written during the weekend but appear during the workday mornings. Thus, there is an appearance that I am constantly online while I am actually working, sleeping or spending time with the family.

Proper Procedure For Shutting Down A Blog

Proper Procedure For Shutting Down A BlogI wish more bloggers would read and bookmark this post (I don’t know when I first wrote it, but I moved it up top on April 20, 2006):

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Hungry at SBC?

SBC%20logo.pngIf you are coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference and you think you’ll be hungry after a cold January day spent talking about science, medicine, journalism and blogging, sign up for dinner now.

SBC – NC’07

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James Hrynyshyn is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Mr R is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Paul Jones is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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Local blogging – what’s new

On Thursday night I went to the Chapel Hill-Carrboro blogger MeetUp. Actually, I did not plan on going – my wife was out of town and I had kids on my hands on a schoolday, so I told Anton in advance that I would not be coming this time.
But, the previous day both of my kids bugged me about some online stuff, asking me how certain things are done and I had no idea how to help them! I promised I’d ask my blog friends. But then, I had an Eureka moment and asked my kids if they would rather ask my blog friends in person! They were quite enthusiastic about it so we went all three of us to Open Eye Cafe.
Anton has posted the minutes of the meetup so you can see who was there and what we talked about.
About half of the people present will be coming to and in some way be involved in organizing the North Carolina Science Blogging Conference so we talked about it a little bit.
A brand new microbiology blog – Microblogology was born right then and there – at the Meetup.
We got new Blogtogether posters so we can promote the local blogging community and draw more people to blogging.
Anton has a great idea for a Food Blogging Coneference to be held at various eating/drinking locations in the area. What would be the best place to go to taste good wines and talk/blog about them? Abel?
Anyway, my kids did not get the direct answers to their questions, but, the whole event energized them so much they both got on the computer yesterday and today and each figured out for themselves the answers to their questions: Coturnix Jr. solved his Flash problem and Coturnietta figured out how to modify her template the way she likes. And Roy got us the information needed for Coturnix Jr. to upload his Flash animations online.
Also, Rob helped me properly report the unusual appearance of the blue-thraoated hummingbird in North Carolina and also drew my attention to yet another discovery of a new bird species.

Biology In Science Fiction

I just discovered (on my Sitemeter referrals list!) a cool new blog – Biology In Science Fiction. Several good posts so far. Go check it out!

SBC – NC’07

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Mr.Sun is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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SBC – NC’07

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Reed Cartwright is coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference. Are you?
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How…

not to write a blog post. Advice for the next generation, but some of it applies to us old geezers as well.

Go say Hello…

…to Shakespeare’s Sister. It is her second blogiversary today.
I am always amazed when I realize that some of the bloggers I most look up to have been blogging less time than I have, and Shakes is certainly one of those bloggers I most look up to – has been a daily must read for a long time now.

How do you like the new logo?

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Design by Brian Russell for the ’07 NC SCB.

Podcastercon2006 – the Teaching Session

Podcastercon2006 - the Teaching SessionBrian Russell is organizing the 2007 Podcastercon. Let me show you how much fun the last year’s Podacstercon was by reposting this January 16, 2006 post (also cross-posted on Science And Politics) about the exciting education session led by David Warlick of 2 Cents Worth blog:

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Useful Chemistry at the ’07 NC Science Blogging Conference

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Jean-Claude Bradley is the pioneer in the use of blogs in science in the way that too many of us are still too scared to do – posting on a daily basis the ideas, methods and data from the lab. He and his collaborators are using the blogs Useful Chemistry, Useful Chem Experiments 1 and Usefulchem-Molecules, as well as the UsefulChem Project wiki to exchange information, brainstorm and inform the public of their work. These sites serve as laboratory notebooks open for everyone to see.
So, I am delighted to tell you that Jean-Claude will be coming to the 2007 North Carolina Science Blogging Conference and leading a break-out session on Open Source/Open Notebook Science.
So, are you coming to the conference, too? Of course you are – just register here and I’ll see you on January 20th.

The Academic Blog Portal

From John Dupuis via ACRLog, news of Academic Blog Portal wiki collecting (in a Chinese Classification of Animals kind of way) all the academic blogging goodness. It is currently heavy on humanities side, but you can add science blogs there if you want.
I wonder if something like this should be linked from somewhere there…

Are you…

…registered for ConvergeSouth by last name initial or by first name initial? If you have a website or blog, you should be registered both ways.

Sci-Fi And Building Blogging Communities

Sci-Fi And Building Blogging CommunitiesSome musings from February 13, 2005…

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