Category Archives: Housekeeping

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Microbiologist XX


Gramstain


Botswana Sceptic


Random Thoughts from Bennett Kankuzi

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My Chemical Journey


Discount thoughts


Optical Futures


Brain Blogger


Chance and Necessity


SciLink Blog

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Mystery of Mysteries


SAGACITY HARBOR


Psychescientia


Room 26 Cabinet of Curiosities


A Man With A Ph.D.

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PLEKTIX


R.E.S.E.A.R.C.H.E.R.S.


Skulls in the Stars


Time to Eat the Dogs


Open Access Blog

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Sciencegeekgirl


The Plummet Onions


Scholarly Communication News@BC


Twisted Physics


Freeresearcher.net

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Social Psychology Daily


Clashing Culture


Jessica Snyder Sachs, Science Writer


En Tequila Es Verdad


Thoughts from gut bacteria


Carnival of the Elitist Bastards

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Sukhdev in Web Land


Hog Foot Holler


Psychedelic Research


Open Access Anthropology


Evolutionary Novelties

Off to Florida….

…no idea what kind of Internet access I will have there, so I scheduled some re-posts and quotes to show up automatically. I’ll add more if I can when I can.

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Neurotic Physiology


Stitchin’ Fish at the Ecology Action Centre


A Reasonable Theory


Scholarship 2.0: An Idea Whose Time Has Come


What Sorts of People


The Stanford Facebook Class


Giovanna Di Sauro


Wandering Primate


Vetskeptics

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Diabola in Musica


Hoxful Monsters


StevenBerlinJohnson


An American Businesswoman’s New Life in Serbia & Abroad


RoBlog


Speaking Serbia – Rob’s Blog

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Antimonite


Palachinka


Because I said so


The Skeptical Adaptationist


Dammit Jim!

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The Echinoblog


Observe The Banana


Ben Off to Iraq


Transient Reporter


Being the Chronicles of B

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Niyaz Ahmed’s Blog


Worst Result Ever


Tomorrow’s Table


Stimulating Aliquot


Little Grassroots


A Baltimore Block


Via Ginnastica

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Astrogator’s Logs


Cranky Sophie’s Blog


News from the world of deep-sea whale-falls, polychaete worms and Antarctica


The Masks We Wear


MedGadget

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Candidate Models


Plausible Accuracy


Dolores Labs Blog


StupidFilter


GraphJam: Pop culture for people in cubicles.


PSD Blog

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Juniorprof


Biology Blogs


JB Say What?


andrew plemmons pratt


Write To Done


BIOLOGY & POLITICS


Simon’s Writing Room

5000

Yes, this is the 5000th post on this blog. Obviously, I am nuts.

A Cool Million

I know it’s an arbitrary number, but it still looks cool:
million.JPG
(Apparently, the 1000000th and the 1000001st visitors arrived simultaneously). Back when I just started I never thought this was even possible.
The millionth visitor came here from Oakland, California, entered the site at this post, and made 17 pageviews in 6 minutes 4 seconds.

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Undergrad Mind


Neuroanthropology


Halley VI


Digitalna knjiznica Univerze v Ljubljani


Blue Lab Coats


Book of Answers

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Faraday’s Cage is where you put Schroedinger’s Cat


Monkey Fluids


Sociological Images: Seeing Is Believing


Playing Chess with Pigeons


Punk Professor

8000

Congratulations to Rev. BigDumbChimp for posting the 8000th comment on this blog!

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Modern Mechanix


Prelinger Library Blog


Almost Diamonds


When do you think you’ll be done?


The Happy Scientist


A Mad Tea-Party


Mother of All Scientists


A Lady Scientist


(Non) Scientific Observations from a female scientist

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Trilobite Blog


Evolucija


Raw Dawg Buffalo


Znanost


Elle, phd


Diary of a PhD student


Education and Class


The field negro


See Jane in the Academy

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Perusing Science


Perusing Aardvarks


Adaptive Complexity


Exsisto Sane


Chimpanzees are not Monkeys


Mystery Rays from Outer Space


PTET


Exploring Our Matrix

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The World We Don’t Live In


Michael Nielsen


A & A’s Excellent Adventure


Ecosystems and Poverty


Rat in the Lab


The Biology Refugia


Fresh Brainz

Various updates

First, the interviews will continue….when I get some answers from one of the six people I sent questions to…. I will also be sending questionnaires to more people soon.
Second, there are some responses now to the 1-2-3, the Goosed/Book meme. First, Chad Orzel provides several interesting quotes. And now Tom Levenson responded with not one but two elaborate, illustrated posts: I’ve Been Tagged! Reading and writing and all that jazz. and I’ve Been Tagged! — Darwin follow up. Update: Eric Roston and Jennifer Ouellette did it, too. And Vanessa as well.
I was also tagged by another meme, about a historical figure, and once I picked the person I realized I first had to order and read a book! So, this will take a fe wmore days.
Third, I will reciprocate to Arunn and write a BPR3-style post soon. I have a stack of printed-out papers as well as half a desktop covered with icons of PDF files of papers accumulated over the last six months or so that I want to comment on. I’ll try to find some time very soon to do this. Perhaps more than one.
Finally, the conversation about What is a Science Blog? continues, so check out the posts by Greg Laden, Mike the Mad Biologist, PhysioProf (and again), John Hawks, Mike Haubrich, Razib, ~C4Chaos and Julia . Update: Janet Stemwedel and John Wilkins add their thoughts. As do Abel and Brian…And Jason and Selva and Greg again. And Lim Leng Hiong, Michael White and Ignored Ethos…And Greg and Chris…And Chad and Arunn….

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SECular Thoughts


Free Range Academy


Nimravid’s Weblog


Thesis – with Children


Frontal Blogotomy

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Psique


Guadalupe Storm-Petrel


Ectoplasmosis


Gallicissa


Sorting Out Science

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Women’s Bioethics Blog


InnoBlogger


Bench Marks


Synthesis


Urban Science Adventures!


Diary of a phd student

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SES: Science, Education & Society


The Natural Patriot


Patently silly


Evolved and Rational


A Fat Question


Stuff White People Like


Running the Numbers

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Sex in Space


Oceanographic Research Vessel Alguita


Ship-2-Shore Education


The Oyster’s Garter


Deus Ex Malcontent


The Beauty Brains


Science Fair


Talk Like A Physicist

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Burgermares and Coffeebots


Sigma Xi Water blog


Sigma Xi’s Science Blog


Talking pictures


Stephen Bodio’s Querencia


Vocino.com

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Dyre Portents


A natural history of Runswick Bay


Northstate Science


Ancient World Bloggers Group


Blog Interupted…


Biology (Magrin 07)


Extreme Biology

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The Daily Mammal


ShopTalk


Open Students


ScienceCrossroads


The Tao of Change


Pyrenaemata

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The Digital Cuttlefish


The Technium


Space Exploration and Us!


Sweet Jesus I Hate Chris Matthews


ThePoliticalCat


Moue Magazine


Cafe Philos: an internet cafe


Riverside Rambles

Blogroll Amnesty Day

Photobucket
Jon Swift and Skippy are reminding us that this weekend is the time for the annual Blogroll Amnesty Day.
The rule is to highlight, link to, and add to one’s blogroll, some deserving blogs that have smaller traffic than you. Now, it’s sometimes not easy figuring out who has what traffic – if you really like a blog you probably think the traffic there is higher than it is.
Also, I have real trouble picking just a few. Go and check my Blogroll – it’s huge! And only a few of them are Big Dawgs. Most are rather smallish blogs. Check them out, at least some of them.
I have been really busy lately so I have not updated my blogroll in a long time. I intend to add all the blogs I mentioned over the last few months in my Blogrolling For Today posts, so check those out as well.
But before I go ahead and turn my monstrously big Blogroll into something even bigger, please let me know, in the comments, who is still missing from it yet deserves to be there? Is it your blog? Give me the URL.

Thanks…

…to Melissa, Greg, Ed, Mustang Bobby and Rook for linking to my Mom’s series of posts this week.

Blogrolling for today

Space Cadet


Saving Species


To catch a panda


The Wisdom of Whores


Animal Inventory


Practical Ethics Blog


Jacks of Science


Science of the Invisible


AJCs Virtual Frogroom

The Blogistential Angst

Do you like ClockQuotes? Do you ever read them? Excitedly wait every night until 4am EST for them to post?
How about YouTube videos of 1970s/80s Yugoslav music? Like them? Dance and sing along?
What about My picks from ScienceDaily? Is that a useful filtering service to you? Is that a place where you find stories you are interested in?
Thing is, those things are easy and quick to post and I am sure there will be three posts per day no matter how busy or tired I am and the traffic will come at least from the Last24Hours page for a little while. But it is a filler. Have you even noticed I did not post them for the past week or so? Do you miss them? Shall I keep posting them again, starting tonight? It certainly made my life easier, but on the other hand made me nervous about potential lack of any posting at all.
On the other hand, do you miss posts explaining the latest peer-reviewed research in chronobiology or animal behavior?
How about an occasional post by a guest-blogger or two? If Yes, who?
Or do you like it just the way it is right now (scroll down to check the last couple of days)?
Give me your opinions in the comments. If many of you scream to have ClockQuotes back, they will be back (I’ll probably post some Darwin quotes instead during February).

Blogrolling for today

SciPhi 08


Data Not Shown


The INFO Project Blog


The Inverse Square Blog


George Folkerts


The Choctawhatchee Search

Busy….

…but should have exciting news this afternoon….stay tuned….

Junk Folder

If you post a comment here and it does NOT appear immediately, it is likely in the Junk Folder, which I tend to forget to check every day. Please e-mail me so I can fish it out and republish it here sooner rather than later.

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PhysioProf


Cognition and Language Lab


Writer’s Daily Grind


OA/UofA


Star Stryder


Grannyhelen’s Kitchen

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JoVE blog


Science Based Medicine


Talking Science


Errol Morris – Zoom


The Open Source Paleontologist

Yes, I am alive…

…just busy with the Conference and Anthology.
Judging of the entries for the anthology is over and Reed and I have determined the winners. The authors have been notified and, unless one of them wants to pull a post out, I will post the links to all the winning posts here on my blog tomorrow, so come back to this spot tomorrow.

A Blog Around The Clock: Year In Review

The year in review meme is too random to really capture the highlights of a year on a blog. So, here is a collection of links that I think mark the most important moments of this blog in the last year:
January (297 posts) was dominated by the science blogging anthology and the science blogging conference, so it was filled mostly with re-posts of the old stuff, quick links and only a couple of science posts. This was also the time when my name first appeared in the media. This is also the time when I started writing more about Open Science. All of this combined resulted in a large and permanent rise in traffic.
February (245 posts) started with a push for funding of the Beagle Project. This was followed by the saga of Amanda and Melissa getting hired and then having to quit as blogmasters for Edwards. And much more politics. Among the myriads of quotes, reposts and quick links, I also wrote several science posts, including three popular ones: Sex On The (Dreaming) Brain, The Lark-Mouse and the Prometheus-Mouse and Lesson of the Day: Circadian Clocks are HARD to shift!.
In March (229 posts) we started early with the organization of the 2nd Science blogging conference and anthology. I wrote about blogging, about open science, about science education, about recent Balkan history, about the Belgrade Zoo, about religion and still a lot about U.S. politics. I put together a google-bombing Michael Egnor linkfest and a CoulterFest. And I wrote a bunch of brief science posts, as well as one or two longer ones, including Cortisol necessary for circadian rhythm of cell division and Evo-Devo: what new animal models should we pick?.
In April (191 posts), there was a famous kerfuffle about fair use of images in science blogging. And then, even more famous blogospheric debate on Framing Science for which I wrote something like ten posts (included in that linkfest). And lots and lots of fun little posts. But April is special because that is when I posted not my most popular but my most famous blog post ever – this one – and what made it famous is not what I wrote, but this comment and the chain of events it precipitated.
In May (210 posts), after going to San Francisco for the interview, I got the job! I got invited to scifoo. Some early influences and a deeply personal post. The Framing Science debate continues. Interesting comment thread on recent Balkan history. More on science education. We celebrated Linneaus’ 300th birthday. A paper came out suggesting Viagra as a treatment for jet-lag and I poked holes in it. Some other papers were better, so check out my takes on them: A Pacemaker is a Network and Flirting under Moonlight on a Hot Summer Night, or, The Secret Night-Life of Fruitflies.
In June (222 posts) I got a new cat. A rare post on religion. Why are dinosaur fossils’ heads turned up and back? Everything important cycles. A longish post on Science 2.0 and one on sociology of social networks. The power of name. Scientists vs. science journalists. And again. Welcoming the Nature Precedings.
I spent most of July (275 posts) in San Francisco. Busy with the new job and exploring this cool city, I mostly scheduled re-posts of the best old science posts. I got a new laptop. While I was there, PLoS ONE introduced ratings. My brother went to Belgrade and got my Mom a new computer and cable internet so she could read my blog and post comments. Still, I managed to review Rainbows End and, related to it, Facebook. Science envy. Posted the exclusive science interview with John Edwards. I did a lot of photoblogging in July – see this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this and this (and those are not all!) where you can see cool people I met and interesting places I went. Oh, I did write a science post, too: The Amplitude Problem.
In August (200 posts) it was time to leave San Francisco, over beer with friends, of course. And then, go to the amazing Science Foo Camp (where, among other things, I got served lunch by Martha Stewart) – see, for instance, my coverage here, here, here, here and, after I got home, here and a final, long wrap-up here – an absolutely amazing experience! So, I got home and moved into my new office and got back into the North Carolina blogworld. Then, it was time to go to NYC for the big SciBling meetup, where I took a lot of pictures and posted them (so you can see how sciencebloggers look like) here, here, here, here, here, here and here (the famous karaoke bar). Blogging after that was pretty quick-and-dirty, with just an occasional foray into serious writing, for instance, What is an Author? And then, it was time to debunk and defeat PRISM.
September (183 posts): false journalistic balance. An internet joke that brought in tons of traffic from social networking sites. Discovered the Zoo School. And some thoughts on textbooks. Rethinking FOXP2. You can send trackbacks to PLoS ONE papers. A great croc paper by Steve Irwin. The big blogging event was a combo of scienceblogging and foodblogging. After getting tagged by others a million times, I decided to start a new meme. The call to Senate to approve the NIH bill was successul. Oxytocin and childbirth. Running, breathing and being a horse.
October (231 posts) was a month of intense travel. I gave a presentation at UNC, then I led a session at ConvergeSouth in Greensboro and a few days later was a part of a panel at the ASIS&T conference in Milwaukee, and then I had a poster in Second Life. PLoS announced its new journal. Sciencebloggers raked in a ton of money for science education through DonorsChoose. There is no soul. The organization of the Science Blogging Conference is heating up. Reintroducing Journal Clubs on PLoS ONE papers. A global slant to Nobel Prizes. Senate passes the NIH bill (Bush vetoes it, but the OA language remains intact). Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research (BPR3) gets started.
November (170 posts) started with the surprise visit by the PLoS ONE managing editor. Then I wrote a serious post about authorship on scientific papers. But the big event was the trip to Boston/Cambridge MA for a panel at Harvard. See my coverage here, here and here. And right after that, I had a lot of work to do in preparation for the publication of the Nigersaurus paper and the subsequent media attention. Locally, we had a wineblogging meetup and a meeting with Rep. Brad Miller. SAGE ventures into Open Access. Has the word “gene” outlived its usefulness? Shift Work labeled as a Probable Cause of Cancer.
December (184 posts so far) – so, have you hugged your horse today? My tour-de-force post, possibly the best post of the year: The Scientific Paper: past, present and probable future. A feminist/Freudian tongue-in-cheek review of the Golden Compass. The big push to get the Presidential candidates to agree to a Science Debate. For this, I posted some of my own potential debate questions: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6. The Lab Website awards have been announced. PLoS ONE is one year old. All the entries for the Open Lab 2007 are now available for everyone to see. There are at least six species of giraffe, not just one. Hanukkah was good to us – I got a new camera, and my wife and daughter got an XO laptop each. My Mom went to Israel for a conference and is guest-blogging about it – see the part I and part II so far.
Enough links here to fill the rest of your holidays?

Blogrolling for Today

Brontossauros em meu jardim


Podblack Blog


Second Sight


Practice Space


Med i Mentol


Nebom hodam, pticu pratim….


My blah, blah, blah…. this and that… anything and everything

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Cogitamus


Wanderlustig


I A C O V I B U S


Overcoming Bias


Science Sense


McBlawg


Sweet Waters


Lisa Paitz Spindler

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Idiosynchrony


BedBugger


Out of the Mountains


Eclectic Glob of Tangential Verbosity


The Dendritic Arbor

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The Lord Geekington


Genomeboy.com


The Modest Proposal


The Modest Proposal blog


The Issue


Peer To Patent blog