Tech Conferences

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

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

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

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

ClockQuotes

The surest way to be late is to have plenty of time.
– Leo Kennedy

Ice Age Floods and Mammoths

When Archy writes about mammoths that is automatically the Obligatory Reading of the Day – an amazing post!

2.5 hours from now

The horses will be entering the starting stalls for this year’s Preakness. Will Street Sense do it again? His Derby win was so impressive it seems impossible he can be beat, but this time the distance is different, the field is much smaller and everyone will be looking out for him. And he is starting from the outside stall, against the instincts of his jockey who loves to hog the rail. It will be exciting to watch…

Amanda behind the scene

Amanda Marcotte, that is. And there are two way to look at her from the ‘other side’ or ‘not-as-well-known-side’ or ‘what-really-happened-side’: the first is BlogPac Hero: The Amanda Marcotte Story You Haven’t Heard by John Javna and the second is Brimstone and cat spit by Amanda Marcotte.

Blogrolling for Today

Web Worker Daily

Zooillogix – Don’t Stick Your Fingers in the Cage…

The Futile Cycle

Reed’s Ruminations

The Accidental Scientist

Small Things Considered

Auntie Em’s house of cookies

Letters from Le Vrai

Scientifically Open Source

SBC-NC’08 – we have a sponsor!

Things are moving fast with us regarding the organization of the second Science Blogging Conference. We received a very generous grant from Burroughs Wellcome Fund which will allow us to get even more ambitious with our planning than we originally thought we could. Is your organization going to try to match their grant? Or help in some other way? Watch this place next week for updates.

Science2.0

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

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

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

My Picks From ScienceDaily

Clock Gene Plays Role In Weight Gain, Study Finds:

Scientists at the University of Virginia and the Medical College of Wisconsin have discovered that a gene that participates in the regulation of the body’s biological rhythms may also be a major control in regulating metabolism. Their finding shows that mice lacking the gene Nocturnin, which is regulated by the circadian clock in the organs and tissues of mammals, are resistant to weight gain when put on a high fat diet and also are resistant to the accumulation of fat in the liver. This new understanding of weight gain could potentially lead to therapies for inhibiting obesity and for treating its effects on health.

Rare Soft-Shell Turtle, Nesting Ground Found In Cambodia:

One of the world’s largest and least studied freshwater turtles has been found in Cambodia’s Mekong River, raising hopes that the threatened species can be saved from extinction. Scientists from World Wildlife Fund, Conservation International, the Cambodian Fisheries Administration, and the Cambodian Turtle Conservation Team captured and released a 24.2 pound female Cantor’s giant softshell turtle (Pelochelys cantorii) during a survey in March.

New Species Of Sea Anemone Found In Deepest Pacific:

Researchers cruising for creatures that live in the deepest parts of the Pacific Ocean found a new species of sea anemone living in the unlikeliest of habitats – the carcass of a dead whale.

Revealing The Origins Of Morality — Good And Evil, Liberal And Conservative:

How much money would it take to get you to stick a pin into your palm? How much to stick a pin into the palm of a child you don’t know? How much to slap a friend in the face (with his or her permission) as part of a comedy skit? Well, what about slapping you father (with his permission) as part of a skit? How you answer questions such as these may reveal something about your morality, and even your politics–conservatives, for example, tend to care more about issues of hierarchy and respect, while liberals concentrate on caring and fairness.

ClockQuotes

The two most powerful warriors are patience and time.
– Leo Nikolaevich Tolstoy

Flirting under Moonlight on a Hot Summer Night, or, The Secret Night-Life of Fruitflies

Blogging on Peer-Reviewed Research

As we mentioned just the other day, studying animal behavior is tough as “animals do whatever they darned please“. Thus, making sure that everything is controlled for in an experimental setup is of paramount importance. Furthermore, for the studies to be replicable in other labs, it is always a good idea for experimental setups to be standardized. Even that is often not enough. I do not have access to Science but you may all recall a paper from several years ago in which two labs tried to simultaneously perform exactly the same experiment in mice, using all the standard equipment, exactly the same protocols, the same strain bought from the same supplier on the same date, the same mouse-feed, perhaps even the same colors of technicians’ uniforms and yet, they got some very different data!
The circadian behavior is, fortunately, not chaotic, but quite predictable, robust and easily replicable between labs in a number of standard model organisms. Part of the success of the Drosophila research program in chronobiology comes from the fact that for decades all the labs used exactly the same experimental apparatus, this one, produced by Trikinetics (Waltham, Massachusetts) and Carolina Biologicals (Burlington, North Carolina):
drosophila%20apparatus.jpg
This is a series of glass tubes, each containing a single insect. An infrared beam crosses the middle of each tube and each time the fly breaks the beam, by walking or flying up and down the tube, the computer registers one “pen deflection”. All of those are subsequently put together into a form of an actograph, which is the standard format for the visual presentation of chronobiological data, which can be further statistically analyzed.
The early fruitfly work was done mainly in Drosophila pseudoobscura. Most of the subsequent work on fruitfly genetics used D.melanogaster instead. Recently, some researchers started using the same setup to do comparative studies of other Drosophila species. Many fruitfly clock labs have hundreds, even thousands, of such setups, each contained inside a “black box” which is essentially an environmental chamber in which the temperature and pressure are kept constant, noise is kept low and constant (“white noise”), and the lights are carefully controlled – exact timing of lights-on and lights-off as well as the light intensity and spectrum.
In such a setup, with a square-wave profile of light (abrupt on and off switches), every decent D.melanogaster in the world shows this kind of activity profile:
fruitfly%20crepuscular.JPG
The activity is bimodal: there is a morning peak (thought to be associated with foraging in the wild) and an evening peak (thought to be associated with courtship and mating in the wild).
The importance of standardization is difficult to overemphasize – without it we would not be able to detect many of the subtler mutants, and all the data would be considered less trustworthy. Yet, there is something about standardization that is a negative – it is highly artificial. By controlling absolutely everything and making the setup as simple as possible, it becomes very un-representative of the natural environment of the animal. Thus, the measured behavior is also likely to be quite un-natural.
Unlike in the lab, the fruitflies out in nature do not live alone – they congregate with other members of the species. Unlike in a ‘black box’, the temperature fluctuates during the day and night in the real world. Also unlike the lab, the intensity and spectrum of light change gradually during the duration of the day while the nights are not pitch-black: there are stars and the Moon providing some low-level illumination as well. Thus, after decades of standardized work, it is ripe time to start investigating how the recorded behaviors match up with the reality of natural behavior in fruitflies.
Three recent papers address these questions by modifying the experimental conditions in one way or another, introducing additional environmental cues that are usually missing in the standard apparatus (and if you want to know what they found, follow me under the fold):

Continue reading

Housekeeping

I am working on a post covering three (excellent) recent Drosophila clock-genetics papers and I am trying not to mention a single gene in it – just the historical, methodological, behavioral and ecological context of the results. It will appear later today/tonight. We’ll see how it turns out.
I have lined up ClockQuotes for the weekend, but I intend to be very busy so there may not be much or anything else posted – it is not really worth the effort when the traffic falls down to 50% over the weekend.
The doc who put my shoulder back is a genius. It never happened before that I never needed to take a single aspirin and immediatelly had a full function of the arm after it is put back in place.
Off to lunch with Abel now…

My Picks From ScienceDaily

Scientists Discover New Life In Antarctic Deep Sea:

Scientists have found hundreds of new marine creatures in the vast, dark deep-sea surrounding Antarctica. Carnivorous sponges, free-swimming worms, crustaceans, and molluscs living in the Weddell Sea provide new insights into the evolution of ocean life.

Continue reading

ClockQuotes

Life is uncharted territory. It reveals its story one moment at a time.
– Leo Buscaglia

Bacteria do it differently

I recently mentioned a study reporting circadian oscillations of bacterial clock-proteins KaiA, KaiB and KaiC in a dish with no transcription and translation whatsoever – the oscillations being due entirely to polymerization of proteins. Now, a mathematical model of this system has also been published describing how the working of the system is possible.

Yes, dolphins are smart!

Remember last summer when some guy named Paul Manger wrote a paper asserting how dolphins and other Cetaceans are really quite dumb? There was quite an interesting discussion about it on blogs back then, e.g., here, here, here and here.
Now, a formal rebuttal got published in PLoS-Biology:
Cetaceans Have Complex Brains for Complex Cognition:

The brain of a sperm whale is about 60% larger in absolute mass than that of an elephant. Furthermore, the brains of toothed whales and dolphins are significantly larger than those of any nonhuman primates and are second only to human brains when measured with respect to body size [1]. How and why did such large brains evolve in these modern cetaceans? One current view of the evolution of dolphin brains is that their large size was primarily a response to social forces–the requirements for effective functioning within a complex society characterized by communication and collaboration as well as competition among group members [2-4]. In such a society, individuals can benefit from the recognition of others and knowledge of their relationships and from flexibility in adapting to or implementing new behaviors as social or ecological context shifts. Other views focus on the cognitive demands associated with the use of echolocation [5-7].
Recently, Manger [8] made the controversial claim that cetacean brains are large because they contain an unusually large number of thermogenic glial cells whose numbers increased greatly to counteract heat loss during a decrease in ocean temperatures in the Eocene-Oligocene transition. Therefore, he argues, cetacean brain size could have evolved independently of any cognitive demands and, further, that there is neither neuronal evidence nor behavioral evidence of complex cognition in cetaceans. These claims have garnered considerable attention in the popular press, because they challenge prevailing knowledge and understanding of cetacean brain evolution, cognition, and behavior.
We believe that the time is ripe to present an integrated view of cetacean brains, behavior, and evolution based on the wealth of accumulated and recent data on these topics. Our conclusions support the more generally accepted view that the large brain of cetaceans evolved to support complex cognitive abilities.

The entire paper is well written and not too technical so anyone with some basic science background can understand it. And yes, the dolphins are smart.

If the (description of the) Beginning was wrong, so is the End

A must-read by Sara Robinson. You can use it to understand the persistence of Creationism. Or the lack of Internal Locus of Moral Authority in people belonging to Moral Majority.

The Fly Buzz Continues

The Fly Spontaneous Behavior paper is generating quite a lot of buzz.
Bjorn has collected some of the best blogospheric responses, including these from Mark Chu-Carroll, Mark Hoofnagle and Kate.
He also got Slashdotted – of course, whoever posted that on Slashdot failed to a) link to the paper, b) link to the press release and c) link to Bjorn’s blog. Instead, a little blurb from one of the worst media articles from MSNBC is the only link. Those got linked later in the comments, so I hope Bjorn enjoys the traffic (it will go away tomorrow never to come back again).
Bjorn has also posted two good posts about the scientific and popular aspects of the paper that can clear stuff up.

There is nothing I like doing more than herding cats!

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

Happy Birthday!

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

Mothers and Others

Scientiae #6 is up on On Being a Scientist and a Woman.

SpaceBlogging of the fortnight

Carnival of Space #3 is up on Universe Today

Nightingales – both of the Florence and of the feathered kind

Change of Shift: Volume 1, Number 24 is up on Nurse Ratched’s Place
I and the Bird #49: the Wordchaser, is up on Via Negativa. In two weeks, the 50th edition will be hosted here by me, so start sending your entries to: Coturnix AT gmail DOT com.

My Picks From ScienceDaily

Reproductive Speed Protects Large Animals From Being Hunted To Extinction:

The slower their reproductive cycle, the higher the risk of extinction for large grazing animals such as deer and antelope that are hunted by humans.

Bites From Mosquitoes Not Infected With Malaria May Protect Against Future Infection:

A new study suggests that bites from mosquitoes not infected with malaria may trigger an immune response limiting parasite development following bites from infected mosquitoes.

Molecular Biologists Convert Protein Sequences Into Classical Music:

UCLA molecular biologists have turned protein sequences into original compositions of classical music.

ClockQuotes

Longevity conquers scandal every time.
– Shelby Foote

CotL – call for submissions

The 39th edition of the Carnival of the Liberals (the peer-reviewed one) will be hosted by me here next Wednesday. Please send your entries by using the blogcarnival.com automated form. The deadline is Monday at 11:59pm EDT.

Thank you!

Oullette%201.jpgOullette%202.jpg
This and this arrived in the mail today. A birthday present from one of my readers! Thank you!

Blogrolling for Today

OptimalScholarship

The Fact Box

iSpiders

Depth-First

Evolutionary Psychology: The New Science of the Brain

Like a lake

Another role for Open Science

When I teach BIO101 I usually give at least one assignment that entails finding a biology-related article, writing a short summary of it and explaining the gist of it to the rest of the class. We did that this Monday and the students picked, as usual, some interesting topics (including some that take us way outside of the scope of the course, e.g., game theory and Evolutionarily Stable Strategies). The sources, as usual, are popular science magazines like American Scientist (the last one that is still of high quality, I’m afraid to say), Scientific American, Discover, Natural History, etc.
One of the students talked about the research on butterflies and beetles by Emlen and Nijhout – if this happened just a week later, she could have used the brand new (and better written) article in Seed Magazine on this topic instead of a 1998 article from Discover.
But this year there was a first! One of the students reported on a paper she found online – where? On PLoS-Biology, of course. This paper about ‘Thermal Stress and Coral Cover as Drivers of Coral Disease Outbreaks’. And she did a good job understanding the paper (with a little help from an MSNBC article about it as well). Remember, this is someone with zero background in biology, being able to understand a true scientific paper, not just a popular science article. I was quite impressed!

Today’s carnivals

The Carnival Of Education: Week 119 is up on The Education Wonks.
Carnival of the Infosciences #71 is up on Confessions of a Science Librarian.
The 72nd Carnival of Homeschooling: In My Backyard is up on PalmTree Pundit.

To Science Foo or not to Science Foo?

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

My Picks From ScienceDaily

Light Pulses Can Adjust The Brain’s Clock For A Longer Day, Sufficient For Adaptation To The 24.65 Hour Day Found On Mars:

Researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital’s (BWH) Division of Sleep Medicine and colleagues, have found that by giving individuals two 45 minute exposures to bright light pulses in the evening they could entrain (synchronize) a persons circadian system to function properly in days longer than the usual 24 hour light/dark cycle. The study was conducted for NASA’s National Space Biomedical Research Institute and the findings can be applied to the planned year-and-a-half visit to Mars, where the Martian day is 24.65 hours long. Without the ability to reset the internal clock to endure the longer day, an individual would feel as if they were in a perpetual state of jet lag.

Childhood Environment Influences Reproductive Function:

A study led by researchers at UCL (University College London) demonstrates that female reproductive function is influenced by childhood environment. This suggests there is a critical window of time from about 0-8 years of age that determines the rate at which girls physically mature and how high their reproductive hormone levels reach as adults.

Continue reading

ClockQuotes

Life offers two great gifts – time, and the ability to choose how we spend it. Planning is a process of choosing among those many options. If we do not choose to plan, then we choose to have others plan for us.
– Richard I. Winword

Lulu 2007 Blooker Prizes

Just announced!

The NCZoo Lion Cubs

The lion triplets now have names.

And now the scientists will do whatever they damned please (start shouting, most likely)

Google was really no help in finding the exact quote, but everyone in the animal behavior field has heard some version of the Harvard Rule of Animal Behaviour:

“You can have the most beautifully designed experiment with the most carefully controlled variables, and the animal will do what it damn well pleases.”

Anyone here knows who actually said that and what were the exact words?
Anyway, one way to re-word the “whatever they damned please” is to call it “free will”. Björn Brembs says so but apparently not everyone agrees. The discussion in the media and on blogs is just about to start because Bjorn’s paper about spontaneous behavior in Drosophila just came out today (after quite a long wait). You can read the summary by Bjorn, but I also suggest you try to read the actual paper. If seemingly spontaneous behavior can be described by mathematical formulas, even if it is chaotic dynamics, is it then, really, quite deterministic? If so (or if not) can it be called “free will”? If not, is there a better term for it?
Keep an eye on the discussion on Bjorn’s blog as well as the discussion attached to the PLoS-ONE paper itself and, if you have read and understood the paper, please contribute to the discussion. This is bound to get very interesting over the next several days.

The unnecessary heroics (like injecting yourself with toxins)

If you watch Tony Wright on his webcam every single millisecond of his experiment, you will likely have some interesting experiences yourself, apart from seeing how sleep deprivation messes with his mind. And his health.

Intel International Science and Engineering Fair

Seed Magazine sent two intrepid reporters to Albuquerque to cover this year’s Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (you may remember those under the old name of “Westinghouse”). They are busy filing their reports and you can find them all on the special scienceblogs Intel ISEF blog.
We never had science fairs in Yugoslavia – the science competitions were all in a paper-and-pencil style (like Math Olympiad), nothing to make or do, just theory and solving problems. I usually did better in math and English (as ESL) than in physics, chemistry and biology championships. But my daughter did participate in a science fair a couple of years ago and I am sure happy science fairs exist – if not, someone should invent them.

Oekologie #5

The latest edition of Oekologie is a real feast – a chockfull of great posts wrapped around the snippets of ancient and medieaval Arabic science for the history buffs, courtesy of Jeremy Bruno. Enjoy!

Green Rounds

Grand Rounds (Vol 3, No. 34) are up on Medical Humanities Blog
Carnival of the Green #77 is up on Natural Collection

My Picks From ScienceDaily

Sleepless For Science: Flies Show Link Between Sleep And Immune System:

Go a few nights without enough sleep and you’re more likely to get sick, but scientists have no real explanation for how sleep is related to the immune system. Now, researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine are finding that fruit flies can point to the answers.

Professor Creates ‘Reverse Alarm Clock’ That Keeps Young Children Sleeping:

John Zimmerman, an associate professor in Carnegie Mellon University’s School of Design and Human-Computer Interaction Institute, has developed an unconventional alarm clock every new parent needs — a clock to keep their children sleeping. Called the Reverse Alarm Clock, the product aims to keep young children from interrupting their parents’ sleep.

Continue reading

The Encyclopedia of Life

Everybody is talking about Encyclopedia of Life these days. It is alll still very Beta – we’ll wait and see how it turns out in the end. Many are enthusiastic, some are skeptical. But, what happened to the Tree of Life? Remember it from 1995 and after? I found it useful during the last decade for teaching and finding info. Why build a whole new thing when the old one could be updated and modernized instead – it is already chockful of information.

ClockQuotes

A sage thing is timely silence, and better than any speech.
– Plutarch

Carnivalia

Panta Rei #5 – Chemical Sciences – is up on Nonoscience. Next edition is a Life Sciences special, planned for May 28, 2007 also at Nonoscience.
Carnival of the Godless #66 is up on The Atheist Experience.
Oekologie #5 – last call for submissions for tomorrow’s edition on The Voltage Gate.
The next Carnival of the Liberals will be hosted by me on May 23rd.
The International Carnival of Pozitivities (HIV/AIDS) is now accepting submissions for its 12th edition to be published in June, 2007. on HIV Health and Support Network Community News

The Inter-Ghost Connection

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

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

Or, from here:

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

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

Digital data preservation, sharing, and discovery: Challenges for Small Science Communities in the Digital Era

From Paul I learned about the DRIADE Workshop on Digital data preservation, sharing, and discovery: Challenges for Small Science Communities in the Digital Era, organized by NESCent (National Evolutionary Synthesis Center) and the UNC Metadata Research Center. I am not sure if the participation is by invitation only, or if it is free, but I’ll try to sneak in somehow. We’ll see if that works and will let you know if it does.

My Picks From ScienceDaily

Rare Sighting Of Threatened Bottlenose Dolphins In English Channel:

On a crossing of the English Channel aboard the P&O Cruise Ferry, the Pride of Bilbao on the 5th of May, a large group of approximately 30 Bottlenose Dolphin was sighted by Clive Martin, Director for the wildlife charity Marinelife and senior Wildlife Officer for the Biscay Dolphin Research Programme.

DNA Reveals Hooded Seals Have Wanderlust:

Researchers have discovered a new fact about hooded seals, a mysterious 200 to 400 kilogram mammal that spends all but a few days each year in the ocean.

Simpler Way To Counter Global Warming Explained: Lock Up Carbon In Soil And Use Bioenergy Exhaust Gases For Energy:

Writing in the journal Nature, a Cornell biogeochemist describes an economical and efficient way to help offset global warming: Pull carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere by charring, or partially burning, trees, grasses or crop residues without the use of oxygen.

Back from the ER

Yup, it happened again. My left shoulder popped out of the socket, right around 12:30 after midnight. I used to be able to put it straight back. My wife did it a couple of times before – she’s a nurse after all. It first happened at a horse show when I was abotu 18 or so and had it fixed on the spot by a sports medicine doc. I had it put back by friends, passers-by, medical students, veterinarians, but as the time passes it gets more and more difficult to put back. This is the second time in a row (last time was about 5 years ago) that I had to go to ER, be put to sleep and wake up with the arm in place. It usually hurts like hell for a few days afterwards, so i got some pain medicine.
I am supposed to teach tonight and meet some people over the next couple of days – I hope I am able to do so.

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

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

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

Read the whole thing….

ClockQuotes

There are no insoluble problems. Only time-consuming ones.
– James A. Michener