ScienceOnline09 – UNC

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Among those registered for ScienceOnline09 are also a bunch of people associated with the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill:
Paul Jones is a journalism professor and the founder of Ibiblio
Patric Lane is the Health and Science Editor at UNC-Chapel Hill News Services
Carolyn Kotlas is the Academic Outreach Consultant at UNC-Chapel Hill Information Technology Services
Jan McColm is in the Department of Genetics and the Managing Editor of Genetics in Medicine
Les Lang is the Director of Research Communications and Assistant Director of Public Affairs and Marketing in the Medical Center News Office
Clinton Colmenares is the National Media Strategist in the Medical Center News Office
Tom Hughes is the Managing Editor in the Medical Center News Office
Douglas Johnston is an instructor in the SPH Executive Masters Program
Denise Young is the Director of Education Programs at the UNC Morehead Planetarium and Science Center
Jay Heinz is a Multimedia Designer at the Morehead Planetarium and Science Center and writes on their blog
Amy Sayle is the Educator in the Adult Programs at the Morehead Planetarium and Science Center
Lynn Davis is the Instructional Designer at the Friday Center for Continuing Education
Christina Whittle is in the Department of Biology
Jeff Yeo is a graduate student in the Medical & Science Journalism Program.
Paul Medina is a postdoc in the Brenman lab.

College Blogging Scholarship

Remember the College Blogging Scholarship? The one that Shelley almost won two years in a row? Well, it is happening again. The prize is $10,000. The deadline for submission is very tight – October 30th 2008, so you need to hurry up.
Among else, you need to know that each entrant has to be:
# U.S. citizen or permanent resident;
# Currently attending full-time in post-secondary education in the United States;
If you are an undergraduate or graduate student, sign up. If you read and like a blogger who is a student, sign her/him up.
Of course, I would like to see a science blogger win this time.
Brian Switek has already applied.
I have no idea how the panel of judges will determine who the finalists will be, but I assume that multiple nominations may help. So, nominate Brian again.
And, since there is no limitation to only one nomination, think of others. I am about to go and nominate Brian again, and also Anne-Marie Hodge (see her interview) and Samia.
Anyone else?
And if one of our science blogging nominees makes it into the finals, we can all support that person by voting and asking friends to vote.
Go to the submission form for the College Blogging Scholarship now!

Obligatory Reading of the Day: Crayfish tail-flip response

You know I have a soft spot for crayfish, so I was excited to read about the new study about their nervous system, nicely explained by Mo:

When confronted with threatening stimuli and predators, the crayfish responds with an innate escape machanism called the startle reflex. Also known as tailflipping, this stereotyped behaviour involves rapid flexions of the abdominal muscles which produce powerful swimming strokes that thrust the small crustacean through the water and away from danger. In the struggle for existence, the speed of this response response can mean the difference between life and death, and the crayfish has evolved an incredibly fast escape mechanism which can be initiated within well under one-hundredth of a second.

Crocodile Embryo MV (video)

Clock Quotes

We New Yorkers see more death and violence than most soldiers do, grow a thick chitin on our backs, grimace like a rat and learn to do a disappearing act. Long ago we outgrew the need to be blowhards about our masculinity; we leave that to the Alaskans and Texans, who have more time for it.
– Edward Hoagland

How to ROFL

How to ROFL:
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27 Best Deep-Sea Species

About half have already been posted:
#27: Brachiopods
#26: Pig Butt Worm
#25: Crawling Crinoids
#24: Tube Worms
#23: Dumbo Octopus
#22: Xenophyophores
#21: Phronima
#20: Swimming Sea Cucumbers
#19: Black Devil Anglerfish
#18: Venus Fly-trap Anemone
#17: Tripod fish, Bathypterois
#16: Chaunax, the red-eyed gaper
#15: Spookfish, Rhinochimaera pacifica
#14: Alviniconcha, the Hairy Vent Snail
Keep checking for others….

Michael Pollan – Serious Sustainability

Clay Shirky: It’s Not Information Overload. It’s Filter Failure.

I’m Voting For O’Bama ‘Cause He’s Irish

Blogrolling – Letter G

Continuing with asking for your help in fixing my Blogroll:

Every couple of days or so, I will post here a list of blogs that start with a particular letter, and you add in the comments if you know of something that is missing from that list.

See so far:
Numbers and Symbols
A
B
C
D
E
F
Today brought to you by letter G. This is what is on the Blogroll right now. Check also the Housekeeeping posts for other G blogs I have discovered in the meantime. Check links. Tell me what to delete, what to add:

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ScienceOnline09 – interviews with last year’s participants

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Do you want to start getting hyped for the ScienceOnline09? You can start by (re)reading the interviews with some of the last year’s participants, many of whom will be coming again this year so you may want to get to know a little bit more about them in advance: SBC’08 Interviews.

Why ninjas kill people?

Zadi Diaz is the co-creator and host of EPIC FU (which also has its own blog):

My picks from ScienceDaily

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Mark Westneat explains why a scientist should support Obama

Your weekend politics

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Participate in an experiment – how do you compare to philosophers on solving moral dilemmas?

Eric Schwitzgebel, Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of California, Riverside, and Fiery Cushman, a psychology post-doc at Harvard, are conducting an online experiment which involves comparing philosophers’ and non-philosophers’ responses to questions about moral dilemmas.
They got plenty of philosophers to do the experiments, but they need more non-philosophers for the comparison group. Their “Moral Sense Test” asks respondents for their takes on various moral dilemmas. They say that people who have taken other versions of this test have found it interesting to ponder the moral dilemmas they ask about. The test should take about 15-20 minutes and can be found at http://moral.wjh.harvard.edu/eric1/test/testN.html.
Please help them out by doing the experiment and telling others as well.

She’s all set with her new job

Once she loses in November (and perhaps gets impeached as the Governor of Alaska), Palin can get a permanent job on Saturday Night Live. She fits there well, is just as good as the rest of the crew, and we can continue NOT watching the show, just like we have not for years now:

Clock Quotes

There are some things which cannot be learned quickly, and time, which is all we have, must be paid heavily for their acquiring. They are the very simplest things, and, because it takes a man’s life to know them, the little new that each man gets from life is very costly and the only heritage he has to leave.
– Ernest Hemingway

Today’s carnivals

Medicine 2.0 Blog Carnival Edition #33 is up on Ivor Kovic’s blog.
Carnival of Space #74 is up on Lounge of the Lab Lemming.
Friday Ark #213 is up on Modulator

Obama-McCain race – a Serbian parallel lesson?

For some reason, my (rare) posts in which I make direct comparisons between Serbia and the USA (usually about politics) tend to become wildly popular (as in: spreading like wildfire on digg, redditt, stumbleupon, etc.). See, for example: Bush is Milosevic, Comparative Wingnuttery, Darwin in Serbia, More about me, The Warriors, Never Again!, Sixteen years ago today, We are now officially living in a dictatorship and When religion goes berserk! for examples of my typically inflamatory prose on the topic 😉
Let me take a stab at another one, connected to the current US election. I’ll try to keep it short if I can.
But first, read this essay by Jasmina Tesanovic about the demise of the Radical Right in Serbia:

The political climate has changed in Serbia. Boris Tadic, the Pro-European president, is wisely minding the nation’s business and doing it relentlessly. The ex-president Kostunica was doing the opposite.
A couple of days ago, journalists from various press groups were beaten up by Radical goons; at that point the new government declared Serbian journalists to be equivalent to Serbian police performing public duties, and severely penalized the street-thugs for attacking free speech.

For about fifteen years (starting around 1988), the Serbs had to endure: years of hated Milosevic; starting and losing five stupid, bloody wars nobody wanted; the surprising and sad spectacle of their brothers and sisters in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Macedonia and Montenegro turning their backs on them and leaving the union; economic hardship, hyperinflation and poverty; mass exodus of young intellectuals; mass influx of illiterate and armed refugees from the wars; deaths and wounds of loved ones recruited by force into the military and sent out to wars; sharp rise in crime and general thuggery; media serving as PR for Milosevic; opposition media getting shut down and beaten; election after election getting stolen by Milosevic; each election being followed by humongous, multi-day demonstrations in big cities, infused with fiery rhetoric of the democratic opposition, leading to vandalism, skirmishes with the police, deaths from gun-shots and a war-zone mentality; being made into pariahs of the world; daily reading lies and demonization of Serbs in the foreign press; getting bombed in 1999 which just paralyzed the opposition’s fight against Milosevic, strengthened his regime, delayed his downfall, not to mention killed many innocents, peppered the area with unexploded bombs and depleted uranium, and resulted in massive environmental degradation.
After enduring all of this and finally getting rid of Milosevic, replacing him with the loud revolutionaries of the opposition movement, the Serbs realized they had enough of the excitement. They wanted someone who will stop the yelling and get down to work instead. They looked for a technocrat, someone who will actually work on fixing the economy and improving the country’s standing in the world. Neither the defeated Socialists, nor greasy, bearded Radicals, nor fiery revolutionary Democrats quite fit that bill. The Serbs were looking for someone who is…..boring!
And they found it in Boris Tadic. He got elected, and later re-elected as the President of Serbia. He is so boring and grey that I guess he does not need security in the street – nobody will recognize him. He probably goes grocery shopping by himself.
Yet, as much as people there are vaguely grumbling (doesn’t everyone everywhere always grumble?), they are largely satisfied with his job. When I visited Belgrade in April I was stunned – the city has never looked so clean and colorful and vibrant. Lots of new shops and restaurants, people were cheerful, well-dressed and generally optimistic. It’s not perfect, but everyone notices that the movement is in the right direction – things are slowly starting to happen and they are all good.
Now, to the parallel with the U.S. We here have had a long time of excitement as well – a stupid, bloody war we cannot win, stolen elections, media acting as PR for the Administration, an economic crisis, shredding of the Constitution, obvious cold shoulder from the rest of the world, torture, wire-tapping, firing of District Attorneys, outing of a CIA operative, Terry Schiavo circus, appointment of extremist judges at all levels (starting with Roberts and Alito), Katrina and FEMA, ridiculous airport “security”, and now scandalously dishonest campaigning by McCain and incitement of the most extremist, racist, violent fringes of the society at the Palin rallies.
I think people had had enough of that excitement. They are not looking for fiery rhetoric. They want someone who will get down to work. They are looking for someone boring.
And Obama, with his poker face and unflinching cool, is exactly that. The angry faces of McCain at the three debates and the hate-mongering by Palin are exactly NOT what people are looking for. Slander, attack ads, sneering, fiery rhetoric, hate and fear – not this season, thank you. The slogans are not working any more. Obama’s boring explanations of policy details, things that used to guarantee an electoral loss for a Democrat in the past, are exactly what people are yearning for right now. He exudes competence – even if the audience does not understands the nuances of the policy, Obama obviously does and thus can be trusted to do his job well.
Thus, even though many people in the country are uneasy with Obama because of his race, or because they truly believe the lies about him being a terrorist, or because they have something irrational against Arabs, they will STILL vote for him. Their need for stability and calm is stronger then even their racism and fear. Look at these examples:
Sean Quinn reports from Pennsylvania:

So a canvasser goes to a woman’s door in Washington, Pennsylvania. Knocks. Woman answers. Knocker asks who she’s planning to vote for. She isn’t sure, has to ask her husband who she’s voting for. Husband is off in another room watching some game. Canvasser hears him yell back, “We’re votin’ for the n***er!”
Woman turns back to canvasser, and says brightly and matter of factly: “We’re voting for the n***er.”
In this economy, racism is officially a luxury. How is John McCain going to win if he can’t win those voters?

Or this stunning focus group report:

Reagan Dems and Independents. Call them blue-collar plus. Slightly more Target than Walmart.
Yes, the spot worked. Yes, they believed the charges against Obama. Yes, they actually think he’s too liberal, consorts with bad people and WON’T BE A GOOD PRESIDENT…but they STILL don’t give a f***. They said right out, “He won’t do anything better than McCain” but they’re STILL voting for Obama.
The two most unreal moments of my professional life of watching focus groups:
54 year-old white male, voted Kerry ’04, Bush ’00, Dole ’96, hunter, NASCAR fan…hard for Obama said: “I’m gonna hate him the minute I vote for him. He’s gonna be a bad president. But I won’t ever vote for another god-damn Republican. I want the government to take over all of Wall Street and bankers and the car companies and Wal-Mart run this county like we used to when Reagan was President.”
The next was a woman, late 50s, Democrat but strongly pro-life. Loved B. and H. Clinton, loved Bush in 2000. “Well, I don’t know much about this terrorist group Barack used to be in with that Weather guy but I’m sick of paying for health insurance at work and that’s why I’m supporting Barack.”
I felt like I was taking crazy pills. I sat on the other side of the glass and realized…this really is the Apocalypse. The Seventh Seal is broken and its time for eight years of pure, delicious crazy….

The Bradley Effect appears to be gone or reversed:

It may be generational. Expressions of racism are strongly correlated with age, and is much more common among pre-Boomer adults. However, a smaller and smaller fraction of the electorate each year came of age in the segregation era. The Pew study that I linked to above reports that 92 percent of Americans are now comfortable voting for an African-American for President. In 1982, when Bradley’s race occurred, that number was more like 75 percent. (Although the Bradley Effect isn’t about racism per se — it is about people misleading pollsters because of social desirability bias — racism is nevertheless one of its prerequisites).

The lunatic fringe will vote for McCain, surely. Those for whom anti-choice position is the litmus test will vote for Palin. But many lifelong conservatives will vote for Obama this time around. And if the things start getting better, they will vote for him again in four years. And they may become Democrats, as will surely their kids. The GOP brand will be so damaged, it will take years to recover, if at all. Just like Serbian Radicals.

Reporter assaulted at a Palin rally

Joe Killian is a reporter for Greensboro News&Record. Friday, he went to a Sarah Palin rally at Elon University and filed a report from there for his newspaper.
But he also got assaulted – the first reporter so far – and then blogged about the incident.
Pam has more details.
Joe lived through the ordeal and joined us all at ConvergeSouth for a while.
More local discussions here, here, here and here.

I Like Pie

Quick ConvergeSouth08 recap

I am back from the 4th ConvergeSouth, the do-not-miss Greensboro conference about the Web, blogging, journalism and community (and the model/inspiration for our own science blogging conferences, including the third one) . Big kudos to Sue Polinsky, Ed Cone and the cast of thousands for putting together the meeting again, making it better and better every year. And of course, thanks to Dave Hoggard for hosting the legendary BBQ with (even more legendary) banana pudding.
I rode to Greensboro with Kirk Ross and came back home with Anton Zuiker, having interesting conversations with each.
Dave Slusher and I found a common interest beside blogging – animal domestication!
Pam Spaulding was on two panels, and did a great job liveblogging the conference. Melody Watson also has interesting thoughts on it all.
At the BBQ, Anton and I talked with Anil Dash (also here) whose SixApart runs MoveableType which is the platform on which scienceblogs.com is hosted. Of course, scienceblogs.com is a complex site, with much more than just a bunch of blogs, and Anil gave kudos to Tim, the tech guru of Seed, for his amazing ability to build, fix and run our platform. We also talked about the ability of the blogosphere to effect change (e.g., in Washington). Something Anil said in a panel discussion lit a lightbulb in my head. He said that until about two years ago or so, it was very unusual for a Congressman or a Senator to receive many phone calls from the constituents. But with blogs (either big blogs like DailyKos or lots of smaller blogs acting in unison), this changed. Suddenly, the blogs can turn the ‘on switch’ and send thousands of people to ring the phone in the offices on The Hill – something for which the offices are not prepared. Instead of a few letters, or some e-mails, suddenly, for a day or two, the phone is ringing off the hook and prevents all other business from getting done over the phone. This is an element of surprise to them and thus they tend to sit up and listen! This may explain why the blogosphere-wide action to defeat PRISM was so successful (and it was so thoroughly defeated that the ridicule even outside of science blogs was widespread). I heard that SPARC got a number of call from various senatorial offices, pretty much saying “call off the dogs, we got it, we understand the issue now and will vote Yes, and please, we need to use the phones again!” As a result, despite being voted on twice (Bush vetoed the bill the first time around), the NIH mandate language remained unaltered and the bill became the law.
After the initial talk by Chris Rabb and the morning panel, I first went to a session on Social Networking for Bloggers led by Kelby Carr. That was quite an interesting discussion about do’s and dont’s of social networking behavior, etiquette, dividing personal from professional, etc. It fed nicely to what someone at the closing panel said (and I’ve been saying for a long time) – that in the age of the Web, the criteria for ‘proper behavior’ for getting a job or running for office will change, as the Facebook generation takes over, knowing that everyone has drunk pictures on Facebook and that it is OK, so let’s look at what really matters about the person, not such superficalities that insult old puritanical norms stemming from the times when such behavior, while ubiquitous, could be safely hidden from the public. Soon enough, we can stop pretending to be mortally insulted that someone, gasp, had a beer at a college party or did/said something silly or stupid at some time in the past.
My own session was small – but that was good. Those who came were interested in the science side of things, so I could quickly dispose of the more general stuff about people being active on Facebook, twitter, FriendFeed or blogs, and focus more on commenting behavior (and specifically psychological barriers to commenting) on science-related content online, be it science posts on blogs or peer-reviewed papers. I got a lot of useful feedback on this which may help me both here on the blog and at work on PLoS.
Next, I went to hear Kirk Ross on “Slow News”. As you already know, I am a big fan of Carrboro Citizen and the concept that guides its publishing model. While the panic – “OMG! The newspapers are dying!” – may well apply to large metro, state and national papers, the small, hyperlocal newspapers are doing just fine and will probably continue to do so. I am constantly online, constantly scouting for news – about science, science publishing, U.S. electoral politics, Serbia, etc. – which is a ‘pull’ model. I am interested in particular topics and actively search for them at places I trust. Thus, I may be missing something interesting which is outside of the realm of topics I actively look for. This includes news about the happenings in my own town and neighborhood (if I spent less time online and more walking the streets, I may get such news the old, from-the-horses-mouth way). For this, I need to occasionally succumb to the ‘push’ model, which I do every Thursday when I go to La Vita Dolce, get a mocha (‘Bora’s style, please’), sit back and enjoy the new edition of Carrboro Citizen. I learn which cool plant is in bloom right now, what is the controversial issue at the Town Hall this week, what is going on at my kids’ school, and what the candidates for local elections are saying. And it is all written with no rush (digest the news first, don’t rush to print) and no heed for the he-said-she-said false-equivalence mode of journalism that has been poisoning the A.S. media for decades. See, for instance, this editorial from this week’s edition (this is just the ending paragraph – read the entire thing – well worth your time):
For The Record:

This has not been lost on many. In fact, in a recent local candidate forum, a member of the GOP — yes, there are a few here in Orange County — acknowledged that it appears there are programs or missions where government actually does a better job than the private sector. Such acknowledgements are rare, but increasing. It will take years, though, for the poison injected into our political discourse to be metabolized. People will still rail about big government and taxes. But there’s a difference between pushing back in order to insist on efficiency, transparency and fairness and simply attracting the system for ideological or political gain.
In a recent New York Times column, Thomas Friedman recalled Oliver Wendell Holmes remark that “I like paying taxes. With them I am buying civilization.”
We’re a far cry from that sentiment but perhaps a little closer to understanding the role of government and how dangerous it is to entrust the whole of civilization solely to those out to profit from it.

Now, if you are a partisan Democrat you will love this piece, if you are a partisan Republican, you will hate it. But if you are unbiased in any way, you will recognize that the piece has no ideological axe to grind – it is a mix of stuff you should have learned in high school Civics and what you have learned in college freshman Economics 101, plus recent statements from the two presidential campaigns. It provides you a baseline expert consensus on what the Reality is, so you can compare the party platforms, proposals and rhetoric to the Reality and decide for yourself which party tends to better consult with Reality when designing their campaign promises, i.e., this is how journalism should be committed.
The final panel compared the roles of the Web and technology between the 2004 and 2008 elections. The two-way communication between campaign and volunteers in real time, texting, ads on games, real-time updates of the voter databases – none of those were possible in 2004, but are ably used by the Obama campaign this year (McCain campaign is relying mainly on old-style techniques: nasty robocalls, racist flyers, and negative TV and radio ads). But the main difference between the two years is video – as soon as someone does or says something on TV or a campaign event, it immediately shows up on YouTube for everyone to see. The video of the ‘macaca’ moment that millions saw in 2006 did not so much show Sen. Allen as a racist as much as a jerk – someone you do not want to vote for. The videos this year are really making the opinions change – when you see the behavior of supporters at McCain/Palin rallies, when you watch the racist, dishonest and nasty ads they are putting out, when you watch the conventions and debates (and important moments from them), when you watch Obama’s rallies, ads and speeches in contrast, when you watch GOP operatives openly lying on TV, and you watch all of that over and over again – it is easy to make up your mind.
Finally, it was so much fun meeting and chatting with Ginny Skalski and Wayne Sutton (of 30Threads), Matt Gross, Lenore Ramm, Heather Solos (you can find her here, here and here), Dan Conover and Janet Edens, Jim Buie, Robert Scoble, Ruby Sinreich, Nancy Shepherd, Lauren Polinsky, Dennis Meredith, Donna Fryer, Ilina Ewen, Vera Hannaford, Jay Ovittore, Andrea Novicki and many others.
You can see more pictures from ConvergeSouth here and more discussions here. See you all next year – same time, same place.

ACORN

Close Enough To Honest:

CNN lies about ACORN 54 times which is certainly better than, say, a billion.

Nuts About ACORN: Believing in vote fraud may be dangerous to a democracy’s health.:

As far as “gotcha” stunts go, the right-wing feeding frenzy over the vile vote-fraud treachery of ACORN has yet to yield much fruit. Investigations are indeed under way. But then, they are always under way this time of the year–and as the indefatigable Brad Friedman points out, so what? Evidence of voter-registration wrongdoing is no more a sign of widespread, Obama-sanctioned vote fraud than evidence of minorities being misled and intimidated on Election Day is a sign of official, McCain-sanctioned vote suppression. What’s the real point of turning voter-registration shenanigans into “one of the greatest frauds in voter history”? The object here is not criminal indictments. It’s to undermine voter confidence in the elections system as a whole. John McCain wants to build a better bogeyman, and he needs your help to do it.

McCain Acorn Fears Overblown:

“There’s no evidence that any of these invalid registrations lead to any invalid votes,” said David Becker, project director of the “Make Voting Work” initiative for the Pew Charitable Trusts.
Becker should know: he was a lawyer for the Bush administration until 2005, in the Justice Department’s voting rights section, which was part of the administration’s aggressive anti-vote-fraud effort.
“The Justice Department really made prosecution of voter fraud of this sort a big priority in the first half of this decade, and they really didn’t come up with anything,” he said.
“We’re chasing these ghosts of voter fraud, like chickens without a head,” said Lorraine Minnite, a political science professor at Barnard College in New York who has researched voter fraud and fraud claims for most of the past decade. “I think it’s completely overblown, I think it’s meant to be a distraction.”
“This stuff does not threaten the outcome of the election,” said Minnite. “How many illegal ballots have been cast by people who are fraudulently registered to vote? By my count, it’s zero. I just don’t know of any, I’ve been looking for years for this stuff.”

Why McCain could easily win this:

I propose that the ACORN frenzy has a more important purpose besides just trying to make Obama look dirty. It’s there as a ethical fetish for the huge numbers of Republicans that will be called on to fight citizens trying to exercise their legal right to vote. Every person intimidated, every name fraudulently purged from the rolls—you need to be able to sleep at night after a long day of dismantling our democracy. If you can tell yourself, “They do it, too,” then you feel better. If you can convince yourself that some black or Hispanic voters are voting twice (not happening, by the way), they you can feel justified forcing some not to vote at all.

Ex DOJ Voting Rights Chief: ‘It’s Going to Take a Long Time to Cleanse’ Department:

A former top Department of Justice voting rights official — who once worked with John McCain in defense of the senator’s campaign-finance reform bill — has added his name to the growing chorus that is denouncing the department’s investigation of ACORN as a shameful and inappropriate politicization of Justice along the lines of the US attorney firings.

Supreme Court Hands GOP Loss in Ohio Voting Rights Case:

Now, I’ll be curious to see where the GOP goes from here. There’s not enough time to pursue this case on the merits before the election. So as a practical matter it may kill the case in Ohio entirely. But perhaps more importantly, it puts a stop to the GOP or any other private party gumming up the works over the next 18 days by filing similar cases in courts across the country.

Kathy Sierra, Amanda Marcotte and Danish Jews as ACORN Organizers:

Now, the bullies that resort to physical threats have a new target. It is the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN). Two ACORN offices have been broken into and vandalized. They have received threatening phone calls and emails, including one that wrote that a female organizer “is going to have her life ended”. The phone calls have included some of the worst racial epitaphs and talked about Sen. Obama being lynched. All of this has been turned over to the appropriate authorities.

‘Tire swinging’ – the way to look at campaign reporting

TPM explains the origin of the term, what it evolved to mean, and who in the U.S. punditocracy is on the tire, who is off for good and who’s off but yearns to get back on:

Meghan McCain: “It was a really fun experience…. Everybody really relaxed. It was fun to kind of see big journalistic figures, like Holly Baily swinging on the tire swing and Jon Martin helping my dad grill ribs.”

Precinct Walking with a Congressman

Scoble goes for a walk through Rep.Brad MIller’s precinct, canvassing the neighborhood and talking about politics:

My picks from ScienceDaily

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New and Exciting in PLoS this week

So, let’s see what’s new in PLoS Genetics, PLoS Computational Biology, PLoS Pathogens, PLoS ONE and PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases this week. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:

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Clock Quotes

The true harvest of my daily life is somewhat as intangible and indescribably as the tints of morning or evening. It is a little star-dust caught, A segment of the rainbow which I have clutched.
– Henry David Thoreau

ConvergeSouth08

Back from ConvergeSouth. Energized but exhausted. Time for bed. Forgot I had a camera with me so I only had one picture taken – this one, with Robert Scoble and myself, trying to make the FriendFeed logo with our fingers:
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More ConvergeSouth microblogging on FriendFeed can be found here.

ScienceOnline09 – blog coverage so far

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A Blog Around The Clock: Get your calendars…
A Blog Around The Clock: Will there be a Third Science Blogging Conference?
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline’09
A Blog Around The Clock: Submit your entries for the third Science Blogging Anthology
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline’09 – Registration is Open!
Confessions of a Science Librarian: ScienceOnline ’09
Laelaps: I’m going, are you?
The Beagle Project Blog: Registration open for ScienceOnline’09 and OpenLaboratory’08
Living the Scientific Life: ScienceOnline’09 Conference in North Carolina
Michael Nielsen: Biweekly links for 09/16/2008
Sea Grant: From Katie Mosher–Science Online 09
Nature Network Bloggers Unite forum: Registration for Science Online 2009 is now open
Fairer Science: It’s coming; it’s coming
Lab Life: Blogger Bonding, Step 2 – continued
49 percent: Random
Biochemicalsoul: Science Blogging Conference in Research Triangle Park, NC!
Catalogue of Organisms: Open Lab 2008
Deep Sea News: Science Online ’09
PODelation: Science Blogs
Lecturer Notes: ScienceOnline’09
Flying Trilobite: ScienceOnline’09
Mindshavings: Science Online ’09
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline’09 – be a sponsor
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline09 – how do you keep up with us?
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – how can you help?
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – The Program
A Blog Around The Clock:100!
A Blog Around The Clock:SciBlings at ScienceOnline’09
A Blog Around The Clock:Nature Network bloggers at ScienceOnline’09
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – the Program
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – Demos
Terra Sigilatta: ScienceOnline’09: a special message to the pseudonymous blogger
Mind the Gap: In which you are encouraged to take note: OpenLab 2008
Using Blogs in Science Education: NSTA and Science Online ’09
Mistersugar: ScienceOnline’09
Panthera studentessa: Open Lab ’08 & Science Online ’09
CIT Blog: Register now for ScienceOnline
Pharma Strategy Blog: Are you going to ScienceOnline09?
Almost Diamonds: ScienceOnline’09
Counter Minds: Science Online 09′
UNC Health Care’s Weblog: Science blogging at its best
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – NIEHS
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – Education sessions
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – Duke University
Panda’s Thumb: OpenLab 2008 and ScienceOnline 2009
The OpenHelix Blog: Science Online meeting is filling fast!
Urban Science Adventures!: Science Online09 – Science Blogging Conference
Biology in Science Fiction: Science Online ’09: Science Fiction on Science Blogs
Digital Serendipities: ScienceOnline ’09 – exploring science on Web
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – individual session pages
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – a more complete list of registered SciBlings
Confessions of a Science Librarian: ScienceOnline ’09: Register while there’s still time!
Women in Science: Science Online ’09
Almost Diamonds: ScienceOnline’09 Update
Science After Sunclipse: ScienceOnline ’09 (Hey, It Rhymes)
Neurotopia 2.0: Morning updates
Highly Allochthonous: Some calls to arms
NOVA Geoblog: Cream, sugar or geoblogosphere?
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – some more individual session pages
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – travel, accommodation, food
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – we are full!
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – more individual session pages
Bjoern Brembs: Moderating the post-IF session at ScienceOnline’09
The Beagle Project Blog: The Atlantic coccoliths blog
Science Careers Blog: Science Bloggers to Convene, In Person
The Core Mechanic: Open Game Table: The 2008 Anthology of Role Playing Game Blogs
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline’09 – Nature Network bloggers
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – even more individual session pages
A Blog Around The Clock:ScienceOnline09 – blogging from strange, crazy places!
Laelaps: What shall we talk about?
The End Of The Pier Show: Bloggerasmic
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Do you trust me?
Interdyscyplinarni humaniści: Science Bloggers to Convene, In Person
Skulls in the Stars: History of science at ScienceOnline ’09!
A Blog Around The Clock: ScienceOnline09 – Hey, You Can’t Say That!
Mistersugar: SCONC report
Flying Trilobite: Face the muses
Denialism blog: Why should I trust you?
DrugMonkey: Abel’s Excellent Pseudonymity Inquiry
Terra Sigillata: The Pseudonymity Laboratory: Up from the Comments
DrugMonkey: Pseudonymous Blogging Panel

The Open Laboratory 2008 – submissions so far

We are busy preparing for The Open Laboratory 2008. The submissions have been trickling in all year, and a little bit more frequently recently, but it is time now to dig through your Archives for your best posts since December 20th 2007 and submit them. Submit one, or two, or several – no problem. Or ask your readers to submit for you.
Then take a look at your favourite bloggers and pick some of their best posts – don’t worry, we can deal with duplicate entries. Do not forget new and up-coming blogs – they may not know about the anthology – and submit their stuff as well.
As we did last year, we encourage you to also send in original poems and cartoons.
Keep in mind that the posts will be printed in a book! A post that relies heavily on links, long quotes, copyrighted pictures, movies, etc., will not translate well into print.
The deadline is December 1st, 2008.
Below are submissions so far. Check them out and get inspired. If you see that one of your posts is at an old URL and you have since moved, re-submit with the new URL (perhaps re-post it if necessary):

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My picks from ScienceDaily

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Clock Quotes

Mark how fleeting and paltry is the estate of man: yesterday in embryo, tomorrow a mummy or ashes. So for the hair’s breadth of time assigned to thee live rationally, and part with life cheerfully, as drops the ripe olive, extolling the season that bore it and the tree that matured it.
– Marcus Aurelius, Meditations

Today’s carnivals

The Giant’s Shoulders #4 is up on Second Order Approximation

Conquering Fear – Overcoming Social (Networking) Anxiety

I am off to ConvergeSouth where there will be a fascinating Program.
Now, my session is entitled “Conquering Fear – Overcoming Social (Networking) Anxiety”. If you walked into a session with this title, what would you expect to hear, want to hear, want to say?

New and Exciting in PLoS ONE

There were 6 new articles published last night and another 14 new articles published today in PLoS ONE. As always, you should rate the articles, post notes and comments and send trackbacks when you blog about the papers. Here are my own picks for the week – you go and look for your own favourites:

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Andrew Sullivan on blogging

Andrew Sullivan, who blogs on the vastly popular Daily Dish (one of the few sane conservatives out there and very informative and entertaining to read) just published a long essay in The Atlantic – Why I Blog? Worth your time and effort to read – just a short excerpt:

From the first few days of using the form, I was hooked. The simple experience of being able to directly broadcast my own words to readers was an exhilarating literary liberation. Unlike the current generation of writers, who have only ever blogged, I knew firsthand what the alternative meant. I’d edited a weekly print magazine, The New Republic, for five years, and written countless columns and essays for a variety of traditional outlets. And in all this, I’d often chafed, as most writers do, at the endless delays, revisions, office politics, editorial fights, and last-minute cuts for space that dead-tree publishing entails. Blogging–even to an audience of a few hundred in the early days–was intoxicatingly free in comparison. Like taking a narcotic.
It was obvious from the start that it was revolutionary. Every writer since the printing press has longed for a means to publish himself and reach–instantly–any reader on Earth. Every professional writer has paid some dues waiting for an editor’s nod, or enduring a publisher’s incompetence, or being ground to literary dust by a legion of fact-checkers and copy editors. If you added up the time a writer once had to spend finding an outlet, impressing editors, sucking up to proprietors, and proofreading edits, you’d find another lifetime buried in the interstices. But with one click of the Publish Now button, all these troubles evaporated.
Alas, as I soon discovered, this sudden freedom from above was immediately replaced by insurrection from below. Within minutes of my posting something, even in the earliest days, readers responded. E-mail seemed to unleash their inner beast. They were more brutal than any editor, more persnickety than any copy editor, and more emotionally unstable than any colleague.
Again, it’s hard to overrate how different this is. Writers can be sensitive, vain souls, requiring gentle nurturing from editors, and oddly susceptible to the blows delivered by reviewers. They survive, for the most part, but the thinness of their skins is legendary. Moreover, before the blogosphere, reporters and columnists were largely shielded from this kind of direct hazing. Yes, letters to the editor would arrive in due course and subscriptions would be canceled. But reporters and columnists tended to operate in a relative sanctuary, answerable mainly to their editors, not readers. For a long time, columns were essentially monologues published to applause, muffled murmurs, silence, or a distant heckle. I’d gotten blowback from pieces before–but in an amorphous, time-delayed, distant way. Now the feedback was instant, personal, and brutal.

Read the whole thing….
Just a note that, after a few months of blogging in relative obscurity, it was a simultaneous link by Cory Doctorow and Andrew Sullivan that exposed my science blogging to a broader audience, which soon led to invitation to Scienceblogs.com, which led to a job with PLoS…so I owe the guy at least a link every now and then…. 😉

Today’s carnivals

I and the Bird #86 is up on The Drinking Bird

My picks from ScienceDaily

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Short, sweet and to the point

The first clips in the AVoteForScience YouTube Challenge are being uploaded. Here is my friend and SciBling Jennifer Jacquet:

ScienceOnline09 – Hey, You Can’t Say That!

scienceonline09.jpg
The registration is closed and the Program is pretty much finalized. Here is another session to consider: Hey, You Can’t Say That!
This session is moderated by Greg Laden, Rick MacPherson, Karen James, Craig McClain, Mark Powell and PZ Myers:

It’s tempting to think that what we contribute in our blogs is written with impunity. But what happens when readers react so negatively to your words that it can leverage pressure on you from your boss, peers, colleagues, or administration? What responsibility, if any, do bloggers owe to their “day job” in avoiding controversy (and vice versa)? Is it enough to say in your profile that “this blog is my personal space and does not reflect the views of my employer”? Is capitulating to pressure a failure or just savvy blogging? What are the rules, if any, to self-censorship? Should an employer have a policy or set of guidelines regarding staff’s personal & professional blogging (and other public and semi-public activities like Facebook)? And when does pseudonymous blogging become a necessity? Bring your own perspectives and experiences to a discussion that explores the ups and downs of science bloggers who navigate the stormy waters between free expression and reader/employer backlash.

Clock Quotes

Whatever you do, do it with all your might. Work at it, early and late, in season and out of season, not leaving a stone unturned, and never deferring for a single hour that which can be done just as well as now.
– Phineas Taylor Barnum, 1810 – 1891

Today’s carnivals

Tangled Bank #116 is up on Pro-science
Carnival of Education! The Debate Edition is up on Eduwonkette

OADay winner: My Father the Anthropologist; or, What I Offer Open Access and Why

Here is the other one of the two winning posts in the Open Access Day blogging competition: My Father the Anthropologist; or, What I Offer Open Access and Why by Dorothea Salo:
In 1980 or thereabouts–I was eight or nine–my father the anthropologist started yet another rant about serials cancellations at his university’s library while he drove the family somewhere in the family car. He thought the problem an artifact of library underfunding, I remember. I don’t recall that he ever did anything about it save rail bitterly on the subject to us, his captive, powerless, and resentful audience.
At the inaugural meeting of the Open eBook Forum in 2000, David Ornstein and Janina Sajka explained what they hoped electronic books would accomplish. Amid the faux-visionary fluff and the crass dollar signs, one hope they expressed made me vibrate: that for the first time, a visually-impaired person would be able to walk into Borders or Barnes & Noble and buy a book off the shelf just like anyone else.
Access to human knowledge and creativity. Access for the wrongly disenfranchised. Access. I loved markup, I loved text, I loved design, I loved standards work–but then and afterward, it was the access argument that kept me engaged with electronic books. My father the anthropologist, his own eyes not what they had been, understood and endorsed that argument at once.
I certainly know how reassuring accurate, authoritative medical information can be. When my father the anthropologist went to the hospital for bypass surgery, I looked for every scrap of reliable information I could find about what he’d have to go through, what his chances were, what would happen afterwards. Information is hope for helpless bystanders.
I know what information gaps mean to the efficacy of medical care, too. I started my quest to treat my repetitive stress injury when my hands and wrists hurt so badly I couldn’t sleep some nights, nor survive a day’s work without severe pain. The open web, obvious misinformation aside, contained little more than nonsensical and insulting condemnations of RSI sufferers as malingerers, as well as blatant advertising of invasive surgery on the websites of orthopedic surgeons.
My primary-care physician insisted on old-fashioned treatment modalities before she would refer me anywhere. I paid for and endured weeks of wrist braces that I knew would not relieve my pain because I had tried them, as well as a tennis-elbow strap that left me in such agony that I refused to put up with it longer than a day. I did achieve a referral at last, and physical therapy turned out to be the right treatment. As I healed, the new search skills I was acquiring in library school, along with the access that being a student entitled me to, helped me discover that the medical literature understood why my doctor’s initial recommendations had been wrong. Why did I waste time, money, and pain over my inability to produce reliable information to assist my medical provider in treating me appropriately?
I can only be glad I wasn’t suffering from anything life-threatening, like artery blockage.
I was slotted into an online course in “Virtual Collection Development,” taught with patient lucidity by Jane Pearlmutter, my first semester in library school. Among the readings was “The Librarians’ Dilemma: Contemplating the Costs of the ‘Big Deal’‘” by the University of Wisconsin’s own Ken Frazier. There it was again, this problem of serials cancellations, framed in terms so transparently sensible that I could only exult.
Later in the semester came a unit on open access. It would be nice to say that lightning struck and I knew that was what I wanted to do with my professional life, but it didn’t and I didn’t. Of course I was intrigued; I knew several for-profit journal publishers from the worm’s-eye view of an erstwhile lowly data-conversion peasant. I wove the complaints I remembered from my father the anthropologist, my own experience in scholarly publishing, and what I learned in class into a rich, detailed mental tapestry, and I felt real hope that open access was an answer I could take back to him that he would understand and appreciate. Discovering that I would shortly join the profession backing open access only confirmed that library school was the right choice for me, even should I not work in the open-access niche myself.
When I landed my first library position just after graduating, I called my father the anthropologist. His first question was “How much will you be paid?” I declined answering. His second question was “What’s your title?”
“Digital Repository Services Librarian,” I said, with pride and no little amusement.
On the other end of the line, a lengthy silence.
My father the anthropologist used to buy lab equipment out of his own pocket, rather than struggle with byzantine university purchasing procedures and skeptical departmental scrutiny. Rightly or wrongly, he was convinced no one would understand or support him and his work, but he refused to knuckle under. He would do what it took, spend what he had to, to further the research he fervently believed in.
I have bought quite a bit out of my own pocket too, rather than charge it to the libraries that have employed me. I have bought color inkjet printers, various sorts of expensive paper for brochures and bookmarks and whatnot, and poster printing. I have bought software that I use for work-related purposes. Once I bought an expensive print run of a color brochure because an opportunity came up to distribute a lot at once so suddenly that I didn’t have time to print and fold them myself as I usually did. I bought a cross-country trip to an important repository conference when I was de facto between jobs. I bought a laptop on which I do repository-related work when the occasion warrants. I have bought buttons with images of Mars on them, because when you’re handed a golden acronym you might as well make the most of it. Like as not the libraries I have worked in would have paid for some or all of this–I never asked.
I have read, written, rewritten, commented, and debugged code in Java, Python, and XSLT. I have tweaked JSPs, murdered unnecessary HTML tables, and rewritten CSS designs from the ground up, swearing sulfurously at various versions of Internet Explorer. I have edited metadata in XML by hand. I have translated Endnote records into Dublin Core. I have screenscraped ugly HTML and cudgeled it into legible metadata. I have screenscraped yet more ugly HTML for transformation into preservation-worthy markup. I have built convoluted SQL queries slowly and carefully from the inside out, run them on production databases with fear and trepidation, and once or twice cleaned up after them when I’ve gotten them wrong. I have typed cargo-cult incantations at command lines to keep server software running and upgraded, and raked Google for answers when some incantations didn’t work as promised.
I have stared at lengthy CVs with a sigh, and then waded resolutely in to clear rights on as many of the publications as I could. I have searched SHERPA/RoMEO and Bowker’s Books in Print. I have hunted down agreements from publisher websites. I have asked faculty for their copyright-transfer-agreement files, and tried not to let my smile grow too pained when they told me they don’t keep such things. I have explained the difference between preprints, postprints, and publisher PDFs to politely incredulous auditors. I have read scads of legalese, and interpreted it as best I could. I have read and pondered the words of librarians and lawyers who understand the legal fine points much better than I. I have made some risky calls, likely some wrong ones. I haven’t been called on the carpet for them… yet.
I have held one-on-one meetings and demo sessions with faculty and librarians. I have designed and produced brochures, flyers, slideshows, posters, web pages, wiki pages, and one mini-movie. I have presented at innumerable campus expos, showcases, lectures, symposia, conferences, and workshops. I have called and written my elected representatives. I have blogged. I have written articles and self-archived them, sometimes after polite and fruitful discussions with publishers. I have run any number of failed efforts toward building a community of practice among repository managers, each new attempt the triumph of hope over experience. I have cold-called librarians, faculty, department chairs, deans, and administrators. I have been to more meetings than ought to fit in the three years I’ve been doing this.
You needn’t be obsessed like my father the anthropologist and me. Believe me, that’s the last thing I’d recommend to anyone. If you cannot find even one thing you can do in the above list, though, I wonder about you.
I once explained to a pleasant elderly faculty member that the repository didn’t easily allow changes. “It’s like a roach motel,” I said. “Files go in, but they don’t go out. Once they’re there, they’re stuck.” Suppressed chuckles from librarians in nearby cubicles greeted that statement, and I returned from ushering the faculty member out to find that my colleagues had good-humoredly dubbed me the Innkeeper at the Roach Motel.
I loved the sobriquet, despite the unhappy truth of its depiction of institutional repositories. I have never liked telling faculty members that my services couldn’t do what they needed, and I’ve had to tell them that often and often. Worst of all, I couldn’t envision my services as anything my father the anthropologist would find useful, compelling, or even comprehensible; the promise of green open access was fading fast in the unforgiving floodlights of faculty diffidence. I looked around the open-access community for understanding and a path forward, but I found little to help or reassure me.
My father the anthropologist and I are alike in one way at least: we don’t suffer fruitless systems in silence. In one way at least, we are different: I cannot content myself with complaining to the powerless and uninvolved.
I don’t think there’s a community I operate in that my gadfly ways haven’t irked or even alienated. My library school. My librarian colleagues. DSpace developers. Green open access. Library bloggers. The DSpace Foundation. Library coders. Repository managers. The open-access community in general. While I accept all this as the price gadflies pay for being pests, it is no source of pride, nor is it pleasant. I have feared for my job, and like as not I deserve to. I have feared that the career I find myself in will not exist in five years’ time, and I have wondered uneasily whether my own behavior has hastened rather than forestalled that eventuality. I have been cautioned, questioned, belittled, berated, cut down to size in public, stepped cautiously away from, set up as homo stramineus, misquoted, deliberately or carelessly ignored–and much of it I have richly earned.
I have also been heeded. I have also made change. Not much, perhaps; certainly not all the change I wanted to make, wanted to show my father the anthropologist, wanted to offer the world. Even so, change is my gift to them and to you: my gift I offer in my much-abused hands on this Open Access Day.

OADay winner: A poem for Open Access Day

Here is one of the two winning posts in the Open Access Day blogging competition. A poem by Greg Laden:
A poem for Open Access Day
Open Access Day

They said:

“if you publish
in an open forum
your paper’d be rubbish
and clearly hokum”

“pub’s commercial know
how to review with the peerage,
how to make data flow
and hurdles clearage”

“limited space on the page
with every new edition
so few make the passage,
it’s editorial selection!”

“we have always done
and it’s never been changed
the readers we dunn
and the paper’s in chains”

“what is ought to be
why change it now
it is so plain to see
must limit the flow”

But in, PLoS chimed,
and challenged that dragon
everyone joined
and the boycott was on

“The authors we’ll dunn
when funding provides
we’ll have much more fun
when all readers can chide”

“the new Open Access
to everyone’s work
can be the new praxis
and everyone’s perk”

“with the previous method
the work was all gratis
publishers prod
to maintain their status”

“the cash it did flow
to the publishers coffers
we were covered with snow
from ingenuous offers”

“It’s all in the model
be it business or open
pub’s whine and they yodel
but their way is broken”

“Open Access is true
for me and for you
the pub’s they be blue
but it’s now, and it’s new”

“they can keep their closed access
and journals galore
but we’ve a new process
that we’ll use ever more. “

*
Open access matters to me because it is one of the pillars of the new world of the 21st century. It is the democratization of information. I’ve been aware of Open Access since before it existed, as I’ve always thought this is how it should be done. Research should be provided in an Open Access format (with no or only very minimal delays) because we expect society to support, through government, private funding, and free-riding on corporate profits, this research. It is not our research. To support Open Access, I blog about it, and my next paper will be submitted to an Open Access journal.
Gotta go …. need to work on paper…

And the Winner is…..!

The Open Access Day blogging competition is now over. We received over 40 excellent entries that took quite a nice chunk of last night to read – they are all good so go and read them all.
In the end, we decided that one prize is not enough and are awarding the First Place to two bloggers:
Dorothea Salo, for her post: My Father the Anthropologist; or, What I Offer Open Access and Why (already cross-posted on the PloS Blog and soon will be posted here and a couple of other places). Dorothea is the Digital Repository Librarian at the University of Wisconsin, where she serves the state university system’s consortial institutional repository, MINDS@UW.
Greg Laden for A poem for Open Access Day. Also, the cross-posts will happen very soon (the first one, on the PLoS Blog is here). Greg is a SciBling, an archaeologist and anthropologist, and a part time independent scholar and part time adviser with the Program for Individualized Learning, University of Minnesota.
Congratulations to the winners, and congratulations to all the contestants for a great day of synchroblogging!

My picks from ScienceDaily

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Open Access Day – the videos 4

Voices of Open Access from Open Access Videos on Vimeo.