linkage

Aug. 2nd, 2005 02:36 pm
sabine: (Charles Darwin)
[livejournal.com profile] czar_victaar, you should like these new findings: Ecstasy as a potential therapeutic for Parkinson's disease. My favorite part of the article is near the end and is much too amusing, "The new results are ironic, given that three years ago a study suggested that ecstasy might cause Parkinson's-like symptoms in monkeys. But the researchers who published that study retracted it after they realized they had mixed up ecstacy with methamphetamine, commonly known as speed."
We then move from nice, uplifting science to a series of articles that make me despair for the future of this country and the species in general.

Arsenic-laden rice just makes my mouth water. Really. Stop looking at me like that.

Dubya once again shows his true colors in this charming little piece about the mistaken mindset that Intelligent Design has anything to do with science. This makes me very upset, as usual. I'm impressed by the rhetoric tricks that they utilize to try to convince their audience that they're not proselytizing for "religion", just trying to get "a different viewpoint" into the mix. Sure. Fine. Go ahead and bring ID into the schools so that I can talk about the Flying Spaghetti Monster with equal enthusiasm and moral correctness.

[livejournal.com profile] jrug and I had the same reaction to this article. We believe it has the proper mix of incredulity and mockery. It's very simple - all you have to do is start reciting from Real Genius. The Sun God Dream snippet is applicable, as is the "scientific" explanation of what you could do with a really big laser.

Well, yes, you could do that too, but PETA's gonna be a bit upset with you.

My favorite part of the article is near the end. I envision the author throwing his hands up in the air and shouting, "For the love of Darwin, I couldn't make this up if they paid me DOUBLE!! Why, me, WHY?!" The line in question begins, "Sophisticated death-star lasers are vulnerable to low-tech counterresponses, such as $6 smoke grenades..."

Finally, we have a winner for Overreaction of the Year award. This award is only rarely presented, but this lady is going to be in the record books for a long while to come. I'm very glad that it's a felony. I mean, Jesus McBiscuit, that's just not cool. Lady, most of us are taught by our parents that stealing is wrong, the rest have to learn it from our judicial system. What the fuck gives you an exception to this rule? And the biting thing? Yeah, I hope the judge throws the book at you and you forget how to duck.
sabine: (Pi)
I'd like it if y'all would join me in wishing a happy birthday to Gregor Mendel.

Born 22 July 1822; died 6 Jan 1884.
sabine: (Cute)
Yes, I'm a little hooked on Today in Science History. How could you tell?

Famous Birthdays
Alfred Binet
Born 8 July 1857 (died 18 Oct 1911)

Sir Arthur Evans (evil bastard, may he rot in hell)
Born 8 July 1851 (died 1941)

Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin
Born 8 July 1838; died 8 Mar 1917

Famous Events
Ice cream sundae, in 1881

~~~~~

I'm going to skip out of work early and go throw. Mmm...playing in mud...
sabine: (Fuck)
Today is the 22nd anniversary of R. Buckminster Fuller's death and the 34th anniversary of Sir Lawrence Bragg's death. A moment of silence, please.

*moment*

Boss has shown more of an interest in my work over the last week than in the previous six months. Normally, this would not be an occasion for me to go on the warpath. He is still, however, in a mental place that encourages total amnesia for every part of his grad students' projects. Yesterday, he came in to talk about how things were going three times. Each time, I had to start over at the beginning and explain every. single. detail. again. I know that I shouldn't burn bridges when I'm still standing on them, but fer chrissakes, I'm getting sick of this.

I also want to throw the 'puter out the window. I'm not sure why it's so difficult to take a stack of image files and make them into a movie, but it's giving me fits. Quicktime Pro won't load when I'm connected to the network and my shared drive (where the files are stored), the files have mysteriously turned black and white even though I made sure to save them as a color overlap (red+green=yellow), and the tower is making noises like it wants to eat the CD. Again. I'm starting to think that the whole idea of making time-lapse videos was a mistake.

I managed to totally piss off, offend, and emotionally distress a friend last night. I know I'm not the most socially adept person on the planet, and I get less able to effectively deal with people when my mental reserves are running on fumes. It didn't really help matters any that she's very extroverted, loud, and loves being the center of attention. I figure I'll apologize as soon as I feel I can do so, mean it, and extricate myself from the ensuing conversation without causing a repeat performance. I knew it was a lost cause last night when she flounced out of the room and my only thought was, "'bout time. *sigh of relief*" I know I need to remember how to tell people that, no, really, I require some alone time if you want to see me at all.

I read about Justice O'Connor's retirement from the Supreme Court this morning. This fills me with no small amount of unspecific dread. I didn't want Dubya to be able to install any of his cronies in the committee that broadly interprets the legality of laws. I can't see anything good coming from this, so I'm restarting my quest to look for a villa on Mars.

Today is the 147th birthday of the publishing of the Darwin-Wallace theory of evolution. Yay! I'd like to take the next few moments to do the Happy Chair Dance of Society-Altering Science.

*happy dance*

I managed to finally finish reading Cicero: The Life and Times of Rome's Greatest Politician Wednesday night before the concert. I liked the book, because it's Roman history; I'm not sure that I agree with the author's claim of Cicero's importance and power. It was a very different view of the man than I'd ever been taught. Of course, I wouldn't be on Nerdtown's city council if the following exchange hadn't been so easy...

[livejournal.com profile] jrug: So, Bush could be prosecuted and impeached because of *these reasons*.
[livejournal.com profile] exlibris11235: But, that's leaving out that *other facts*
Me: But, we wouldn't be able to prosecute Bush for another couple of years, since he'll still have immunity as a proconsul. What province would he be getting, anyway?
[livejournal.com profile] jrug: *blinks*
[livejournal.com profile] exlibris11235: Syria
Me: Yes, that makes sense.

Yes, typing for the last while has made me feel better. I'm going to be leaving work in 15 minutes to drive to Chicago to spend the holiday with [livejournal.com profile] downwood and visit with [livejournal.com profile] bexdragon, too. I also am about halfway though Guards! Guards!. I read the following section on the bus this morning and just had to share it. *grin*
"A book has been taken. A book has been taken? You summoned the Watch," Carrot drew himself up proudly, "because someone's taken a book? You think that's worse than murder?"
The Librarian gave him the kind of look other people would reserve for people who said things like "What's so bad about genocide?"
sabine: (Two Lumps Rar)
Yesterday I told Boss that I'm not going to register for school again in the fall semester. I expressed my desire to leave grad school and that I think a Real Job is what's best for me right now. He didn't snap at me with the "That's fine, if you have no problem working fast food for the rest of your life" speech that he gave other grad students, so I didn't have to use the "If your goal is to not have grad students, you're doing an excellent job" retort that [livejournal.com profile] downwood suggested I prepare.

I can add three new states to my List of Places I've Been, even though two of those were only driven through. I got to spend four glorious days in Pittsburgh for the wedding of [livejournal.com profile] czar_victaar and She of No LJ. [livejournal.com profile] bexdragon warned me in advance that I'd need to bring extra tissues to the ceremony. She was right. It was absolutely beautiful and I'm so glad that I was able to be there. Outside of the wedding preparations, I was very happy to get to spend time with the Rev. Bex and [livejournal.com profile] galieth. Much booze, dancing, and playing of morbid card games was had.

If I can figure out how to do it, I might end up posting some of the data I've been gathering in lab to this space. It's pretty interesting time-lapse microscopy. It almost makes me wish that I were staying to see this thing through to the end. Almost. Yes, I'm still scared out of my mind. Yes, I still think it's the right decision.

Science is still spiffy, though. [livejournal.com profile] jrug pointed out this article to me today. I would love to be able to work on this system. If they can figure out the mechanism by which the viruses target cancerous cells, they're sitting on a fortune and a couple of Nobels. I'd be worried about the possibility of contamination, the effects of the entire body on the activity, and non-specific killing, but those are things that will get figured out with more research.

If you have a subscription to Science Online, you may want to check out this article. I've put the full text and picture behind a cut for those without the ready cash or university connection. They think they've found photosynthetic bacteria at the bottom of the ocean that use bioluminescence, carbon dioxide, and sulfur to stay alive. This flies in the face of much that scientists had considered "fact". I think that it's insanely cool.
Deep-Sea Bacterium Breaks All the Rules )

!!!

Oct. 27th, 2004 11:30 am
sabine: (cute)
Hypoallergenic kittens

Do I really have to say anything else?
sabine: (Stitch)
Duck-billed platypus boasts ten sex chromosomes
Not content with one pair of sex chromosomes, the platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) has five. This is the largest number found in mammals so far, and also hints that the sex determination systems of birds and mammals may be linked.
sabine: (please)
Malaria vaccine shows promise. Now, granted, it's only a 30-60% better chance, but that's so much better than they've been able to do in the past that it's very spiffy.

A potential topical treatment to prevent HIV infection. Do I really need to describe why I think this is cool?

Giant virus qualifies as 'living organism' It can make its own proteins and repair its DNA without the help of a cell. This is freaky and contradicts just about everything previously assumed by virologists. I love science!

Paralysed man sends email by thought. I'm impressed - they got it to work. Now, they just have to get the cost of the procedure down into a manageable range and we'll be living like the Jetsons.
sabine: (coffee)
WTF?

I'm pretty sure this isn't real, but I can't exactly prove it.

If it's real, it's pretty cool.

x-posted to [livejournal.com profile] wtf_inc
sabine: (cute)
Square bacteria!! They figured out how to culture a species of bacteria that grow in a square shape.

The pictures are cool; their reasoning is elegant; their techniques are kinda spiffy; I love biology!

I really hope that I used those semicolons correctly. Virginia Woolfe I am not.
sabine: (dancing gir)
"The Ig Nobel awards are arguably the highlight of the scientific calendar. The prizes, which are the wayward son of the more righteous Nobels, are supposed to reward research that makes people laugh, then think. They are a welcome antidote to the everyday seriousness and stuffiness of life in the lab, providing a run down of mildly amusing, and sometimes frankly ridiculous, science."

From this article on Nature.com
sabine: (Stitch)
Boss told me yesterday to come up with a couple of protocols. One I pretty much knew how I could do it. The second's taken me reading several papers, but I've got the general idea, though I'm not sure how some of the individual steps will work. The third has me stumped. Before I dive back into PubMed to try to figure this out, I'd like to open this question up to y'all.

How does one go about wrapping inside-out or rightside-out vesicles derived from mammalian cells around purified nuclei (either Xenopus or purified from the same cell line)?

I don't even care if an answer makes scientific sense. I'm stuck and an off-the-wall comment may be just what I need to snap me out of the mental rut this damn thing's put me in. *frustrated smile*
sabine: (cute)
Replies To An Invitation To A Scientists' Ball
(Bonus points if you get all the references. [livejournal.com profile] jrug, you're disqualified, as I know that you already looked up the ones with whom you were unfamiliar.)

  • Pierre and Marie Curie were radiating enthusiasm.
  • Einstein thought it would be relatively easy to attend.
  • Volta was electrified and Archimedes was buoyant at the thought.
  • Ampere was worried he wasn't up on current research.
  • Ohm resisted the idea at first.
  • Boyle said he was under too much pressure.
  • Edison thought it would be an illuminating experience.
  • Watt reckoned it would be a good way to let off steam.
  • Stephenson thought the whole idea was loco.
  • Wilbur Wright accepted, provided he and Orville could get a flight.
  • Dr Jekyll declined -- he hadn't been feeling himself lately.
  • Morse's reply: "I'll be there on the dot. Can't stop now must dash."
  • Heisenberg was uncertain if he could make it.
  • Hertz said he planned the future to attend with greater frequency.
  • Henry begged off due to a low capacity for alcohol.
  • Audubon said he'd have to wing it.
  • Hawking said he'd try to string enough time together to make a space in his schedule.
  • Darwin said he'd have to see what evolved.
  • Schrodinger had to take his cat to the vet, or did he?
  • Mendel was invited because he was a man of breeding.
  • Descartes said he'd think about it.
  • Newton was moved to attend.
  • Pavlov was drooling at the thought.
  • Gauss was asked to attend because of his magnetic personality.

grr

Sep. 7th, 2004 03:31 pm
sabine: (crazy)
There's nothing like someone being rational to take all of the fun out of wanting to cause mayhem, destruction, and chaos. Drat. I keep having to remind myself that it's okay to feel angry and irritated and that I'm not required to be nice to everyone all the time. It's sort of disturbing when I get in these extremely violent moods. I don't so much like myself when I start figuring out how to precisely take a person apart so far that they may never put themselves back together. It is interesting, however, how I choose the targets of my vengeful rage - those who catch the full blast of my vindictive fury. I was told this afternoon that I was not blaming the person truly at fault. I don't believe him; I think I'm assigning proper accountability. *phbbt*

The weekend was wonderful. I got to spend much time with [livejournal.com profile] downwood, yay! We trekked over to MN over the weekend to see [livejournal.com profile] bexdragon and [livejournal.com profile] galieth. The Ren Faire was fun, but Mother Nature expressed her displeasure at my attire by causing it to rain profusely. Drat. I so didn't want to come to work today. That's okay, I'll survive, and I may even get some useful data out of it. *grin*

While discussing our weekend events with my Cool Coworker, he asked if I'd seen The Passion yet. I responded that I have no desire to sit through a 2-hour snuff film. He commented, "You know that sound that a cow pie makes when you step in it? That sound shouldn't be involved in a movie where there are no cows." I winced, then laughed.

And, on the "this is really spiffy" front, you know you want to read the article that generated the quote, "They're the kind of scientists you would like to be but never quite dared to."

grr

Aug. 31st, 2004 04:19 pm
sabine: (Waffle)
This article is pretty interesting. I'm not enough of a neuroscientist to understand if what they say is true, but it looks like an interesting system. If it works, spiffy. If it doesn't, the ever-suspicious public is going to instigate an uproar condemning the research as useless and cruel to the animals.

I'd like to take a moment here to politely, maturely, and calmly issue a rebuttal against those who feel the need to protest science topics.

Shut. the Fuck. Up.

Until you truly understand, inside and out, the mechanisms and possible outcomes of any given system, keep your mouth shut and read. Educate yourself. Prepare intelligent arguments. Don't give me the, "God didn't mean for us to tamper with His work." Bull. shit. If God didn't want us to learn science, there'd be many more lightning bolts striking people. That, or we wouldn't be smart enough or curious enough to figure it out.

Science is a tool. That's all. Like any tool, the user is the one that gives it purpose and "morality". A hammer can be used to build a house. It can also be used to beat someone to death. Science is the same. We can learn how to cure and how to create disease. Those two go hand in hand. That's why we have this concept called "Ethics".

Grr.



Quotes of the Moment
Nothing else matches the exhilaration of helping to conceive, plan and create something that has no purpose other than to give people pleasure.
-- Richard Rodgers

I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forgo their use.
-- Galileo Galilei
sabine: (Default)
I saw this license plate the other day. If you can tell me why it's funny, I'll give you a cookie.

"AUG UGA"


I'm pretty sure most of you saw the story about the guy who got a new jaw implanted that the doctors grew in his back. This is really spiffy science. Me, being a nerd, saw it on CNN and went straight to the original paper to read the "real story". Here are some selected quotes from the article. The translation from Science Jargon to English is given in italics after each selection.

"Even with his edentulous jaws, he was now able to undertake a small amount of mastication."
He doesn't have teeth, but he can chew.

"The patient was also satisfied with the aesthetic outcome of the procedure."
He likes the way his new jaw looks. Well, wouldn't you? Sheesh...

"Although this method was clearly successful, we cannot conclude whether regeneration of bone tissue was attributable to the bone-marrow cells or BMP7 - it is likely to have been a combination of the two."
We're not exactly sure how this worked, but IT WORKED!! The man has a jaw! We can go back and figure out the mechanism later. The important part is that it worked!! *happy dance*

The paper was extremely cool. The citation is as follows, if you've got access to online journals (meaning, primarily university-type people).
Warnke, PH, Springer, ING, et al. (2004). "Growth and transplantation of a custom vascularised bone graft in a man." Lancet 364: 766-770
sabine: (Grad school)
A brain is necessary when trying to write a profound, yet entertaining, post. I guess you just get the weirdness of the day. *grin* Happy Friday, everyone!!


Believe those who are seeking the truth. Doubt those who find it.
-- Andre Gide


If you clone yourself, then have sex with the clone, is it incest or masturbation? Discuss.


Your fortune for today...
You are never dull. It is part of your charm to tease and play while at work.


I pulled this gem from this article.
...the strontium atoms—choreographed in this experiment with precision laser pulses and ultracold temperatures—were recorded flying in the shape of a cube.
So, does anyone else have the visual of the strontium atoms sailing around like the Borg?


Juxtaposition of the Day
Truth resides in every human heart, and one has to search
for it there, and to be guided by truth as one sees it. But
no one has a right to coerce others to act according to his
own view of truth.
--Mahatma Mohandas K. Gandhi

contrasted with

Out of chaos shall come the New World Order.
--George Herbert Walker Bush
sabine: (Carpet ship)
Maybe I should've joined a microscopy lab. I swear, the pretty pictures are my favorite part of the job. Getting to write and edit is really secondary at this point. Hm, maybe I should shift my dream job from being an editor at Nature to being an editor at a microscopy journal. That'd be fun...

blue-green 1

Cut for loading ease )

Spiffy, no?

Profile

sabine: (Default)
sabine

August 2021

S M T W T F S
1 234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031    

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags