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About this site
- "Freelancing science" is a blog about biology in silico, data visualization and open science. Written by Paweł Szczęsny.
- Contact: pawel at FreelancingScience dot com
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Original content of this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License, unless stated otherwise.
Other sites and projects
- New home site - Circle of complexity
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- Sistema Commons - textbook for music instructors
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Most popular posts
- Images of molecules
- CLANS - java tool for cluster analysis of sequences
- Photography is not a hobby. Updated CV and feedback request.
- About
- Protein cartoons with Pymol
- Tracking changes in a multiple sequence alignment
- PhD thesis in LaTeX
- Skyrails and STRING
- Freelancing science - today and tomorrow
- Joining ONS club - classification and prediction of bacteriocins
Twitter Updates
- @neilfws The future is already here — it's just not very evenly distributed. ;) 4 days ago
- Are you sure DOC file is the best way to distribute SOURCE CODE? people.uleth.ca/~selibl/Spyder… 4 days ago
- Nuclear noncoding RNA surveillance: is the end in sight? twurl.nl/a01cb5 #greader 6 days ago
- @mndoci Experiment did work and the area is probably a goldmine. I've never been so excited about research as I am now. :D 3 weeks ago
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Shared items- Quantification of mRNA and protein and integration with protein turnover in a bacterium
- 07/20/11 PHD comic: 'Intellectual Freedom'
- [News & Analysis] Psychology: Searching for the Google Effect on People's Memory
- Epigenome-wide association studies for common human diseases
- How to waste public money in one easy step…
- Genome sequence and analysis of the tuber crop potato
- Differential Producibility Analysis (DPA) of Transcriptomic Data with Metabolic Networks: Deconstructing the Metabolic Response of M. tuberculosis.
- Learning: Not Just the Facts, Ma'am, but the Counterfactuals as Well.
- The neural basis of following advice.
- How stands the Tree of Life a century and a half after The Origin?
GR starred items (not necessarily scientific)- The new geography of scientific collaborations
- Nuclear noncoding RNA surveillance: is the end in sight?
- PLoS ONE: TumorHoPe: A Database of Tumor Homing Peptides
- Publishing can be the engine of the engagement economy
- Individual genomics of yeast
- A Polycomb-based switch underlying quantitative epigenetic memory
- Structural basis for alginate secretion across the bacterial outer membrane.
- A Model of Proto-Anti-Codon RNA Enzymes Requiring L: -Amino Acid Homochirality.
- How accurate is the new Ion Torrent genome, really?
- Day Old News is Fresh Enough
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Blogging overtaken by life streaming
I don’t post new things as often as I used to couple of months ago, but it’s not all my fault. FriendFeed and Google Reader (especially the newest feature of adding notes to shared things) create so much better space for rapid thoughts exchange than a blog, that I comment, link and share most of the things over there, and that includes even making scientific collaborations. This blog is going to loose a little of its dynamics, but already after few weeks I see advantages (like saving time) of moving micro-posts to World Wide Talk Show, as Robert Scoble calls FF.
Amount of interesting conversations at FF and Twitter combined is so huge that I don’t do random web browsing anymore (and I’m not the only one who says that). And I don’t even subscribe to thousands of people – it’s less than a hundred in total on both services. This list includes scientists (here’s probably already outdated list at Nature’s blog Nascent of scientist at FF), technologists and other interesting chaps.
So join us at Twitter or FriendFeed – my login at both services is “freesci”. Life is about interesting conversations, isn’t it?
UPDATE: Pierre Lindenbaum has obviously similar thoughts.
Posted by Pawel Szczesny on May 15, 2008 in Comments
Tags: FriendFeed, Google Reader, RSS, Twitter, World Wide Talk Show