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What We're Talking About Thursday, July 29, 2010
Yesterday marked 100 days since the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded and triggered one of the worst environmental disasters in US history. A lot has changed even in the past week; a containment cap has stemmed the gush of oil enough to begin relief well drilling, and BP announced the resignation of its chief executive, Tony Hayward, an act symbolic of its desire to move public perception beyond the spill and into cleanup efforts. That's a tall order, especially for Gulf residents whose lives have been turned upside down and wear their animosity toward the company with pride. Jennifer Jacquet of Guilty Planet is on the scene, speaking to people and documenting grassroots (swamproots?) efforts to map and document the spill as it slimes its way up into Louisianian bayous.
Guilty PlanetJuly 28, 2010
"In a humble effort at citizen journalism, we went around New Orleans and other parts of the Gulf asking people what they thought of the BP oil spill. Most of victims don't have voices, but here is what a few of the humans thought (they wrote down their opinions or, on occasion, dictated it to us)."
Guilty PlanetJuly 20, 2010
"Do people hate BP? Yes. Does it matter? It must. Most CEOs believe that corporate brand reputation outranks financial performance as the most important measure of a company's success."
Guilty PlanetJuly 13, 2010
"'The bucketheads are here,' Jeff Holmes radioed back to his camp in Grand Bayou Village, a totally bizarre and charming outcropping of homes built on salt marshes that Holmes is worried will disintegrate under a thin but suffocating blanket of oil that is creeping up the bayou."
Dave Ng talks about education and the developing trading card game called Phylo. You can contribute your artistic and scientific expertise to Phylo's ecology at phylogame.org.

“Tony Hayward, CEO of British Petroleum, is headed for the exit -- with a $20 million golden parachute to guide him safely and luxuriously to the ground. The wages of sin may be death, as the Bible says, but reckless environmental destruction clearly pays much better.”
Endogenous filoviruses! YAY!! ... wait... didnt I already write about this... wait... wat?
As you know, I have a long standing interest in dogs and bears and in the topic of...
Investigations launched by the FDA and US Congress have potentially set the stage for a large-scale regulatory crackdown on the embryonic direct-to-consumer genetic testing industry. Such a move would be premature, and would do more harm than good to consumers. The industry needs to change, but a more careful, measured approach based on increasing the transparency of genetic tests is the best way forward.
The Life Science Channel RSS FeedI had intended to write up a recent paper for ResearchBlogging today, but I cleverly forgot to bring...
I'm going to be spending a good chunk of the rest of my day scrounging up adapters to...
This APS rocks! Here's the press release from PAMnet: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE APS ONLINE JOURNALS AVAILABLE FREE IN...
The Physical Science Channel RSS Feed.And like the wild geese in my oldest, Eli's favorite poem, I can feel the tang of winter coming. When you live on a farm, and when you eat with the seasons, winter is always coming in a way
Alternative policy directions are needed along with new approaches to communicating about the relevance of the issue.....
The word on the street: Yes....
The Environment Channel RSS FeedAdventures in Ethics and Science
Complicating the "two cultures" framing of research (and of what undergraduates should be learning in a research methods course).
Barbara Forrest, author of Creationism's Trojan Horse: The Wedge of Intelligent Design, has a major blog post addressing...
I was initially puzzled by the headline "Research-Assignment Handouts Give Students Meager Guidance, Survey Finds," and the opening...
The Education Channel RSS FeedFor a new project to fund progressive candidates, with the intention of countering the 200 million or so...
Judith Curry has damaged her credibility by making careless and ill-thought-out claims.
If you've got four minutes, watch Diane Lillicrap explain the importance of OSHA's new crane rule.
Funny how everything old is new again, isn't it? Yes, if there's one thing I've learned over nearly...
Nancy Snyderman isn't helping. At least, she wasn't helping yesterday. Don't get me wrong. I like the fact...
The Medicine & Health Channel RSS FeedHave you heard about NCBI ROFL? It's a previously-independent blog that has been incorporated into "Discoblog," one of...
Tan Le's astonishing new computer interface reads its user's brainwaves, making it possible to control virtual objects, and...
"What we're seeking is not just one algorithm or one cool new trick - we're seeking a platform...
The Brain & Behavior Channel RSS FeedMy initial reaction to the financial meltdown caused by the housing bubble was "Are our business leaders really...
These data were scraped by security consultant Ron Bowles, using code that scans Facebook profiles and collects all...
Direct-to-customer genetic testing can learn from antibiotic susceptibility testing.
The Technology Channel RSS FeedConfessions of a Science Librarian
A few of us are proposing this session at the upcoming Science Foo Camp at Google HQ this...
Earlier this year, I received a charming email from a pair of Helsinki-based artists and designers who...
Like the headline says. I've been thinking about setting up a schwag shoppe, and so I'm going to...
The Information Science Channel RSS FeedVia Inside Higher Ed this YouTube video is pretty much a distillation of faculty reaction nationwide to higher...
O.K. It's been a while since I last posted, but I do have a good excuse. I've been...
On Becoming a Domestic and Laboratory Goddess
Yes, little darlings. That is the title of this edition of Ask Dr. Isis. I can't come up...
The Jobs Channel RSS FeedPZ Myers 07.29.2010
PZ Myers 07.28.2010
Ed Brayton 07.29.2010
Orac 07.29.2010
Ed Brayton 07.29.2010
Page 3.14 05.11.2010
Uncertain Principles 07.28.2010
Tomorrow Table 07.27.2010
The Thoughtful Animal 07.26.2010
Guilty Planet 07.13.2010
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Some engineers use cranes and steel to make their designs reality, but synthetic biologists engineer using tools on a different scale: DNA and the other molecular components of living cells. Synthetic biology uses cellular systems and structures to produce artificial models based on natural order. Read these posts from the ScienceBlogs archives for more:
Pharyngula May 30, 2007
The Loom January 31, 2008
Discovering Biology in a Digital World July 2, 2006
Humanities & Soc. Sciences
Aardvarchaeology
Continued Afro-Chinese History Manipulation
I hope the project does find a 15th century Chinese shipwreck. But if they do, then this will in no way validate the suddenly remembered folklore. It's a ridiculous product of current Afro-Chinese economic relations.
Greg Laden's Blog
Barry Glassner, Fear, Poor people and their babies: Friday!
I've been interested forever in human perceptions of risk and culturally mediated fear. I got to work with...
Greg Laden's Blog
Sociosexually, what is "safe"?
Are you a "safe guy"? Or do you know someone who (you or he or some else thinks)...
The Social Sciences Channel RSS Feed