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#ThinSectionThursday Perhaps my favourite rock 😍 Sample U5A17 from my PhD fieldwork collected from Unit 5 of the Eastern Layered Intrusion in Rum a long time ago. Blue and green crystals of olivine enclosed in buff-coloured clinopyroxene, and striped plagioclase. Cross-polars illumination. Field of view 2mm across. #Microscopy #IsleOfRum #Geology #Igenous

@SpencrGreenberg In any case, I guess that since we both agree these phenomena indeed have names and an established literature, we both also can agree that what you're doing here is engaging in a bit of novelty hacking.

In your words, hacking novelty is "showing something that is already well-known but giving it a new name that leads people to think it is something new. "

I know I’m supposed to be nice here on mastodon but this CEO of a startup foundry

1) discovering that scientists sometimes oversell their results,

2) trying to coin a name “importance hacking”

3) deciding that no one talks about it, and then

4) pronouncing that is perhaps comparable to the replication crisis in scale….

It’s, how do I say this nicely? It’s importance hacking of the highest order.

Auto-snitch-tagging so the OP can respond if he wants to. @SpencerGreenberg@nerdculture.de

An elevator pitch but the elevator broke down so the person is stuck listening the details of your work for at least twenty minutes

RT @luismbat@birbsite

Who would have thought that adding a Sierpinski Triangle Fractal as musical notes would actually sound good!😅

@vicgrinberg One very beautiful one that I think is readable by nonexperts but it takes a great deal of time (I would read and savor and have to work through every page because I am not a math whiz, but it was some of the most interesting reading I have ever done) is Art Winfree's "The Geometry of Biological Time" (as recommended by @stevenstrogatz ). Lovely set of ideas about biological dynamics that really changed the way I think about, well, a lot of things from biology to politics

So, why is it that (as I mentioned earlier), when you draw a line that turns left at every nontrivial zero of the Riemann zeta function (it actually works for just about any turn angle), it coils up into these lovely whimsical curlicues resembling Euler spirals? I think I have a general understanding of it now.

The bit about a lawyer being stopped from entering a music hall in the US because its facial recognition system picked up that she's part of a law company that's suing them is even crazier than I thought.

The law company isn't suing the music hall - it's suing a restaurant, in another state, which is owned by the hall's parent company MSG Entertainment. MSG gone ahead and harvested photos of all the lawyers in the firm and fed it to an image recognition system to ban them from every MSG Entertainment owned location.

People always tell me that if you've got nothing to hide then you've got nothing to fear. She's got nothing to hide and they still went after her.

If this doesn't start making people worried about facial recognition then there's serious trouble coming.

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2022/12/facial-recognition-flags-girl-scout-mom-as-security-risk-at-rockettes-show/

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Yo faculty who were hiring this season: Are all of your interviewees prospective homogeneity hires? If so, what are you doing to change that next hiring season? The time to do the research on that is now.

A common retort is "there weren't enough qualified underrepresented people in the applicant pool". That is a crap excuse, but even so, what are you doing now to change that within your graduate program? Current grad students will be applicants in a few years.

Sharing this in case it's useful: I find that students often have a hard time conceptualizing quantitative parameters in genomics and popgen.

Here is a draft version of a cheat-sheet that I put together for my winter-quarter human genetics class. It's also part of a book that I am slowly writing on human popgen.

Corrections and other comments very welcome

This is absolutely insane. A mom was prevented from taking her daughter to a Christmas show at Radio City Music Hall because she works for a law firm litigating against the venue's parent company. They spotted her with facial recognition technology according to this report: nbcnewyork.com/investigations/

Some of you may have seen Elon Musk's endorsement of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s crazy antivax conspiracy theories today.

Over at post.news, I just posted a long-form piece about this, and about how science education needs to adapt to online disinformation.

Please a look. If you like it, boost it there or here or — if you dare — over on the birdsite.

post.news/article/2J7VEapSIpNW

The asteroid that ended the dinosaurs was technically the highest ratio of killing birds to one stone.

Sister Mary Kenneth Keller was born #OTD in 1913. She worked with John G. Kemeny and Thomas E. Kurtz on the design and implementation of Beginner’s All Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code — BASIC — and was the first woman in the US to earn a PhD in Computer Science.

10 PRINT “HAPPY BIRTHDAY”
20 GOTO 10

Does the Qoto web client lack the ability to follow hashtags?

There are more people here now so maybe this will find someone who knows - is this some kind of lichen? I find it in my firewood, it’s often a little ball form as you see. #lichen #mosstodon #fungi #forest

Looking for more motor and cytoskeleton friends out here in Mastodon, it's slow going so far...

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