Your occaisional reminder that consequences from elections can be very positive and so you should %@*$&#! vote. https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/brazil-amazon-deforestation-lula-bolsonaro-b2371102.html
News from two U.S. federal agencies on how their important work will soon be openly available to all!
The Department of Energy @ENERGY has released its plan to provide public access to the results of its research. More here: https://www.energy.gov/sites/default/files/2023-06/doe-public-access-plan-2023.pdf
And the National Institutes of Standards & Technology @NIST is seeking comments on its draft public access plan. Weigh in here: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2023/06/30/2023-13866/draft-plan-for-providing-public-access-to-the-results-of-federally-funded-research.
The @WHOSTP memo is becoming a reality that will help advance science and discovery!
Ynes Mexia was born in 1870 & became one of the most successful botanists in the world.
At a time when most people felt women couldn't travel alone, she did - A woman of color in her 50s & 60s. Mexia traveled the Americas for 13 years, collecting >145,000 #plants & discovering >50 new species.
She was a fierce conservationist & early pioneer fighting to preserve the redwood forests of California. She also advocated for Indigenous rights. https://www.nps.gov/people/ynes-mexia.htm #HistoryRemix #science #history
NEW: “What impressed Mr. Toderian most was not just the exclusion of cars but what replaced them. ‘They weren’t lazy about it. They didn’t just throw up barriers and ban cars,’ he said.”
My comments along with Val Plante’s & others in this great article about #Montreal’s inspiring summer street transformations!
#cities #streets #cars #OpenStreets #Montreal https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-montreal-avenues-car-free-transformation-proves-a-hit-with-residents/
“From the beginning, race & ethnicity have been at the center of our nation’s identity, defining who does & does not belong. Far from being an innocent bystander, science has been an active participant in the exclusion of persons…
It is time to change the culture of science by putting inclusive diversity at the center.”
- “Race Matters,“ David J. Asai in Cell, 2020 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0092867420303378
Onesimus, a Boston enslaved man saved hundreds of people from the horrors of smallpox in 1721. His contributions to science reverberate to this day b/c his knowledge led to what became the 1st vaccine-related study in America. Onesimus’s story illustrates the degree to which reputable men of science depended on the testimony & experience of Africans in dealing with a dreaded disease.
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#StillWeRise #Medicine #BlackHistory
#BlackMastodon
#Histodons #History
@blackmastodon@a.gup.pe @BlackMastodon@chirp.social
@Nonya_Bidniss In 1883, Otto von Bismarck established universal health care for exactly this reason: national security.
@OldAndCranky The cover is awesome. Is the inside good too?
Please, I'm begging you, if you're a researcher, archive your data, back up your files, have a data succession plan.
Chat to your library, chat to your colleagues. The best time is as you collect the data, the second best time is now.
I'm dealing with multiple different data nightmares now. People leave academia, people retire, people pass away with a plan to make a plan.
No judgement here, just sadness for all that hard work thrown into uncertainty.
Open, shared software is the opposite of machine learning.
Bear with me on this, but start here:
https://mastodon.social/@noamross@ecoevo.social/110548824148209227
I've had this experience, of some seemingly-trivial niche little utility I've written and shared, of somebody I will never meet appearing in my inbox asking, I just found this, does this really [do X]?"
To which I answered, yes, and got the reply "oh thank god".
So, somebody found the solution to a difficult problem they had, and that problem just... vanished.
@marick @haruki_zaemon I pondered this while flying home on Sunday, and off and on yesterday while working.
I thin Sharon's quilting retreats work because people are working with similar tools and techniques, even though they each have their own project. That gives them topics of conversation relevant to what they're working on.
What's the goal of a conference/workshop? Would it be sharing/learning information on a specific topic? If so, maybe you would ask people to bring projects related to that topic. And maybe intersperse parallel play time with talks/classes?
I went to #Atlanta to check out "#CopCity" - and found a battle for the very soul of America's cities
If built, the project will launch a 21st century security state to crush protests
My money's on the everyday folks fighting to stop it
If @willbunch wrote it, you should read it.©
@marick @haruki_zaemon My wife, Sharon, and I were talking about parallel play just last week, and hypothesizing that it's one reason our (40 year!) marriage has been so successful. Sometimes we'll do projects together, or play games together. And we do Wordle together every day. But we spend much more time in parallel play.
Sharon enjoys quilting retreats. A bunch of people get together to each work on their own quilting project side by side for a few days, sharing meals and conversations as desired.
I work remotely, but far prefer a co-working environment. The play there is even more parallel than if I were to go work at the Backblaze office. The folks at co-work are working on different projects and different companies, but there are still interesting chats at the coffee station or over lunch for those who wish to partake. And I just like the vibe of having other people around engaged in similar activity; it's a lot easier for me to focus on what I'm doing.
@haruki_zaemon I’m becoming more and more fascinated with the idea of parallel play as an important metaphor for productive adult behavior.
Now I’m tempted to analyze my (successful!) marriage to see how much an easy tolerance of parallel play figures into that success.
@Bikevisionary Nice interview. Thanks for your advocacy.
New blog post, inspired by a recent @nat issue:
https://surfingcomplexity.blog/2023/06/17/resilience-requires-helping-each-other-out/
Now at: @haiku_brian
Proud papa/dad/husband. Choral singer. Aspiring linguist. CTO at Backblaze. Usually in Indiana, sometimes on Maui. He/him.