Tweeps
- If the results make sense, something has gone wrong. 4 minutes ago
- Blore's Razor: Given a choice between two theories, take the one which is funnier. 1 day ago
- boy, n: A noise with dirt on it. 1 day ago
- 7 Things You Didn’t Know About Groundhogs http://t.co/lgMwEtbM 3 days ago
- drug, n: A substance that, injected into a rat, produces a scientific paper. 3 days ago
- Space Cats: http://t.co/tVV4nBhu 3 days ago
- 5th Grader Accidentally Makes Explosive in Class, Gets Co-Authorship on Subsequent Paper http://t.co/XUy4EeuR 4 days ago
- Barker's Proof: Proofreading is more effective after publication. 4 days ago
- Open peer review of our arseniclife submission please http://t.co/aNeZLdhD 4 days ago
- Miss Anne Elk's theory on the Brontosauruses: http://t.co/m4YPcEyh 5 days ago
-
Recent comments
-
Top Posts
- Starting an Open Notebook Science project
- Causal basis of the ice cream-shark correlation fallacy
- The Joy of Sweave - A Beginner's Guide to Reproducible Research with Sweave
- Time to order your Darwin Day gear!
- Vanilla C code for the Stochastic Simulation Algorithm
- Imminent announcement from NSF on the National Institute for Mathematical and Biological Synthesis (NIMBioS)
- Unconventional laptop cooling
- How many espressos would it take to kill you?
- SciFoo 2008 tag cloud
- Choosing the tools of Open Notebook Science
- F1000 Biology review: The unpredictability of ecological tipping points
- Are cows an endangered species?
February 2012 M T W T F S S « Dec 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Category Cloud
academia Alan Hastings blog Canada Charles Darwin children closed science computer cluster computer simulations computing ecology epidemiology evolution fatherhood FMD foot-and-mouth disease Gillespie algorithm GillespieSSA global climate change humour Jonathan Eisen LHC livestock manuscript math Mathematical biology meeting Music natural history Nature Open Access Open Notebook science open science Origin of Species physics PLoS programing R Richard Dawkins science Science Foo statistics Stephen Harper Sweave The Cathedral and the Bazaar theory Uncategorized useR! useR 2007 writingArchive
MPK’s research notebook- Reaction norms for larval viability in Drosophila pseudoobscura November 7, 2011
- Results November 7, 2011
- LRG lab meeting (November 7, 2011) November 7, 2011
- Genotype-by-environment interaction figure November 7, 2011
- Model November 7, 2011
- Woltereck November 7, 2011
- Introduction November 7, 2011
- Questions needing answers November 7, 2011
- Daphnia November 7, 2011
- About November 7, 2011
My CiteULike- Density Dependence Slows Invader Spread in Fragmented Landscapes Jonathan Levine
- Names are key to the big new biology
- Community ecology: stasis, evolution or revolution?
- Assessing rapid evolution in a changing environment
- Adaptation genomics: the next generation
- A Bacterium That Can Grow by Using Arsenic Instead of Phosphorus
- Low-altitude airbursts and the impact threat D Crawford
- Aging in a Long-Lived Clonal Tree Sarah Otto
- Using Environmental Correlations to Identify Loci Underlying Local Adaptation Jonathan Pritchard
- Mathematics Is Biology's Next Microscope, Only Better; Biology Is Mathematics' Next Physics, Only Better Joel Cohen
Unknown Feed- An error has occurred; the feed is probably down. Try again later.
Category Archives: CERN
Is there an alien inside the LHC?
As it turns out, CERN has a channel at YouTube, called CERNTV. Of course, this is hardly surprisingly since the the World Wide Web actually was invented at CERN by the British scientist Tim Berners-Lee [HP] (here‘s the worlds first … Continue reading
Posted in Alien, CERN, LHC
Leave a comment
LHC First Beam Party – a blast of a party
In less than 12 hrs the first the first beam will circulate through the massive Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN taking particle physics research to a new frontier and changing our entire world view. All around the world scientists … Continue reading
Shagadelic LHC rap
The wet dream of many a science geeks is about to come true. In a few hours the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, will make its first attempt to circulate a beam (on … Continue reading


