One of our cats is called Microsoft; another is called Patches.  I chuckle about that, sometimes.   Above is a picture of Patches, transformed by a java applet that can be found here.  It appears that the original intent of the program was to transform human faces to resemble those found among persons of different ethnicities.  However, they added some artistic transformations as well.  One option is to view a face as is might have been portrayed by href="http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/modigliani/">Modigliani.   HT: href="http://climactericclambake.blogspot.com/2006/07/i-am-…
type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://video.google.com/googleplayer.swf?docId=-6232036444150437471" allowscriptaccess="sameDomain" quality="best" bgcolor="#ffffff" scale="noScale" salign="TL" flashvars="playerMode=embedded" align="center"> href="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6232036444150437471&q=How+To+Be+Popular" onclick="setMyPlaylist()"> src="http://video.google.com/ThumbnailServer?app=vss&contentid=c79158189d625cc1&second=115&itag=w160&sigh=pcmnwty6Oc74LyNUiO-4ODNeT2k" title="Are You Popular?" alt="" align="left" border="0"…
I was happy to see this article in the New York Times: href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/06/business/worldbusiness/06equator.html?ex=1309838400&en=372128defc2d33d5&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss">More Lenders Join in Pledge to Safeguard EnvironmentBy CLAUDIA H. DEUTSCHPublished: July 6, 2006 Three years ago, 10 financial institutions — with Citigroup the only United States company on the list — announced that they would abide by the Equator Principles, a set of standards intended to ensure that the large projects they financed did not have a harmful impact on the…
I am having a bit of trouble publishing posts. So it may be a couple of days before substantive posting resumes.
Earlier, I wrote a post entitled href="http://scienceblogs.com/corpuscallosum/2006/06/selective_moral_outrage.php#more">Selective Moral Outrage, in that post, I discussed the fact that some site, particularly conservative sites, picked on the New York Times for reporting on the monitoring of international money transfers. It wan't just two-bit pundits who got on this bandwagon. href="http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,201549,00.html">Senator Bunning openly accused the NYT of treason. Now, we see a similar situation, but this time, everyone is curiously silent. I wonder if this…
Usability Tips: How to read blogs more efficiently I can tell that people are clicking on my "add to Bloglines" button, but few are actually completing the process.  I can only surmise that people are clicking on it in order to find out what it does.  But if you click on it and you do not already have a Bloglines account, the page you go to might not be too inviting.  I've decided to write this explainer to help. I think that more people will get involved in reading and writing blogs, if someone takes the time to explain a few things that make it easier, and more fun.   Continue reading below…
This is the Spiral Galaxy NGC 2403 from Subaru, as noted on NASA's Astronomy Picture of the Day.
There has been some blogosphere and mediasphere activity regarding the following article ( href="http://archpedi.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/full/160/7/739">Age at Drinking Onset and Alcohol Dependence) in Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.  The New York Times picked it up ( href="http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/04/health/04teen.html?ex=1309665600&en=64fcb20497217e6c&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss">permalink), and Jake href="http://scienceblogs.com/purepedantry/2006/07/on_the_merits_of_postponing_yo.php#more">posted about it at Pure Pedantry.  There'…
Is href="http://skepticrant.blogspot.com/2006/07/thirsty-for-truth-try-skeptic-cola.html">up at Skeptic Rant.  Really cool graphics this time.  Took a lot of work.  Clever.  Plus, it seems that everybody is reading it.
What do the following have in common: heliocentrism, evolution, Freudian psychology, and neuroscience?  And what does this have to do with the controversy about whether nonhuman creatures have emotions? Pure Pedantry href="http://scienceblogs.com/purepedantry/2006/06/post_7.php">Do mice have empathy? Small Gray Matters href="http://www.smallgraymatters.com/2006/07/02/the-science-of-empathy-sociology-of-affective-neuroscience/">The science of empathy & sociology of affective neuroscience The authors of those blog posts engage in informed speculation about the existence of empathy…
What part of the 50 US States is in the Eastern Hemisphere? Hint: it was taken over by the Japanese in World War II.  Answer below the fold... Answer: href="http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3">Attu Island, Alaska.  
It's funny how these things work out sometimes.  I was reading an article on the Christian Science Monitor website, about simmering controversies regarding the religious views of our founding fathers (in the USA).  As I was reading it, it occurred to me that it might be a good topic for a Skeptic's Circle post.  Yesterday, I had seen a href="http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2006/07/last_call_for_submissions_to_t_1.php">call for papers posted on Orac's site.  So I went there to find out who is hosting this time, and saw that Orac had already posted on the same topic that I was…
I want to get back to reply to this comment: Comments The Bush administration has not been against science in any conceivable way. I hate to see people use a lie to push a political cause. I would ask all those concerned with the advancement of science to stay true to the calling of using empirically backed reason to further our understanding of the universe. We should also be more prudent in how we as scientists enter public discourse. Many scientists today have resorted to crying wolf instead of laying out clearly what we know and what we don't. The global warming debate is one area where…
It was pointed out to me after I put up the FUD post, that Steven Clemons (of the Washington Note) recently posted an href="http://www.thewashingtonnote.com/archives/001502.php">excellent example of the use of fear-mongering: June 25, 2006NATIONAL SECURITY FOR FAMILIES: IT'S FOR KIDS TOO -- ESPECIALLY KIDS!! Visit www.FamilySecurityMatters.org -- a site seemingly devoted to convincing a large cross-section of Americans that they must fear terrorism -- really fear it, now -- tomorrow -- and in the many years to come. It's high-fear exploitation of the worst kind candy-coated with slick…
A long time ago, href="http://scienceblogs.com/grrlscientist/about.php">Grrlscientist href="http://girlscientist.blogspot.com/2005/06/le-scholar-oblige-another-book-meme.html">tagged me with a meme.  So long ago, in fact, that ScienceBlogs did not even exist.  So it may as well have been in a galaxy far, far, away.   It was a book meme.  There were questions like "how many books do you own."  I finished counting several weeks later, and started to write it out.  Then the file was lost in an unfortunate incident that we do not need to discuss here.   I never got back to reconstructing…
{I actually started writing this weeks ago, got bogged down and distracted, and never finished it.  Now, I have decided to just go ahead and finish it up, even though I am not entirely happy with it.  Hey, I am not getting paid for this, so so what if it is not a polished piece of work.} I just finished reading rel="tag" href="http://scienceblogs.com/intersection/about.php">Chris Mooney's column in Seed Magazine, href="http://www.seedmagazine.com/news/2006/06/as_science_goes_so_goes_the_na.php?utm_source=SB-rightcol&utm_medium=linklist&utm_campaign=internal%2Blinkshare">As…
For various reasons, I am now mostly using a computer in the living room, rather than the study.  That is fine, but it is far from the cable modem.  That would be no problem, having a wireless card installed.  But the card is a Linksys card that uses a Broadcom chip.  There is no Linux driver.  I am not clever enough to get the Windows driver to work is Linux using ndiswrapper.  I did get to the point where the OS could see the card, but I could not actually get the card to work.  I'm pretty sure that I was getting hung up on configuring the encryption.  I thought briefly about using it…
There's a href="http://www.medpagetoday.com/Neurology/Migraines/tb/3663">brief article on Medpage Today, about a small study that suggests that improving sleep can improve the course of a particular type of headache.  (A nicety to the article is that it provides 0.25 CME's.) They write specifically about href="http://www.achenet.org/articles/purdy.php" rel="tag">transformed migraine, which is a kind of headache that occurs daily, with the daily headaches developing after a person has had some episodic migraines.   ...The study included 43 women with transformed migraine treated at a…
This is a response to this week's Ask-A-ScienceBlogger question.  I must say, it took a while to come up with a reasonable answer.  I finally settled on environmental policy. The rel="tag">Environmental Protection Agency href="http://www.epa.gov/history/org/origins/first.htm">was established in 1970, mostly in response to popular concern about the damage that was accumulating in the environment as a result of industrial activity.  See the EPA page, href="http://www.epa.gov/history/topics/epa/15b.htm">Why EPA Was Established, for details. There are two reasons for choosing this…