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A Choon of a Science Friday with Strange Sounds, Strained Plumbing, and Straight-to-Your-Inbox Science

Let's face the music… and put our face in it.

It's open-season on proposals for Biorythm, so to get you in a musical mood, check these out.  We reviewed of the Darwin-meets-beserk-electro-opera album "Tomorrow in a Year," but if you really need a dose of strange, have a look at what Richard James (aka Aphex Twin) has done to the spectrograph image of his music.
It gets weird at 5:27
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-KMFxzA_Lk&feature=player_embedded#
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Back after this ad break…
If you watch the match over the weekend, consider the fishes.  Because the bigger the game, the bigger the number of ad-break flushes.  In another instalment of data that gets way cooler when visualized, behold: the water consumption in Edmonton Canada during the olympic gold medal hockey game:
http://www.patspapers.com/blog/item/what_if_everybody_flushed_at_once_Edmonton_water_gold_medal_hockey_game/
World wide tubes
Data visualizations are just getting better and better as the web gets more ubiquitous. And the BBC's map of net growth only starts in 1998, really driving home the point that the internet as we know it really did come down in the last shower.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8552410.stm
Change Wellcome believe in
The Wellcome trust are changing from a project-funding basis to one based on funding investigators, which will "provide researchers and their teams with the support to pursue individual, bold visions without constraints."
Irishscience 
http://irishscience.wordpress.com/2010/03/05/how-should-we-fund-research-invest-in-projects-or-people-and-how-do-returns-on-research-investment-arise/
has a good writeup, and distills some of the impacts this could have on the science scene in Ireland, saying, "This approach couldn’t be more different than the intuitively-appealing and well-intended ideas regarding the relationship between research and economic growth promoted by some politicians (such as in this article by former Taoiseach John Bruton). The path from university research to innovation is much more complicated, unpredictable, uncontrollable and non-linear than anyone would expect."
Science is in with the in(box) crowd
Lastly, what kind of articles do you send on to friends? What kind of articles do you get? Well, credit is due to the enthusiastic readers of the New York Times, who mail science articles more than any other kind, a new study has found.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/09/science/09tier.html
People preferred e-mailing articles with positive rather than negative themes, and they liked to send long articles on intellectually challenging topics. Perhaps most of all, readers wanted to share articles that inspired awe, an emotion that the researchers investigated after noticing how many science articles made the list. In general, they found, 20 percent of articles that appeared on the Times home page made the list, but the rate rose to 30 percent for science articles, including ones with headlines like “The Promise and Power of RNA.”
 Let's face the music… and put our face in it.

It's open-season on proposals for Biohythm, so to get you in a musical mood, check these out.  We reviewed of the Darwin-meets-beserk-electro-opera album "Tomorrow in a Year," but if you really need a dose of strange, have a look at what Richard James (aka Aphex Twin) has done to the spectrograph image of his music.  It gets weird at 5:27.

 

Wanna know how to do this? Check out synthgear's writeup. 

 

Back after this ad break…

If you watch the match over the weekend, consider the fishes.  Because the bigger the game, the bigger the number of ad-break flushes.  In another installment of data that gets way cooler when visualised, behold: the water consumption in Edmonton Canada during the olympic gold medal hockey game:

 

World wide tubes

Data visualizations are just getting better and better as the web gets more ubiquitous. And since the BBC's map of net growth only starts in 1998, it really drives home the point that the internet as we know it really did come down in the last shower.


Change Wellcome believe in

The Wellcome trust are changing from a project-funding basis to one based on funding investigators, which will "provide researchers and their teams with the support to pursue individual, bold visions without constraints."  Irishscience has a good writeup, and distills some of the impacts this could have on the science scene in Ireland, saying,

"This approach couldn’t be more different than the intuitively-appealing and well-intended ideas regarding the relationship between research and economic growth promoted by some politicians (such as in this article by former Taoiseach John Bruton). The path from university research to innovation is much more complicated, unpredictable, uncontrollable and non-linear than anyone would expect."


I'm in with the in(box) crowd

Lastly, what kind of articles do you send on to friends? What kind of articles do you get? Well, credit is due to the enthusiastic readers of the New York Times, who mail science articles more than any other kind, a new study has found.

"People preferred e-mailing articles with positive rather than negative themes, and they liked to send long articles on intellectually challenging topics. Perhaps most of all, readers wanted to share articles that inspired awe, an emotion that the researchers investigated after noticing how many science articles made the list. In general, they found, 20 percent of articles that appeared on the Times home page made the list, but the rate rose to 30 percent for science articles, including ones with headlines like “The Promise and Power of RNA.” "

 

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