I was surfing around tonight and found a couple of things y'all might enjoy.
The first is a video of bears in Glacier NP doing "The Bear Rub" over on LiveScience.com. Ah, the secret life of bears!
http://www.livescience.com/php/video/player.php?video_id=080402-bear-rub
(You do have to endure a short ad first before viewing it.)
And second is a story on CNN about whistles from the ancient Aztec culture.
The story is here:
http://tinyurl.com/5o4yfb
The recreated sounds of such whistles can be listen to here:
http://tinyurl.com/6cm4tj
The first whistle, in the shape of a skull, is quite eery.
Showing posts with label From Around the Web. Show all posts
Showing posts with label From Around the Web. Show all posts
Monday, June 30, 2008
Saturday, June 28, 2008
For Your Consideration: A New Blog
I just ran across a new blog that was mentioned on A Mad Tea-Party by the Mad Hatter and wanted to give everyone a heads up as it promises to be a good blog for those of you scientists still deciding on a career path or looking for a new one.
It is called The Alternative Scientist. As someone who had no real guidance with her career path decisions and at times really struggled to decide which path to take, I am glad someone has decided to start such a blog. As the community finds the blog and participates in it, I think it could help many people.
It is called The Alternative Scientist. As someone who had no real guidance with her career path decisions and at times really struggled to decide which path to take, I am glad someone has decided to start such a blog. As the community finds the blog and participates in it, I think it could help many people.
Labels:
Career,
For Your Consideration,
From Around the Web,
Science
Monday, May 19, 2008
From Around the Web
Here are some interesting tidbits that I found while exploring the blogosphere/Web when I should have been in lab finishing up my reaction:
1) "The Simple Dollar" is a great site by Trent Hamm. I chose to highlight his quick primer on estate planning.
Many of these things--like the master document with personal letters--I have had on my to-do list for a long time now and I just have not gotten around to it. If I croaked tomorrow, my parents would have a huge mess to sort out and wouldn't have a clue where to find my financial accounts. And yes, this would fall to my parents as I am single and quickly approaching the age where I have a better chance of getting struck by lightning twice on the same day a year apart or dying in a terrorist attack than finding a mate.
2) "In the Pipeline"--a blog by Derek Lowe is a good site for the chemist and non-chemist alike. In this post, he highlights the recent announcement by Merck that they are closing down their natural products program.
The announcement makes me a little sad. When I was in grad school, I worked for a professor who was an organic chemist---but he applied it to natural products. Natural products (compounds found in nature from sources like marine sponges, plants or insects) were the rage in those days. In fact, in 2003, Chemical and Engineering News published an article about which companies had programs devoted to natural products.
I love natural product synthesis. Yes, I know--I am biased as my dissertation was on one such compound. But I love the challenge inherent in the synthesis of these kinds of molecules. Take a look at some of the structures in the CE&N article. Mother Nature makes some of the most beautiful and complex structures.
However, I am under no illusions. While attempting to synthesize these molecules, we expand our knowledge of organic chemistry and possibly broaden the methodologies in our synthetic arsenals. We may even be able to identify new biological targets or a new signal pathway based on a natural product's activity.
But the fact is Taxol and Vancomycin are the exceptions rather than the rule. Many natural products suffer from poor bioavailability, metabolic instability, or toxic side effects not to mention the sheer synthetic effort that must be applied to a large majority of them (read: too expensive to make; cost of drug would be astronomical).
3) For those needing an introduction to chemistry, here is my pick for Viral Video of the Day--I found it on The Chemistry Blog and embedded it here. It is an hysterical ad commissioned by the EU's Marie Curie Actions research program. BTW, this is my first attempt to embed a movie, so if you have problems viewing it, let me know.
Chemistry Can Be Fun - video powered by Metacafe
EDITED at 2:37AM 5/19/08:
Apologies to Mitch at The Chemistry Blog. While writing this post, I had several tabs open in IE to blogs that carried the video/linked to the video and as a result, I credited the wrong one. This error was corrected in the above post.
1) "The Simple Dollar" is a great site by Trent Hamm. I chose to highlight his quick primer on estate planning.
Many of these things--like the master document with personal letters--I have had on my to-do list for a long time now and I just have not gotten around to it. If I croaked tomorrow, my parents would have a huge mess to sort out and wouldn't have a clue where to find my financial accounts. And yes, this would fall to my parents as I am single and quickly approaching the age where I have a better chance of getting struck by lightning twice on the same day a year apart or dying in a terrorist attack than finding a mate.
2) "In the Pipeline"--a blog by Derek Lowe is a good site for the chemist and non-chemist alike. In this post, he highlights the recent announcement by Merck that they are closing down their natural products program.
The announcement makes me a little sad. When I was in grad school, I worked for a professor who was an organic chemist---but he applied it to natural products. Natural products (compounds found in nature from sources like marine sponges, plants or insects) were the rage in those days. In fact, in 2003, Chemical and Engineering News published an article about which companies had programs devoted to natural products.
I love natural product synthesis. Yes, I know--I am biased as my dissertation was on one such compound. But I love the challenge inherent in the synthesis of these kinds of molecules. Take a look at some of the structures in the CE&N article. Mother Nature makes some of the most beautiful and complex structures.
However, I am under no illusions. While attempting to synthesize these molecules, we expand our knowledge of organic chemistry and possibly broaden the methodologies in our synthetic arsenals. We may even be able to identify new biological targets or a new signal pathway based on a natural product's activity.
But the fact is Taxol and Vancomycin are the exceptions rather than the rule. Many natural products suffer from poor bioavailability, metabolic instability, or toxic side effects not to mention the sheer synthetic effort that must be applied to a large majority of them (read: too expensive to make; cost of drug would be astronomical).
3) For those needing an introduction to chemistry, here is my pick for Viral Video of the Day--I found it on The Chemistry Blog and embedded it here. It is an hysterical ad commissioned by the EU's Marie Curie Actions research program. BTW, this is my first attempt to embed a movie, so if you have problems viewing it, let me know.
Chemistry Can Be Fun - video powered by Metacafe
EDITED at 2:37AM 5/19/08:
Apologies to Mitch at The Chemistry Blog. While writing this post, I had several tabs open in IE to blogs that carried the video/linked to the video and as a result, I credited the wrong one. This error was corrected in the above post.
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