https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8539-5416
“.. it’s either one of two things: either you’re cowards or you’re with him. And if you’re with him, you never believed in the things you were talking about to begin with.”
“.. it’s either one of two things: either you’re cowards or you’re with him. And if you’re with him, you never believed in the things you were talking about to begin with.”
But honestly the worst part was seeing the light die in fellow lab members eyes when they met their hero and got...that.
But honestly the worst part was seeing the light die in fellow lab members eyes when they met their hero and got...that.
www.statnews.com/2025/11/07/j...
www.statnews.com/2025/11/07/j...
Capital letters went in the upper case.
Smaller letters went in the lower case.
This is why we say ‘UPPER CASE’ and ‘lower case.’
Ok, but what did we call them before the invention of the printing press?
MAJUSCULE and minuscule.
Capital letters went in the upper case.
Smaller letters went in the lower case.
This is why we say ‘UPPER CASE’ and ‘lower case.’
Ok, but what did we call them before the invention of the printing press?
MAJUSCULE and minuscule.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
So much riding on such absurd, cruel, and opaque practices with overworked NIH staff caught in the middle doing their best.
3/4
So much riding on such absurd, cruel, and opaque practices with overworked NIH staff caught in the middle doing their best.
Researcher: Here’s some data, can you wrangle it?
DM: Sure! Do I have everything I need?
Researcher: Yep!
The next 6 months: A series of back and forth emails about missing files, unclear values, and why things are the way that they are.
Researcher: Here’s some data, can you wrangle it?
DM: Sure! Do I have everything I need?
Researcher: Yep!
The next 6 months: A series of back and forth emails about missing files, unclear values, and why things are the way that they are.
I wrote about “Predatory Data” by @anitachan.bsky.social in Nature’s summer reading list. Such a great work demonstrating the persistence of eugenics in all its many forms while offering a better way forwards.
Maybe not a fun beach read, but absolutely essential for these times.
I wrote about “Predatory Data” by @anitachan.bsky.social in Nature’s summer reading list. Such a great work demonstrating the persistence of eugenics in all its many forms while offering a better way forwards.
Maybe not a fun beach read, but absolutely essential for these times.