Travis Wheeler
@wheelerlab.org
Associate Professor, University of Arizona
Algorithms, Machine Learning, Data Resources
Computational Genomics, Drug Discovery, Animal Tracking, etc.
wheelerlab.org
Algorithms, Machine Learning, Data Resources
Computational Genomics, Drug Discovery, Animal Tracking, etc.
wheelerlab.org
I just asked my dogs, and they were pretty clear on the concept: just after 5PM *is* dinner time.
November 3, 2025 at 12:58 AM
I just asked my dogs, and they were pretty clear on the concept: just after 5PM *is* dinner time.
Reposted by Travis Wheeler
Please pass along - Our CAMBIUM NSF NRT provides fellowships to support new PhD students at @uarizona.bsky.social To train & prepare a new generation of scientists to harness the revolution in biodiversity big data to adapt to & mitigate the impacts of climate change. cambium.arizona.edu 🧪🌐🌾
October 21, 2025 at 5:17 AM
Please pass along - Our CAMBIUM NSF NRT provides fellowships to support new PhD students at @uarizona.bsky.social To train & prepare a new generation of scientists to harness the revolution in biodiversity big data to adapt to & mitigate the impacts of climate change. cambium.arizona.edu 🧪🌐🌾
I mean, one way to approach this is: when a paper is published under a closed license, and there isn't even a copy on a preprint server, it doesn't need to be cited (or read).
(with all apologies to the authors of this particular paper)
(with all apologies to the authors of this particular paper)
October 10, 2025 at 5:54 PM
I mean, one way to approach this is: when a paper is published under a closed license, and there isn't even a copy on a preprint server, it doesn't need to be cited (or read).
(with all apologies to the authors of this particular paper)
(with all apologies to the authors of this particular paper)
Quite the complement.
October 5, 2025 at 11:05 PM
Quite the complement.
I think that's "juice of a lemon".
October 3, 2025 at 6:38 PM
I think that's "juice of a lemon".
So you're saying there's a chance that 10^60 is "far greater than the number of atoms in the Milky Way"?
This restores my faith in Google AI answers - thanks!
This restores my faith in Google AI answers - thanks!
September 29, 2025 at 3:01 AM
So you're saying there's a chance that 10^60 is "far greater than the number of atoms in the Milky Way"?
This restores my faith in Google AI answers - thanks!
This restores my faith in Google AI answers - thanks!
Everyone knows you can skip the middle part of a book and get most of the story.
September 12, 2025 at 8:46 PM
Everyone knows you can skip the middle part of a book and get most of the story.