Single molecule biophysics group publishes new results in APL

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The Single Molecule Biophysics Lab
observes biological processes on a fundamental level and have adapted
some widely-used techniques (fluorescence labeling, confocal
microscopy) towards these ends.

PC magazine promotes the online library

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On the heels of yesterday’s fine New York Times article promoting libraries in the age of Google, here comes a PC magazine piece written by a UCSD librarian who describes all the databases and resources that your public library may subscribe to and which you can access in or out of the library via the internet. (Source: The Virtual Chase) (Note: As librarian and weblogger colleague j and I have discussed, Gary Price has been making this point for years in the ResourceShelf.) So we have one piece on librarian savvy and resourcefulness (we know our way around information resources – it’s what we do) and another on the range of information tools that are specialized and indexed and free through your library.

Update: j links to Gary’s piece What Google Teaches us Has Nothing to Do With Searching.

degrees of separation in science

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A paper (PNAS in press) reports studies of degrees of separation and connectivity among scientists. Robert Savoy, Rowland scientist, and I discussed this once. Think how close you are to the president, he told me. “I know the head of NIH” and the head of NIH knows the president. Still, the actual question of access may be a little more complex. Will the next research involve the physics of “foot in the door” or chutzpah?

Update (12:48 PM): Science’s Next Wave has a column on how to use scientific connections effectively, “So it’s a small world? So what?” (access restricted to subscribers; Harvard users follow this link.)

Newsgroups via RSS?

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Robin Good says you can create a feed for Yahoo groups or similar mailing lists in three easy steps.

“Confessions” gives a presentation

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John DuPuis posted his slides “Blogging for Science Librarians.” Seems like a reasonable overview of the how and why. Mentions two other science library blogs, namely STLQ and Englib, not Pullen or RIH. (Then again, the others are Canadian, like the confessor. I enjoy reading his blog, although he is not as prolific as the others.)

Sharing between macs and pcs

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From the O’Reilly network, software and other tips to make cross-platform sharing easier….

Growth of online journals

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Carol Tenopir of Tennesee made an attempt to count how many scholarly journals are online and relates the difficulty of the task. (Source: Stevan Harnad, American Scientist forum)

Billboards via RSS

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An Internet News article reports that content providers will begin including ads with their feeds. I find it disturbing but who am I to tell Yahoo and others not to make money. (source; Daypop)

NY Times on librarians and search strategies

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Good article about librarians and alternatives to search engines, such as books (!), proprietary databases (which most libraries make freely available to their patrons) and indexed sites such as lii.org. Thank you New York Times.
(And thanks to LIS News!)

On peer review

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A survey reports the public think peer review of science is a good thing. Some recent failures in the system are noted. Interestingly, 71% of those surveyed weren’t familiar with the concept of peer review.

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