Science Blogs
Mags, Blogs, and Lit, mostly science related.
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I'm Bruce Sterling, author, journalist, editor, critic, blogger for Wired. I'm best known for writing science fiction novels, but I like to go mess around with all kinds of weird events, places and issues in order to introduce some useful grit into my compositional process.
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A science blog by seismology Professor Bill Menke at Columbia University.
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(1 vote)
An anonymous feminist professor and mother somewhere in the US.
Submitted 12/11/05, edited 12/20/05.
Views: 206. Details | Rate | Report | E-Mail Link | Comments ( 0 ) |
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The Editors' blog of The American Journal of Bioethics.
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A digest of developments in the life of an emergency medicine resident.
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Wired magazine blog on biotech and related weirdness.
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A blog about tech life and culture and other things by mark, cory, david, and xeni.
Submitted 04/14/05, edited 11/06/05.
Views: 145. Details | Rate | Report | E-Mail Link | Comments ( 0 ) |
(1 vote)
Chronicles and musings of an urban field ecologist.
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Materials informatics, the web, design, graphics, music and the politics/culture of open access.
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Fuelling a passion for science...BunsenBurner is for all those who care about science. BunsenBurner aims to unite the scientific community in order improve the public persona of science and to actively promote the subject.
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(1 vote)
A place where nature, photography, and writing meet.
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The blog of JEFF JARVIS, former TV critic for TV Guide and People, creator of Entertainment Weekly, Sunday Editor of the NY Daily News, and a columnist on the San Francisco Examiner. He is now president & creative director of Advance.net.
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(1 vote)
A student in Colorado, looking for some sort of synthesis--the big picture, encompassing all the strangeness in the universe--but willing to settle for the philosophic or poetic lens.
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This blog deals with chemblaics in the broader sense. Chemblaics (pronounced chem-bla-ics) is the science that uses computers to address and possibly solve problems in the area of chemistry, biochemistry and related fields. The big difference between chemblaics and areas as chem(o)?informatics, chemometrics, computational chemistry, etc, is that chemblaics only uses open source software, making experimental results reproducable and validatable. And this is a big difference!
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Chemistry Teacher forum. A place to discuss recent trends in teaching high school chemistry. Problems encounted in class. And other related teacher topics.
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Last Link: 06/14/08
Links: 322 (440 counting subcategories)
Last Link: 06/14/08
(1 vote)