Science Blogs
Blogs, magazines, and articles, mostly science and research related.
473 listings
Submitted Aug 30, 2008 to Science Blogs Comments and analyses of important problems in national security. Hosted by the Federation of American Scientists.
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Submitted Aug 30, 2008 to Science Blogs Arms Control Wonk explores the foundations of arms control, reports random items of interest that fall below the popular media radar, and place arms control related news into context, correcting poor reporting by the press. ACW was founded by Jeffrey Lewis, Director of the Nuclear Strategy and Nonproliferation Initiative at the New America Foundation, a research affiliate at Harvard University, and a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
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Submitted Aug 30, 2008 to Science Blogs Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces is written by Pavel Podvig, a physicist and research associate at the Center for International Security and Cooperation at Stanford University. Pavel headed the Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces Research project and edited the project's book, which provided "the first open Russian account of the history and structure of the Soviet/Russian nuclear complex."
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Submitted Aug 29, 2008 to Science Blogs Math-Blog covers the beauty of mathematics at every level including applied math, math news, math software, math websites, and math tutorials. It is edited by Antonio Cangiano, a software engineer at IBM and includes articles written by guest authors.
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Submitted Aug 29, 2008 to Science Blogs EagerEyes covers data visualization including theoretical foundations of visualization and is written by Robert Kosara, Assistant Professor of Computer Science at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
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Submitted Aug 29, 2008 to Science Blogs If you love data, charts, and graphs, Flowing Data is the blog for you. Flowing Data covers data visualization, statistics, typography, maps and mapping, computer science, programming, analytics, and more.
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Submitted Aug 29, 2008 to Science Blogs The NSGIC Blog is meant to be a place for news, announcements, and informal discussion of GIS related topics.
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Submitted Aug 13, 2008 to Science Blogs This blog is not officially affiliated with Google. Google Earth Blog is dedicated to sharing the best news, interesting sights, technology, and happenings for Google Earth. You will find the most amazing and interesting Google Earth files and network links, which you can download right off the site. Learn how to take data from your GPS, map it into Google Earth, and share it with friends or the world. Learn when new releases of Google Earth come out, hear about new technologies and features, or check out the links to dozens of other Google Earth web sites.
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Submitted Aug 13, 2008 to Science Blogs This is the official Google blog of the Google Earth and Maps team. Find out what's new with Google Earth and Maps, learn about cool new features and products, and other ramblings.
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Submitted Aug 10, 2008 to Science Blogs Richard Gayle is a biochemist with 30 years of experience in academic and industrial biotechnology. This is his personal blog.
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Submitted May 23, 2008 (Edited Aug 10, 2008) to Science Blogs Professional scientists, junior and senior, write about their lives. The basis of the blog is the book "Science Survival Guide", full of tips about writing a paper and getting a paper published and about all aspects of scientific presentations. Political correctness is low on our list of priorities (which makes us vulnerable, but also unique). For non-scientists the blog gives an unmatched inside view of the social structure of science.
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Submitted May 09, 2008 (Edited Jul 17, 2008) to Science Blogs Skulls in the Stars covers optical science, science fiction, and various political and philosophical musings. The blog is written by an assistant professor of physics specializing in optical science.
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Submitted Apr 12, 2008 to Science Blogs » Element FYI Tsunami research, monitoring, and mitigation efforts have intensified since the 2004 Sumatra earthquake that devastated communities around the Indian Ocean. Here we've compiled links to some of the best websites about the Sumatra event and various research and education efforts on tsunamis. In this Element List feature, you can find video simulations of the Sumatra event, satellite photos, information on the earthquake that generated the event from the USGS, and more.
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Submitted Nov 05, 2007 to Science Blogs Drew McCormack has a degree in Mathematics, and a PhD in Chemical Physics. He works as a researcher in the Theoretical Chemistry group of Evert Jan Baerends, at the Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam. In his spare time, he writes sofware for the Mac.
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Submitted Oct 16, 2007 to Science Blogs Information Society, e-Readiness, Digital Divide, ICT4D, Open Access / Open Science
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Submitted Oct 09, 2007 (Edited Aug 17, 2008) to Science Blogs A KQED multimedia series exploring Northern California science, environment, and nature.
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Submitted Aug 31, 2007 to Science Blogs This is an attempt to make a blog in which I comment on scientific issues.
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Submitted Aug 29, 2007 to Science Blogs A health and medicine blog by Kendra James, RN, focusing on heart health.
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Submitted Aug 14, 2007 to Science Blogs Ouroboros is a community weblog for biologists of aging. The mission of the site is to provide timely, thoughtful and scholarly commentary on developments within the field, as they are reported in the scholarly literature and at relevant conferences.
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