Corante: technology, business, media, law, and culture news from the blogosphere
OUR PUBLICATIONS:
Corante is a trusted, unbiased source on technology, business, law, science, and culture that’s authored by leading commentators and thinkers in their respective fields. Corante also produces premium conferences and publications that help decision-makers better understand their industries and the world around them.
Corante Blogs
Corante Blogs examine, through the eyes of leading observers, analysts, thinkers, and doers, critical themes and memes in technology, business, law, science, and culture.
Vin Crosbie, on the challenges, financial and otherwise, that newspaper publishers are facing: "The real problem, Mr. Newspaperman, isn't that your content isn't online or isn't online with multimedia. It's your content. Specifically, it's what you report, which stories you publish, and how you publish them to people, who, by the way, have very different individual interests. The problem is the content you're giving them, stupid; not the platform its on."
by Vin Crosbie in Rebuilding Media
There's a problem in the drug industry that people have recognized for some years, but we're not that much closer to dealing with it than we were then. We keep coming up with these technologies and techniques which seem as if they might be able to help us with some of our nastiest problems - I'm talking about genomics in all its guises, and metabolic profiling, and naturally the various high-throughput screening platforms, and others. But whether these are helping or not (and opinions sure do vary), one thing that they all have in common is that they generate enormous heaps of data.
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline
Now that the Web labor market is saturated and Web design a static profession, it's not surprising that 'user experience' designers and researchers who've spent their careers online are looking for new worlds to conquer. Some are returning to the “old media” as directors and producers. More are now doing offline consulting (service experience design, social policy design, exhibition design, and so on) under the 'user experience' aegis. They argue that the lessons they've learned on the Web can be applied to phenomena in the physical and social worlds. But there are enormous differences...
by Bob Jacobson in Total Experience
Clay Shirky, in deconstructing Second Life hype: "Second Life is heading towards two million users. Except it isn’t, really... I suspect Second Life is largely a 'Try Me' virus, where reports of a strange and wonderful new thing draw the masses to log in and try it, but whose ability to retain anything but a fraction of those users is limited. The pattern of a Try Me virus is a rapid spread of first time users, most of whom drop out quickly, with most of the dropouts becoming immune to later use."
by Clay Shirky in Many-to-Many
Over the last few years we've seen old barriers to creativity coming down, one after the other. New technologies and services makes it trivial to publish text, whether by blog or by print-on-demand. Digital photography has democratised a previously expensive hobby. And we're seeing the barriers to movie-making crumble, with affordable high-quality cameras and video hosting provided by YouTube or Google Video and their ilk... Music making has long been easy for anyone to engage in, but technology has made high-quality recording possible without specialised equipment, and the internet has revolutionised distribution, drastically disintermediating the music industry... What's left? Software maybe? Or maybe not."
by Suw Charman in Strange Attractor
Derek Lowe on the news that the Nobel Prize for medicine has gone to Craig Mello and Andrew Fire for their breakthrough work: "RNA interference is probably going to have a long climb before it starts curing many diseases, because many of those problems are even tougher than usual in its case. That doesn't take away from the discovery, though, any more than the complications of off-target effects take away from it when you talk about RNAi's research uses in cell culture. The fact that RNA interference is trickier than it first looked, in vivo or in vitro, is only to be expected. What breakthrough isn't?"
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline
Andrew Phelps: "Recently my WoW guild has been having a bit of a debate on the merits of Player-vs.-Player (PvP) within Azeroth. My personal opinion on this is that PvP has its merits, and can be incredible fun, but the system within WoW is horridly, horribly broken. It takes into account the concept of the battle, but battle without consequence, without emotive context, and most importantly, without honor..."
From later in the piece: "When I talk about this with people (thus far anyway) I typically get one of two responses, either 'yeah, right on!' or 'hey, it’s war, and war isn’t honorable – grow the hell up'. There is a lot to be said for that argument – but the problem is that war in the real historical world has very different constraints that are utterly absent from fantasized worlds..."
by Andrew Phelps in Got Game
Derek Lowe: "So, you're developing a drug candidate. You've settled on what looks like a good compound - it has the activity you want in your mouse model of the disease, it's not too hard to make, and it's not toxic. Everything looks fine. Except. . .one slight problem. Although the compound has good blood levels in the mouse and in the dog, in rats it's terrible. For some reason, it just doesn't get up there. Probably some foul metabolic pathway peculiar to rats (whose innards are adapted, after all, for dealing with every kind of garbage that comes along). So, is this a problem?.."
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline
Bob Jacobson, on shopping at his local Albertsons supermarket where he had "one of the worst customer experiences" of his life: "Say what you will about the Safeway chain or the Birkenstock billionaires who charge through the roof for Whole Foods' organic fare, they know how to create shopping environments that create a more pleasurable experience, at its best (as at Whole Foods) quite enjoyable. Even the warehouses like Costco and its smaller counterpart, Smart & Final, do just fine: they have no pretentions, but neither do they dump virtual garbage on the consumer merely to create another trivial revenue stream, all for the sake of promotions in the marketing department..."
by Strange Attractor in Total Experience
Kevin Anderson: "First off, I want to say that I really admire the ambition of the Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free. It is one of the boldest statements made by any media company that participation needs to be central to a radical revamp of traditional content strategies... It is, therfore, not hugely surprising to find that Comment is Free is having a few teething troubles..."
by Kevin Anderson in strange
Corante Developments
Here you will find the latest news from Corante including updates on upcoming events, new initiatives, product and publication launches, and more.
It was with shock that I returned home from a night out last night to hear the news of Russell's passing. How terribly, terribly sad. Most of all for him, as he'd seemed buoyant, healthier, and content when I'd last seen him several months ago when he was in town - he was happy that work was busy and rewarding and was having fun with it but most of all was thrilled about how things were going with his girlfriend, Ellen.
I've known Russ for what seems like ages now (in a good way) though in fact it's only been about six or seven years since the early days of "commercial" blogging when he started working on various projects at and around Corante. He was a diligent, committed, and prolific journalist who had impressively and more ably than others been able to make the transition from the old-school way of doing things to the new. He had his quirks, as we all do, but I greatly valued that he was good-natured, collegial, reliable, quick to adopt, trustworthy, eager to learn, and earnest in his interest in helping others better understand what he wrote about.
He was also, it should be said, a kind and thoughtful soul and it was the rare conversation in which he didn't ask, with sincerity, about what he knew of my life, e.g. our new babe, and we didn't talk as seemingly old friends about our lives and respective paths. I can't say I knew him very well, of course, but in our half-dozen get-togethers over the years and dozens of conversations I got a good sense of the man: he cared about learning and sharing and his bearing was earnest and ego-less and we'll miss him for that and more.
We wanted to let you know about a discount to New Comm Forum, the annual event event put on by our friends at the Society for New Communications Research. The conference, which runs from April 22-25, will feature many of the field's leading observers and is an important event for those looking, in the words of SNCR, to "better understand new communications tools, technologies and emerging modes of communication, and their effect on traditional media, professional communications, business, culture and society."
Check out the event's website and, if you're interested in attending, be sure to use the code supplied below for a special discount.
EARLY BIRD PRICING - NOW UNTIL FEB. 15th
NewComm Forum Conference - $995.
Pre-conference or post-conference session - $195.
SNCR Jam only - $75.
REGULAR PRICING - AFTER FEB. 15th
NewComm Forum Conference - $1095.
Pre-conference or post-conference session - $249.
SNCR Jam only - $75.
CORANTE READER DISCOUNTS
NewComm Forum Conference - save an additional $100
Use discount code: NCF08100
Pre-conference or post-conference session - save an additional $45.
Use discount code: NCF0845
We've been remiss in letting you know about two new independent blogs we've helped launch in the past month or so.
The first - the ConversationHub - is a companion blog to Supernova 2007, the latest edition of Kevin Werbach's excellent conference on all things connected. As the conference site says: "Supernova examines the effects of an increasingly connected world on business, life, and public policy. As disparate physical and social networks link with one another, a new societal network is rapidly evolving... The New Network is greater than the sum of its parts. It challenges us to re-create everything from the software and hardware we use...to the business models we employ...to the information and entertainment we encounter...to the ways we work and play."
Visit the ConversationHub and you'll find several dozen leading thinkers and doers, led by a few notable ringleaders, weighing in on the themes and trends of the day in technology and business. We encourage you to tune in - feel free to comment and even suggest topics and ideas for posts.
The second blog - Mobile Messaging 2.0 - convenes about a dozen top observers of the mobile messaging space for an intense discussion of the industry and where it's headed. Among its contributors are leading commentators, journalists and players in the field - tune in and you'll find them touching on topics such as mobile device design, messaging platforms, market pressures, user-generated content, interface design, and much, much more.
Also, if you visit the site, which is sponsored by Airwide Solutions, this week, you'll find live coverage and commentary from Global Messaging 2007, to which several of our contributors have traveled to hear about the latest developments from a broad spectrum of the industry's players and providers.
Be sure to catch the Office 2.0 Conference and hear from and engage with leading thinkers and doers in this exciting new market. Find out more here and be sure to use the code "GLDRK" for a special discount for Corante readers.
In the Pipeline: Don't miss Derek Lowe's excellent commentary on drug discovery and the pharma industry in general at In the Pipeline
Sometimes a picture can tell you a lot about evolution. This particular picture has a story to tell about how two species--in this case a fly and an orchid--can influence each other's evolution. But the story it tells may not be the one you think.
Coevolution, as this process is now called, was one of Darwin's most important insights. Today scientists document coevolution in all sorts of species, from mushroom-farming ants to the microbes in our own gut. But Darwin found inspiration from the insects and flowers he could observe around his own farm in England.
Darwin's thoughts about coevolution began with a simple question: how do flowers have sex? A typical flower grows both male and female sexual organs, but Darwin doubted that a single flower would fertilize itself very often. Flowers, like other organisms, display a lot of variation, and Darwin thought that the only way flowers could vary was if individuals mates, mixing their characters. (Sex turns out not essential for creating variation, but it does do a good job of creating it.) But in order to have sex, plants can't walk around to find a mate. Somehow the pollen of one flower has to get to another. Not just to any flower, moreover, but to a member of its own species.
The random wind might suffice for some plants. But Darwin also knew that bees visited many flowers to gather their nectar. He began to study what happened on those visits. He would watch bees land on scarlet kidney bean plants, for example, and climb up a petal to get to its nectar. The flower's pollen-bearing organs, Darwin found, were located in precisely the right spot to brush pollen onto the back of feeding bees. When the bees traveled to another scarlet kindey bean plant, they unloaded the pollen. The bees depended on the flowers for food, and the flowers depended on the bees for sex. Without each other, they could not survive.
In the Origin of Species, Darwin offered some thoughts on how this sort of partnership between bees and clover could have evolved. Imagine that the flowers are pollinated by other insects, but the insects go extinct in some region. Now all their nectar goes uneaten. Honeybees might visit the flowers sometimes, and variations that allowed them to reach the nectar--a longer tongue-like proboscis, for example, more easily might be favored by natural selection.
Meanwhile, the flowers would be experiencing intense natural seleciton of their own. Without their old pollinators, their chances of producing offspring plummeted. Any variation that would make it easier for honeybees to pollinate them would bring a huge increase in reproductive success. Gradually, the flowers anatomy would come to match that of the honeybees, just as the honeybees were adapting to the flower.
"Thus I can understand," Darwin wrote, "how a flower and a bee might slowly become, either simultaneously or one after the other, modified and adapted in the most perfect manner to each other, by continued preservation of individuals presenting mutual and slightly favoruable deviations of structure."
Around the time that Darwin published the Origin of Species, he developed a fondness for orchids. He was not alone; at the time a rising orchid fever was seizing England's upper class. Aristocrats would dispatch explorers to the Amazon or to Madagascar, where they would strip entire hillsides of the rare plants. Some prized specimens sold for hundreds of pounds at auctions in London and Liverpool. If, as many people then believed, the only meaning of natural beauty was as a gift from God, orchids were the most exquisite gifts of all. They could have only one purpose: to please the eye of man.
Darwin had other ideas.
In orchids, he discovered the same evolutionary pressures at work as in other flowers, but the results were supremely baroque and bizarre. Despite the prices orchids might fetch at auction, their beauty did not exist for beauty's sake. It was, Darwin showed, an elaborate means for luring insects into their sex lives. He documented case after case of these adaptations. One species, for example, had its pollen loaded in a crossbow-like structure that bees triggered by walking across a petal.
Darwin described this and many other adaptations in The Various Contrivances by Which British and Foreign Orchids are Fertilized by Insects, and on the Good Effects of Intercrossing. Darwin guided the reader from orchid to orchid, showing how each flower's design was not simply beauty for beauty's sake, but some of nature's most elaborate forms of sex. He showed how orchids were simply highly evolved flowers. All the various parts of ordinary flowers had simply been stretched and twisted and otherwise transmogrified into new structures such as crossbows.
Darwin was so confident that orchids were adapted to their pollinators that he made a bold prediction in his book. He pointed out how many orchids produce their nectar at the bottom of long tubes called nectaries. The insects that feed on them are equipped with tongues that are almost the same length. Short-tongued insects visit flowers with shallow nectaries, and long-tongued insects visit deep nectaries. In every case, the insect has to press its head against the flower to reach the bottom of the tube. The orchid's pollen is invariably positioned in a place where it can stick to the insect's head while it drinks.
Darwin saw the evolution of these tubes and tongues as the result of a race between flower and insect. If an insect could drink nectar without pressing its head against the orchid, it couldn't pass on its pollen. Natural selection would thus favor orchids with longer tubes. At the same time, an insect with a tongue that was too short for the tube wouldn't be able to drink all the nectar.
In some cases, this race between orchid and insect might drive each partner to absurd extremes. Darwin once received an orchid from Madagascar, called Angraeceum sequipedale, with a whip-shaped nectary over eleven inches long, with a drop of nectar tucked away at its very base. Only an animal with a suitably long tongue could drink it. Darwin predicted that somewhere in Madagascar there must live just such an insect.
The orchid's pollen, he declared, "would not be withdrawn until some huge moth, with a wonderfully long proboscis, tried to drain the last drop."
When Darwin died in 1882, the Madagascar orchid was still without a partner. But in 1903 entomologists discovered an extraordinary Madagascar hawkmoth. Normally its proboscis remained curled up like a watch spring. But when it approached orchids, it pumped fluid into the proboscis to straighten it out like a party balloon, and then insert it into the flower, as carefully as a tailor threads a needle's eye.
Scientists have found many other orchids and other flowers with an equally intimate relationship with their pollinators. Steven Johnson, a South African biologist, has documented lots of them in his part of the world, as he descirbed in an excellent article this spring in Natural History.
Now, in the August issue of the American Journal of Botany, Johnson and his colleagues have published a paper about a new orchid, shown in this picture. Disa nivea is a rare orchid found only in a few places in South Africa, and until Johnson came to study it, no one knew how it was pollinated. After a lot of patient orchid-watching, he and his colleagues discovered that it is visited exclusively by the fly shown in the picture. Its proboscis is well-matched to the length of the orchid, and the orchid grows pollen in just the right place so that they get stuck to the fly. You can see them in this picture--the two dangling yellow packets on the fly's snout.
There's just one catch: when the fly manages to get its proboscis all the way down to the bottom of the orchid's nectary, it finds no nectar.
To explain this deceit, Johnson and his colleagues observe that the orchids are always found intermingled with a similar-looking plant related to foxgloves. These plants are also pollinated by the same fly, but unlike the orchid, they reward visiting flies with nectar. Johnson and his colleagues argue that the orchid has evolved to mimic the rewarding flower, luring the flies with the same cues but deceiving them in the end.
To test this hypothesis, the scientists looked at five populations of the rewarding flower, measuring their dimensions. They found that from one population to another, the orchids mimic their local models. In some places, the rewarding flower is twice as long as in other places; the same goes for the orchid. Where the rewarding flowers are wide, so are the orchids; where they are narrow, the orchids are as well. These patterns are evidence that the evolution of this deceit is not a thing in the past, but an ongoing process.
Darwin would have not believed that such a deceitful plant could exist. Botantists had reported nectarless orchids as early as 1798, but Darwin thought they had to be wrong. Insects were too smart to be fooled for long. They would learn how to recognize a deceitful plant and avoid it, and the deceivers would become extinct. That turns out to be quite wrong. Over 8,000 species of orchids are believed to practice deceit. Most, like Disea nivea, mimic a food-supplying plant in their shape and odor. Others lure flies with growths that look and smell like feces. Others produce sex pheromones to lure male insects and sometimes even produce shapes that look and feel like female insects--so much so that the males try to mate with them. (More on wasp-on-orchid kinkiness here.) Orchids can in fact outfox insects, but only by continually reshaping their deceptions. Scientists suspect that the main benefit of deceit is that insects tend to fly far away after getting fooled. As a result, tend to fertilize more distant orchids, which gives the flowers a healthy supply of genetic variation.
It's fascinating to compare the story of Disea nivea to Angraeceum sequipedale. In one case, Darwin was right, and in the other he was wrong--at least in the details. His rough ideas about coevolution have developed over nearly 150 years into a huge body of knowledge about how partners shape one another over time. It just turns out that sometimes coevolution can push life in directions he couldn't imagine.
(Note: I adapted parts of the historical material in this post from my book Evolution.)
Update, Sunday 2 pm: For some reason the comments aren't going through for this post. We'll try to fix the bug today.
Update, Monday 11 am: Okay, comments are working again.
Great post, Carl. There was a PBS program titled Deep Jungle a few months ago and in one episode they followed a biologist who was trying to film the hawk moth for the first time. They kind of gave the impression the moth had not been seen before, just predicted; maybe it was the first time it had been photographed? By the way, I'm always impressed by the wide variety of sources you draw upon. Do you search and read the literature 20 hours a day, or do you have other means of finding all of this info? What's your secret?
You've a real gift for explaining complex biology in simple terms.
A few years ago I was in South Africa and met some of the scientists involved in the fly-flower research. It's one of the most charismatic study systems I've seen, both entomologically and botanically. For what it's worth, I snapped this picture of a fly visiting one of the nectar-producing flowers:
If Disa nivea plants are not as abundant as foxgloves, then it may not matter to the flies that they don't have nectar. Not every foxglove would have nectar in it all the time. For example, a foxglove that has just been visited by a fly will be empty for the next fly that comes along soon after the first one. So, if the orchids are rare, the flies may simply "think" that they are empty foxgloves.
Incidentally, Darwin didn't really have a farm, did he? He just had a big house with gardens.
Corante: technology, business, media, law, and culture news from the blogosphere
OUR PUBLICATIONS:
Corante is a trusted, unbiased source on technology, business, law, science, and culture that’s authored by leading commentators and thinkers in their respective fields. Corante also produces premium conferences and publications that help decision-makers better understand their industries and the world around them.
Corante Blogs
Corante Blogs examine, through the eyes of leading observers, analysts, thinkers, and doers, critical themes and memes in technology, business, law, science, and culture.
Vin Crosbie, on the challenges, financial and otherwise, that newspaper publishers are facing: "The real problem, Mr. Newspaperman, isn't that your content isn't online or isn't online with multimedia. It's your content. Specifically, it's what you report, which stories you publish, and how you publish them to people, who, by the way, have very different individual interests. The problem is the content you're giving them, stupid; not the platform its on."
by Vin Crosbie in Rebuilding Media
There's a problem in the drug industry that people have recognized for some years, but we're not that much closer to dealing with it than we were then. We keep coming up with these technologies and techniques which seem as if they might be able to help us with some of our nastiest problems - I'm talking about genomics in all its guises, and metabolic profiling, and naturally the various high-throughput screening platforms, and others. But whether these are helping or not (and opinions sure do vary), one thing that they all have in common is that they generate enormous heaps of data.
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline
Now that the Web labor market is saturated and Web design a static profession, it's not surprising that 'user experience' designers and researchers who've spent their careers online are looking for new worlds to conquer. Some are returning to the “old media” as directors and producers. More are now doing offline consulting (service experience design, social policy design, exhibition design, and so on) under the 'user experience' aegis. They argue that the lessons they've learned on the Web can be applied to phenomena in the physical and social worlds. But there are enormous differences...
by Bob Jacobson in Total Experience
Clay Shirky, in deconstructing Second Life hype: "Second Life is heading towards two million users. Except it isn’t, really... I suspect Second Life is largely a 'Try Me' virus, where reports of a strange and wonderful new thing draw the masses to log in and try it, but whose ability to retain anything but a fraction of those users is limited. The pattern of a Try Me virus is a rapid spread of first time users, most of whom drop out quickly, with most of the dropouts becoming immune to later use."
by Clay Shirky in Many-to-Many
Over the last few years we've seen old barriers to creativity coming down, one after the other. New technologies and services makes it trivial to publish text, whether by blog or by print-on-demand. Digital photography has democratised a previously expensive hobby. And we're seeing the barriers to movie-making crumble, with affordable high-quality cameras and video hosting provided by YouTube or Google Video and their ilk... Music making has long been easy for anyone to engage in, but technology has made high-quality recording possible without specialised equipment, and the internet has revolutionised distribution, drastically disintermediating the music industry... What's left? Software maybe? Or maybe not."
by Suw Charman in Strange Attractor
Derek Lowe on the news that the Nobel Prize for medicine has gone to Craig Mello and Andrew Fire for their breakthrough work: "RNA interference is probably going to have a long climb before it starts curing many diseases, because many of those problems are even tougher than usual in its case. That doesn't take away from the discovery, though, any more than the complications of off-target effects take away from it when you talk about RNAi's research uses in cell culture. The fact that RNA interference is trickier than it first looked, in vivo or in vitro, is only to be expected. What breakthrough isn't?"
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline
Andrew Phelps: "Recently my WoW guild has been having a bit of a debate on the merits of Player-vs.-Player (PvP) within Azeroth. My personal opinion on this is that PvP has its merits, and can be incredible fun, but the system within WoW is horridly, horribly broken. It takes into account the concept of the battle, but battle without consequence, without emotive context, and most importantly, without honor..."
From later in the piece: "When I talk about this with people (thus far anyway) I typically get one of two responses, either 'yeah, right on!' or 'hey, it’s war, and war isn’t honorable – grow the hell up'. There is a lot to be said for that argument – but the problem is that war in the real historical world has very different constraints that are utterly absent from fantasized worlds..."
by Andrew Phelps in Got Game
Derek Lowe: "So, you're developing a drug candidate. You've settled on what looks like a good compound - it has the activity you want in your mouse model of the disease, it's not too hard to make, and it's not toxic. Everything looks fine. Except. . .one slight problem. Although the compound has good blood levels in the mouse and in the dog, in rats it's terrible. For some reason, it just doesn't get up there. Probably some foul metabolic pathway peculiar to rats (whose innards are adapted, after all, for dealing with every kind of garbage that comes along). So, is this a problem?.."
by Derek Lowe in In the Pipeline
Bob Jacobson, on shopping at his local Albertsons supermarket where he had "one of the worst customer experiences" of his life: "Say what you will about the Safeway chain or the Birkenstock billionaires who charge through the roof for Whole Foods' organic fare, they know how to create shopping environments that create a more pleasurable experience, at its best (as at Whole Foods) quite enjoyable. Even the warehouses like Costco and its smaller counterpart, Smart & Final, do just fine: they have no pretentions, but neither do they dump virtual garbage on the consumer merely to create another trivial revenue stream, all for the sake of promotions in the marketing department..."
by Strange Attractor in Total Experience
Kevin Anderson: "First off, I want to say that I really admire the ambition of the Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free. It is one of the boldest statements made by any media company that participation needs to be central to a radical revamp of traditional content strategies... It is, therfore, not hugely surprising to find that Comment is Free is having a few teething troubles..."
by Kevin Anderson in strange
Corante Developments
Here you will find the latest news from Corante including updates on upcoming events, new initiatives, product and publication launches, and more.
It was with shock that I returned home from a night out last night to hear the news of Russell's passing. How terribly, terribly sad. Most of all for him, as he'd seemed buoyant, healthier, and content when I'd last seen him several months ago when he was in town - he was happy that work was busy and rewarding and was having fun with it but most of all was thrilled about how things were going with his girlfriend, Ellen.
I've known Russ for what seems like ages now (in a good way) though in fact it's only been about six or seven years since the early days of "commercial" blogging when he started working on various projects at and around Corante. He was a diligent, committed, and prolific journalist who had impressively and more ably than others been able to make the transition from the old-school way of doing things to the new. He had his quirks, as we all do, but I greatly valued that he was good-natured, collegial, reliable, quick to adopt, trustworthy, eager to learn, and earnest in his interest in helping others better understand what he wrote about.
He was also, it should be said, a kind and thoughtful soul and it was the rare conversation in which he didn't ask, with sincerity, about what he knew of my life, e.g. our new babe, and we didn't talk as seemingly old friends about our lives and respective paths. I can't say I knew him very well, of course, but in our half-dozen get-togethers over the years and dozens of conversations I got a good sense of the man: he cared about learning and sharing and his bearing was earnest and ego-less and we'll miss him for that and more.
We wanted to let you know about a discount to New Comm Forum, the annual event event put on by our friends at the Society for New Communications Research. The conference, which runs from April 22-25, will feature many of the field's leading observers and is an important event for those looking, in the words of SNCR, to "better understand new communications tools, technologies and emerging modes of communication, and their effect on traditional media, professional communications, business, culture and society."
Check out the event's website and, if you're interested in attending, be sure to use the code supplied below for a special discount.
EARLY BIRD PRICING - NOW UNTIL FEB. 15th
NewComm Forum Conference - $995.
Pre-conference or post-conference session - $195.
SNCR Jam only - $75.
REGULAR PRICING - AFTER FEB. 15th
NewComm Forum Conference - $1095.
Pre-conference or post-conference session - $249.
SNCR Jam only - $75.
CORANTE READER DISCOUNTS
NewComm Forum Conference - save an additional $100
Use discount code: NCF08100
Pre-conference or post-conference session - save an additional $45.
Use discount code: NCF0845
We've been remiss in letting you know about two new independent blogs we've helped launch in the past month or so.
The first - the ConversationHub - is a companion blog to Supernova 2007, the latest edition of Kevin Werbach's excellent conference on all things connected. As the conference site says: "Supernova examines the effects of an increasingly connected world on business, life, and public policy. As disparate physical and social networks link with one another, a new societal network is rapidly evolving... The New Network is greater than the sum of its parts. It challenges us to re-create everything from the software and hardware we use...to the business models we employ...to the information and entertainment we encounter...to the ways we work and play."
Visit the ConversationHub and you'll find several dozen leading thinkers and doers, led by a few notable ringleaders, weighing in on the themes and trends of the day in technology and business. We encourage you to tune in - feel free to comment and even suggest topics and ideas for posts.
The second blog - Mobile Messaging 2.0 - convenes about a dozen top observers of the mobile messaging space for an intense discussion of the industry and where it's headed. Among its contributors are leading commentators, journalists and players in the field - tune in and you'll find them touching on topics such as mobile device design, messaging platforms, market pressures, user-generated content, interface design, and much, much more.
Also, if you visit the site, which is sponsored by Airwide Solutions, this week, you'll find live coverage and commentary from Global Messaging 2007, to which several of our contributors have traveled to hear about the latest developments from a broad spectrum of the industry's players and providers.
Be sure to catch the Office 2.0 Conference and hear from and engage with leading thinkers and doers in this exciting new market. Find out more here and be sure to use the code "GLDRK" for a special discount for Corante readers.
1. Carl Zimmer on August 29, 2005 11:11 AM writes...
Hello? Is this thing on? Testing...
Permalink to Comment2. Cameron Peters on August 29, 2005 11:41 AM writes...
Great post, Carl. There was a PBS program titled Deep Jungle a few months ago and in one episode they followed a biologist who was trying to film the hawk moth for the first time. They kind of gave the impression the moth had not been seen before, just predicted; maybe it was the first time it had been photographed? By the way, I'm always impressed by the wide variety of sources you draw upon. Do you search and read the literature 20 hours a day, or do you have other means of finding all of this info? What's your secret?
Permalink to Comment3. Scott Belyea on August 29, 2005 03:53 PM writes...
A lovely article, with writing that matches the elegance of the topic.
However - "Over 8,000 species of orchids are believed to practice deceit."
Hmmm. What does this say about the Intelligent Designer??? :-)
Permalink to Comment4. Alex on August 29, 2005 06:06 PM writes...
You've a real gift for explaining complex biology in simple terms.
A few years ago I was in South Africa and met some of the scientists involved in the fly-flower research. It's one of the most charismatic study systems I've seen, both entomologically and botanically. For what it's worth, I snapped this picture of a fly visiting one of the nectar-producing flowers:
http://myrmecos.net/insects/Philoliche1.html
Permalink to Comment5. linguist on August 30, 2005 11:16 AM writes...
Speaking of orchids, apparently they've got some stinky ones blooming right now in Australia. Good timing.
Permalink to Commenthttp://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-foul30.html
6. D. B. Light on August 30, 2005 11:47 AM writes...
Nice post -- co-evolution is a tricky subject to discuss, but you are a great explainer.
Permalink to Comment7. Aydin on August 30, 2005 10:03 PM writes...
If Disa nivea plants are not as abundant as foxgloves, then it may not matter to the flies that they don't have nectar. Not every foxglove would have nectar in it all the time. For example, a foxglove that has just been visited by a fly will be empty for the next fly that comes along soon after the first one. So, if the orchids are rare, the flies may simply "think" that they are empty foxgloves.
Incidentally, Darwin didn't really have a farm, did he? He just had a big house with gardens.
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