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 Boston area?: Join us on June 11 for Startups and the Cloud, a free event on cloud computing with insights from Intuit founder Scott Cook and others
There was a time not that long ago when sequencing a single gene would be hailed as a scientific milestone. But then came a series of breakthroughs that sped up the process: clever ideas for how to cut up genes and rapidly identify the fragments, the design of robots that could do this work twenty-four hours a day, and powerful computers programmed to make sense of the results. Instead of single genes, entire genomes began to be sequenced. This year marks the tenth anniversary of the publication of the first complete draft of the entire genome of a free-living species (a nasty little microbe called Haemophilus influenzae). Since then, hundreds of genomes have emerged, from flies, mice, humans, and many more, each made up of thousands of genes. More individual genes have been sequenced from the DNA of thousands of other species. In August, an international consortium of databases announced that they now had 100 billion "letters" from the genes of 165,000 different species.
But this data glut has created a new problem. Scientists don't know what many of the genes are for.
The classic method for figuring out what a gene is for is good old benchwork. Scientists use the gene's code to generate a protein and then figure out what sort of chemical tricks the protein can perform. Perhaps it's good at slicing some other particular protein in half, or sticking two other proteins together. It's not easy to tackle this question with brute force, since a mystery protein may interact with any one of the thousands of other proteins in an organism. One way scientists can narrow down their search is by seeing what happens to organisms if they take out the particular gene. The organisms may suddenly become unable to digest their favorite food or withstand heat, or show some other change that can serve as a clue.
Even today, though, these experiments still demand a lot of time, in large part because they're still too complex for robots and computers. Even when it comes to E. coli, a bacterium that thousands of scientists have studied for decades, the functions of a thousand of its genes remain unknown.
This dilemma has helped give rise to a new kind of science called bioinformatics. It's an exciting field, despite its woefully dull name. Its mission is to use computers to help make sense of molecular biology--in this case, by traveling through vast oceans of online information in search of clues to how genes work.
One of the most reliable ways to find out what a gene is for is to find another gene with a very similar sequence. The human genes for hemoglobin and the chimpanzee genes for hemoglobin are a case in point. Since our ancestors diverged about six million years ago, the genes in each lineage have mutated a little, but not much. The proteins they produce still have a similar structure, which allows them to do the same thing: ferry oxygen through the bloodstream. So if you happen to be trolling through the genome of a gorilla--another close ape relative--and discover a gene that's very similar to chimpanzee and human hemoglobins, you've got good reason to think that you've found a gorilla hemoglobin gene.
Scientists sometimes use this same method to match different genes in the same genome. There isn't just one hemoglobin gene in humans but seven. They carry out different slightly functions, some carrying oxygen in the fetus, for example, and others in the adult. This gene family, as it's known, is the result of ancient mistakes. From time to time, the cellular machinery for copying genes accidentally creates a second copy of a gene. Scientists have several lines of evidence for this. Some people carry around extra copies of genes not found in other people. Scientists have also tracked gene duplication in laboratory experiments with bacteria and other organisms.
In many cases, these extra genes offer no benefit and disappear over the generations. But in some cases, extra genes appear to provide an evolutionary advantage. They may mutate until they take on new functions, and gradually spread through an entire species. Round after round of gene duplication can turn a single gene into an entire family of genes. Knowing that genes come in families means that if you find a human gene that looks like hemoglobin genes, it's a fair guess that it does much the same thing as they do.
This method works pretty well, and bioinformaticists (please! find a better name!) have written a number of programs to search databases for good matches between genes. But these programs tend to pick the low-hanging fruit: they are good at recognizing relatively easy matches and not so good at identifying more distant cousins. Over time, related genes can undergo different mutations rates, which can make it difficult to recognize their relationship simply by eyeballing them side by side. Another hazard is the way a gene can be "borrowed" for a new function. For example, snake venom genes turn out to have evolved from families of genes that carry out very different functions in the heart, liver, and other organs. These sorts of evolutionary events can make it hard for simple gene-matching to yield clues to what a new gene is for.
To improve their hunt for the function of new genes, bioinformaticists are building new programs. One of the newest, called SIFTER, was designed by a team of computer scientists and biologists at UC Berkeley. They outline some of their early results in the October issue of PLOS Computational Biology (open access paper here). SIFTER is different than previous programs in that it relies on a detailed understanding of the evolutionary history of a gene. As a result, it offers significantly better results.
To demonstrate SIFTER's powers of prediction, the researchers tested it on well-studied families of genes--ones that contained a number of genes for which there was very good experimental evidence for their functions. They used SIFTER to come up with hypotheses about the function of the genes, and then turned to the results of experiments on those genes to see if the hypotheses were right.
Here's how a typical trial of SIFTER went. The researchers examined the family of (big breath) Adenosine-5'-Monophosphate/Adenosine Deaminase genes. Scientists have identified 128 genes in this family, in mammals, insects, fungi, protozoans, and bacteria. With careful experiments, scientists have figured out what 33 of these genes do. The genes produce proteins that generally hack off a particular part of various molecules. In some cases, they help produce nitrogen compounds we need for metabolism, while in other cases they help change the information encoded in genes as it is translated into proteins. In still other cases they have acquired an extra segment of DNA that allows them to help stimulate growth.
The SIFTER team first reconstructed the evolutionary tree of this gene family, calculating how all 128 genes are related to one other. The shows how an ancestral gene that existed in microbes billions of years ago was passed down to different lineages, duplicating and mutating along the way. The researchers then gave SIFTER the experimental results from just five of the 128 genes in the family. The program used this information to infer how the function of the genes evolved over time. That insight then allowed it to come up with hypotheses about what the other 123 genes in the family do.
Aside from the 5 genes whose function the researchers had given SIFTER, there are 28 with good experimental evidence. The scientists compared the real functions of these genes to SIFTER's guesses. It got 27 out of 28 right.
SIFTER's 96% accuracy rate is significantly better than other programs that don't take evolution so carefully into consideration. Still, the Berkeley team cautions that they have more work to do. The statistics that the program uses (Bayesian probability) get harder to use as the range of possible functions gets bigger. What's more, the model of evolution that it relies on is fairly simple compared to what biologists now understand about how evolution works. But these aren't insurmountable problems. They're the stuff to expect in SIFTER 2.0 or some other future upgrade.
Those who claim to have a legitimate alternative to evolution might want to try to match SIFTER. They could take the basic principles of whatever they advocate and use them to come up with a mathematical method for comparing genes. No stealing any SIFTER code allowed--this has to be original work that doesn't borrow from evolutionary theory.
They could then use their method to compare the 128 genes of the Adenosine-5'-Monophosphate/Adenosine Deaminase family. Next, they could take the functions of five of the genes, and use that information to predict how the other 123 genes work. And then they could see how well their predictions were by looking at the other 28 genes for which there's good experimental evidence about their function.
All the data to run this test is available for free online, so there's no excuse for these antievolutionists not to take the test. Would they match SIFTER's score of 96%? Would they do better than random? I doubt we'll ever find out. Those who attack evolution these days aren't much for specific predictions of the sort SIFTER makes, despite the mathematical jargon they like to use. Until they can meet the SIFTER challenge, don't expect most scientists to take them very seriously.
Identifying the functions of genes is important work. Scientists need to know how genes work to figure out the causes of diseases and figure out how to engineer microbes to produce insulin and other important molecules. The future of medicine and biotech, it appears, lies in life's distant past.
Update Monday 10:30 am: John Wilkins says that bioinformatician is the proper term, although no improvement. I then googled both terms and found tens of thousands of hits for both (although bioinformatician has twice as many as bioinformaticist). Is there an authority we can turn to? And can it try to come up with a better name? Gene voyagers? Matrix masters?
Very nice. FYI, the professional name is "bioinformaticians", which is absolutely no improvement.
This supports the use of phylogenies as inductive tools, rather than as hypotheses (which of course they also are) - if you know the properties of two branches of a clade, then you can infer with high probability for any deep property (i.e., not just a specific adaptation) what the properties of all the intervening branches are. Contrast this with the pre-phylogenetic approach to classification based on grades - there was little inference apart from the characters used to create the grade.
Carl, I desperately need someone to explain in nontech talk what a microarray is and how it works. Over to you...
Funny you should mention microarrays - i'm working on a graduate genetics lecture, and i'm doing the array slides right now. If you're interested, i can email them to you with a brief description when i'm done. You can email me at jrtimmer-at-gmail.com if you're interested.
Otherwise, sifter sounds great. I wonder how well it copes with non-biochemical families, like transcription factors or ECM components, which don't have such straightforward functions and don't exist in bacteria.
excellent peek into a bioinformatician's :) world!
Microarrays, simplistically, are chips that have a spot for gene (gene is treated with a flourescent dye) and use a laser and light intensity to measure if a particular gene is active in a test condition. Light intensity varies depending on whether a gene is over active/"expressed", underexpressed or not affected. There are different chips made by different companies with different technologies, but the technology is based on this basic principle.
6. Arun Gupta on October 20, 2005 08:45 AM writes...
Isn't "what is a gene for" really "what is this gene for in the context provided by all the other genes"? There is a similar context for the operation of a human gene and its chimpanzee analog, again explained by evolution. Or does the protein that a gene encodes really have a function independent of context?
At the risk of detracting from the actual content of this interesting article, I wonder what the ID/Creationist crowd would make of a post like this. It says nothing about the "debate" over of evolution/creationism, and yet it is impossible to make sense of this post outside of an acceptance of evolutionary theory. When scientists say that evolution is the central concept underlying all modern biology, this is the sort of thing they are talking about.
Perhaps the good folks in Dover, PA might read a few more articles like this, and ask themselves if a creationist account of life would adequately prepare their students for this type of study. Can you possibly talk about the similarity between ape and human gene lineages if you believe this similarity is simply a coincidence, and not due to the fact of a common ape/human ancestor? How can you cure a disease if you believe the immune system was created by a miracle?
Reading these articles might also remind the Dover School Board that scientists are not trying to undermine their faith by insisting that evolution be taught in high school. It would be hard to read this article and think Carl was attempting to replace your religion. Science is about understanding genes and atoms, not the meaning of life.
I guess I would have gone with the unlovely "computational biology", on analogy with "computational linguistics". Then, of course, a practitioner is a computational biologist. At least this proposal clarifies that the field is part of biology, and that practitioners are a kind of biologist.
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.
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1. coturnix on October 17, 2005 12:25 AM writes...
Thank you. Waaaay cool!
Permalink to Comment2. John Wilkins on October 17, 2005 03:55 AM writes...
Very nice. FYI, the professional name is "bioinformaticians", which is absolutely no improvement.
This supports the use of phylogenies as inductive tools, rather than as hypotheses (which of course they also are) - if you know the properties of two branches of a clade, then you can infer with high probability for any deep property (i.e., not just a specific adaptation) what the properties of all the intervening branches are. Contrast this with the pre-phylogenetic approach to classification based on grades - there was little inference apart from the characters used to create the grade.
Carl, I desperately need someone to explain in nontech talk what a microarray is and how it works. Over to you...
Permalink to Comment3. John Timmer on October 17, 2005 08:13 AM writes...
RE: John Wilkins
Funny you should mention microarrays - i'm working on a graduate genetics lecture, and i'm doing the array slides right now. If you're interested, i can email them to you with a brief description when i'm done. You can email me at jrtimmer-at-gmail.com if you're interested.
Permalink to CommentOtherwise, sifter sounds great. I wonder how well it copes with non-biochemical families, like transcription factors or ECM components, which don't have such straightforward functions and don't exist in bacteria.
4. veena on October 17, 2005 10:17 AM writes...
excellent peek into a bioinformatician's :) world!
Permalink to CommentMicroarrays, simplistically, are chips that have a spot for gene (gene is treated with a flourescent dye) and use a laser and light intensity to measure if a particular gene is active in a test condition. Light intensity varies depending on whether a gene is over active/"expressed", underexpressed or not affected. There are different chips made by different companies with different technologies, but the technology is based on this basic principle.
5. nicnicholson on October 18, 2005 12:32 PM writes...
Hey, how about biominers? That's what they do--digging through gene sequences for nuggets of information.
It would have to be pronounced differently than bio-miners, to have a ring of authority...
How 'bout BiOminers? Accent on the "O", soft "i".
I think it'll catch on! ;)
Permalink to Comment6. Arun Gupta on October 20, 2005 08:45 AM writes...
Permalink to CommentIsn't "what is a gene for" really "what is this gene for in the context provided by all the other genes"? There is a similar context for the operation of a human gene and its chimpanzee analog, again explained by evolution. Or does the protein that a gene encodes really have a function independent of context?
7. John on October 20, 2005 11:33 AM writes...
At the risk of detracting from the actual content of this interesting article, I wonder what the ID/Creationist crowd would make of a post like this. It says nothing about the "debate" over of evolution/creationism, and yet it is impossible to make sense of this post outside of an acceptance of evolutionary theory. When scientists say that evolution is the central concept underlying all modern biology, this is the sort of thing they are talking about.
Perhaps the good folks in Dover, PA might read a few more articles like this, and ask themselves if a creationist account of life would adequately prepare their students for this type of study. Can you possibly talk about the similarity between ape and human gene lineages if you believe this similarity is simply a coincidence, and not due to the fact of a common ape/human ancestor? How can you cure a disease if you believe the immune system was created by a miracle?
Reading these articles might also remind the Dover School Board that scientists are not trying to undermine their faith by insisting that evolution be taught in high school. It would be hard to read this article and think Carl was attempting to replace your religion. Science is about understanding genes and atoms, not the meaning of life.
Permalink to Comment8. ACW on October 24, 2005 01:46 PM writes...
I guess I would have gone with the unlovely "computational biology", on analogy with "computational linguistics". Then, of course, a practitioner is a computational biologist. At least this proposal clarifies that the field is part of biology, and that practitioners are a kind of biologist.
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