Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Check out these Essays images:

SMOKING AROUND CHILDREN: "ESSAY ON SMOKING AROUND CHILDREN" by R.L.Huffstutter

Essays


Image by roberthuffstutter

Read my essay about smoking around children

wordle of the follow the sound essay

Essays


Image by believekevin

this is a wordle.net of my essay about bitch ass darius' "follow the sound" mixtape.

www.kevindriscoll.info/todomundo/2008/05/02/dancefloor-st...

A few nice Comic images I found:

Sarah savoring her victory at a King of the Hill game after Comic-Con. Granted, it isn't much of a hill, and comic book geeks run away in tears when you wrap their Superman cape around their head. But she was proud of the victory none the less.

Comic


Image by colorblindPICASO

Shot after a long day of walking around at Comic-Con. You'd be surprised how inviting a shady piece of grass can be after passing approximately 200 fully dressed Imperial Storm Troopers in one day. As you can see, she is staring down a passing group of anime samurai who have their eye on our hill.

Comic-Con Costume 2

Comic


Image by heath_bar

Comic-Con 2008

Click here for my Blog.
Click here for info on my Comic-Con trip.


Comic-Con Costume Girls 03

Comic


Image by heath_bar

Comic-Con 2008: Rinoa from Final Fantasy 8 (Right)
Check out these Biology images:

Molecular Biology Building

Biology


Image by SD Dirk

Opened in 1992, the Molecular Biology Building is a truly unique structure. The one and one-half ton "G-Nome" figures atop each of the four corners of the building provide the first clues that this building is unique. Then, a closer inspection shows DNA helixes trailing down the building from each of the gnomes. The airy atrium provides a sense of openness inside the building, and helps to highlight the DNA molecule, in mosaic tile, that graces the floor of the atrium. In short, public art, a requirement for all newly constructed state buildings since 1978, is built into the actual structure of the Molecular Biology Building. This impressive four story structure give students and faculty state-of-the-art laboratory and classroom facilities in which to generate new knowledge in disease resistance, environmental protection, genetic alterations, and a host of other topics that will ultimately benefit virtually the entire planet.

PhotonQ-Antoine Danchin on Synthetic Biology

Biology


Image by PhOtOnQuAnTiQuE

Meeting with Antoine Danchin last night, before his first talk (part of a series of three, this month in Paris) on Synthetic Biology. A curious mind for sure, full of passion and happiness about his work and research. But more than that, it seems like he was "feeling", more than just thinking, about all the possibilities, implication, dangers and wonders, this field may lead to.

A funny and "first time" thing happened, when I ask him if he would be interested and happy to be part of the upcoming Conference / Project, in am working on at the moment.
His first thought was. Yes...but....I' ll need to be sure of the ideology of this conference...
I had no idea what he was talking about at first so I just laugh...then stopped and thought for a second..and asked..what do you mean ? Ho you know..sometimes you have groups.. like the Vatican, behind this kind of proposition, because of the subject and implication.... I guess their was some kind of "not from the Vatican thing" in my laugh..because he smiled back O=)

Anyway, while talking with him, few interesting things came up. First, the lack of researchers in France, working on synthetic biology. Why ? First, because their is no risk taking in exploring new ways of thinking, approach, ideas. Then because most scientists in their 40th don' t (or want to) understand it. But young generation do. Because biology is becoming a science of information. And the youngest are more and more use to deal with this kind of approach and way of thinking today.Thanks to computers, information and complex sciences etc.. Their will be a change soon, and it will be very fast.

Another thing was that " We usually think that the world is constitute of 4 dimensions. You have matter, energy, space and time. But I think we really need to add Information as a fifth one. To think a lot deeper about it, and its implications on science and our perception of life and the Universe.

Then after a while, talking about some of his current research he told me...I think I may have found the genes of Maxwell's demon. (and I don' t need to tell you how exited he was to tell me that..and how I was listening to him.)
One of the experiment he is working on at the moment, with a team in Hong Kong (if I remember correctly) may have given him an answer he has been looking for a long time apparently.

They introduced genetically-modified organisms in a control environment. "Taking out" the genes that allows them to feed on their natural food supply.
But add in this environment a new source of food, that they were not able to assimilate and use in anyway.
Then they waited...nothing happened for the next few hours, days...week....but then something did.
"We discovered that a mutant-variation of these organisms had emerge and found a way of exploiting this new food supply. Now you see, the question was, how did they do it... and I think I may have found how... found the genes of Maxwell's demon, that transmit that information".
The conference had to start few minutes after, so I left him, with the head full of questions.. But I' ll have more info and understanding of all the implication of what he was trying to tell me in the next few days or next Thursday for the second meeting.

If you are around Paris, and free on Thursday and the next one, the talks are from 18h30 to 20h...20h30. Fell free to come and feed your mind with his two next conferences, at La Cité des Sciences- La Vilette =)

*Antoine Danchin PhD DSc is the director of the Department Genomes and Genetics at the Institut Pasteur in Paris where he heads the Genetics of Bacterial Genomes Unit. He is a world authority in the study of microbial genomes. ...

Have a look to his great and very interesting Personal WebSite . Full of great thoughts, quotes, links, papers etc...



Check out these Engineering images:

Corps of Engineers restoring oysters in Chesapeake tributaries

Engineering


Image by The U.S. Army

Norfolk District Oceanographer Dave Schulte displays a cluster of oysters which were growing on the district's sanctuary reefs in the Great Wicomico River.

See more at www.army.mil

Corps of Engineers restoring oysters in Chesapeake tributaries


USA Science and Engineering Festival (201010230007HQ)

Engineering


Image by nasa hq photo

Priniciples of air flow are explained to visitors to the wind tunnel exhibit at the USA Science and Engineering Festival, Saturday, Oct. 23, 2010, at Freedom Plaza in Washington. NASA, joined with more than 500 science organizations this weekend to inspire the next generation of scientists and engineers during the first national science and engineering festival held in the nation's capital. Photo Credit: (NASA/Paul E. Alers)

Scene at engineer's dump

Engineering


Image by National Library of Scotland

Some horse-pulled wagons unloading supplies at an engineers dump. Judging by the curved sheets of corrugated iron, large wooden boards and timbers, it appears likely that this shipment is for construction engineers. These supplies were probably used for building dugouts and huts behind the front line.

Transporting such bulky supplies to the front would have involved several journeys. After shipping the cargo from England to France, trains would then bring the supplies closer to the front line. Following that, horse-drawn wagons would carry the supplies closer to where they were needed, then soldier working parties would take the equipment to its final destination.

[Original reads: 'BRITISH OFFICIAL PHOTO FROM THE WESTERN FRONT. Scene at engineer's dump.']

digital.nls.uk/74548002
Check out these Fishing images:

Negroes fishing in creek near cotton plantations outside Belzoni, Miss. (LOC)

Fishing


Image by The Library of Congress

Wolcott, Marion Post,, 1910-1990,, photographer.

Negroes fishing in creek near cotton plantations outside Belzoni, Miss.

1939 Oct.

1 slide : color.

Notes:
Title from FSA or OWI agency caption.
Transfer from U.S. Office of War Information, 1944.

Subjects:
Fishing
African Americans
United States--Mississippi--Belzoni

Format: Slides--Color

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

Part Of: Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Collection 11671-8 (DLC) 93845501

General information about the FSA/OWI Color Photographs is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsac

Persistent URL: hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsac.1a34331

Call Number: LC-USF35-106



Looking at the fish

Fishing


Image by bslmmrs

my recent uploads on flickriver



Science Central turns 15 Saturday

Science Central celebrated 15 years of hands-on fun learning for the community Saturday.

Read more on WANE-TV Fort Wayne







'Science must respect life'

BARCELONA - POPE Benedict XVI called on science to respect life and dignity on Sunday as he blessed the first stone of a new disabled children's residence in Spain, alluding to the selection of embryos to eliminate deformities. Remarkable advances in medicine had improved care for those most in need, said the 83-year-old pontiff, dressed in a white cassock, on the last day of a weekend visit to ...

Read more on Straits Times







AAAS/Science Family of e-Resources Now Indexed in Ex Libris Primo Central

The American Association for the Advancement of Science , publisher of the journal Science, has partnered with Ex Libris Group to provide integrated access to its online content via Ex Libris’ Primo Central Publisher Program.

Read more on Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance













Family to complete memoirs of the late Rev Yao

THE family of the late Datuk Seri Rev Yao Ping Hua, a civil servant whose career spanned Sarawak’s administration from White Rajah rule to Malaysia, plans to complete his memoirs to keep alive his many experiences.

Read more on The Star