Messages de Rogue Scholar

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Publié in iPhylo

This post is inspired by the Pharaoh exhibition at the NGV in Melbourne, Australia. This is a beautifully displayed exhibition of objects from the British Museum, London. It has all the trappings of a modern exhibition, beautiful lighting, a custom sound track, and lots of social media coverage. But I found it immensely frustrating to visit.

Publié in Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

The world is full of wonderful animals, both extant and extinct, and they all have names. As a result, it’s fairly common for newly named animals to be given names already in use — as for example with the giant Miocene sperm whale “ Leviathan “ (now Livyatan ). BUt there are ways to avoid walking into this problem, and in a helpful post on the Dinosaur Mailing Group, Ben Creisler recently posted a summary.

Publié in BLOG ATARRAYA
Auteur Atarraya

Los seises de la catedral de Puebla en el virreinato por Gustavo Medellín Luna El canto ha sido uno de los elementos más destacados en los ritos católicos. Pero, poco se sabe del trabajo de los niños cantores quienes hacían la labor de voz femenina, es decir, la de tiple; conocida ahora como soprano.

Publié in Triton Station

I want to take another step back in perspective from the last post to say a few words about what the radial acceleration relation (RAR) means and what it doesn’t mean. Here it is again: This information was not available when the dark matter paradigm was developed. We observed excess motion, like flat rotation curves, and inferred the existence of extra mass. That was perfectly reasonable given the information available at the time.

Publié in Sauropod Vertebra Picture of the Week

Last time we talked about the evident hijacking of the PalArch Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. No-one seemed to know what had happened or how. I managed to track down Andre J. Veldmeijer, who was involved with the PalArch journals a while back. Based on my Facebook Messenger discussions with him, here’s what we now know: Andre is not involved any more with these journals.

Publié in Gemeinsamer Blog der DINI AGs
Auteur Gastautorin(nen) und -autor(en)

Anfang Juni berichtete Nature über das Anliegen des japanischen Wissenschaftsministeriums, 10 Milliarden Yen in den Ausbau von institutionellen Open-Access-Repositorien zu investieren (Singh Chawla, 2024). Diese Initiative bietet einen guten Anlass, um auf dem 112. BiblioCon über die Zukunft von institutionellen Open-Access-Repositorien zu sprechen.

Publié in Math ∩ Programming
Auteur Jeremy Kun

This blog now accepts webmentions. I used webmention.io and webmention.js for live rendering. You can see an example at the end of my old Bezier Curves post. After my initial experiments with POSSE, I’ve made a few improvements to the system. Now shortform posts are syndicated to Mastodon, Bluesky, and Twitter, and the links to the syndicated posts are automatically added to the end of each post.

Publié in Daniel S. Katz's blog

This post is cross-posted from Upstream: https://doi.org/10.54900/zks0k-pe034 I recently attended the FORCE2024 conference at UCLA. I’m a member of the board of directors of FORCE11, the parent organization for the conference, and the co-located FORCE11 Scholarly Communications Institute (FSCI), which I was not able to attend this year but have taught at in the past.