Dismay as funding for UK’s ‘world-beating’ Covid trackers is axed | Coronavirus | The Guardian

March 16, 2022

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/mar/12/dismay-as-funding-for-uks-world-beating-covid-trackers-is-axed


Google Docs getting email template transfers into Gmail – 9to5Google

March 16, 2022

https://9to5google.com/2022/03/15/google-docs-gmail-template/


COVID’s true death toll: much higher than official records

March 15, 2022

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-00708-0?utm_term=Autofeed&utm_campaign=nature&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Twitter#Echobox=1647303192


BBS students selecting thesis labs

March 14, 2022

…. below are some topics to discuss. Going over these points may help minimize future miscommunication or conflict.

QT{{”
Norms of communication: How often will a student and adviser meet? What communication method(s) (email, in person, Slack, etc) does the adviser prefer?
Time: What are the normal hours of operation in the lab? What is the policy on vacation and time off for religious observances and holidays? What are the expectations for research on weekends or at night?
Thesis project: What is the role of the adviser and student in formulating a project? How much will a project overlap with projects of other members of the lab?
Feedback: Is feedback provided one-on-one, in lab meetings, both? Authorship: What are the lab’s rules on who is an author and who is a first author?
Publications: Does the adviser expect a first author paper prior to graduating? (Note that some graduate programs may already have expectations on first author papers.)
Conferences: What is the lab’s policy on attending
national/international conferences?
Career/professional development: How much time is available to participate in career and professional development activities? What role(s) would the adviser play in career/professional development? “}}


Hybrid labs piece went up on Friday

March 14, 2022

https://twitter.com/KendallSciWrite/status/1503508908085760000

CAREER FEATURE
11 March 2022

How hybrid working took hold in science

Two years since COVID-19 forced labs to shut down, group leaders describe how academic research has changed, perhaps forever. Kendall Powell

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-00729-9

QT:{{”

Principal investigators (PIs), including those who started research groups during the pandemic, are now incorporating the best parts of pandemic flexibility into the future of research. “It’s hard to see any good when we are heading toward six million deaths,” says Mark Gerstein, a computational biologist at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. “But the pandemic has taught us new ways of thinking about things.”

For example, Gerstein has learnt that some group members work most efficiently at home, whereas others really need to come in to work. “I have been a little surprised that the tails of that spectrum have been so wide.”

Gerstein says that increased flexibility should also help to ease some of the thorniest problems that early-career researchers can face, such as childcare support and the two-body problem — the challenge of two partners needing to find a job in the same geographical location. “I want to be very flexible,” Gerstein says. “That’s what talented people want in their workplace.”
….

Hybrid lab working has also changed the dynamics of groups. Gerstein’s weekly Zoom meeting with his 40-strong team can last for several hours, but he’s fine with a healthy dose of zoning out, turning cameras off and multitasking for those who don’t need to engage in the main conversation. His group uses a Google Doc to draw up the agenda and the members share screens to annotate it in real time. He then saves the final document to the lab’s Dropbox account.

Science-ing from home

“It is efficient and works even better than in-person meetings,” says Gerstein, who plans to retain video meetings to accommodate childcare responsibilities, illness and scheduling conflicts. “Now, everyone is equal, even our collaborators in Europe or China. I don’t think we’ll ever go back to a large in-person lab meeting.”

Gerstein has also been rethinking his computational group’s workspace. “Do we want that same traditional look where people come in every day and sit at desks?” he asks. “I’m sceptical — no one wants to be in open-plan cubes.”

Instead, he sees his lab of the future as being one in which, ideally, researchers have their own office and can close the door when they need to think, code or write. There also needs to be a room big enough for three or four people, to host meetings or conference calls. Hybrid working could mean a lot of unoccupied space on certain days. He’s considering a ‘hotelling’ option, with lab members booking larger office spaces in advance as needed, alongside everyone having a smaller dedicated workstation in the group’s shared space.

“}}


How I organise my Mac as a Software Developer? | by Shrishty Chandra | Mac O’Clock | Feb, 2022 | Medium

March 13, 2022

How I organise my Mac as a Software Developer? | by Shrishty Chandra | Mac O’Clock | Feb, 2022 | Medium

https://medium.com/macoclock/how-i-organise-my-mac-as-a-software-developer-7ff8a2a0bfa


Kids show mysteriously low levels of COVID antibodies

March 13, 2022

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-00681-8


Tracking COVID-19 infections: time for change

March 13, 2022

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-00336-8


Commit to transparent COVID data until the WHO declares the pandemic is over

March 13, 2022

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-00424-9


The Finest in Custom Printed Lego(R) Minifigs and Bricks – Citizen Brick

March 13, 2022

https://citizenbrick.com/