https://twitter.com/cshperspectives/status/1197272151402962944
Posts Tagged ‘fromemail’
Where are bioRxiv preprints finally published?
November 23, 2019AL William
November 22, 2019bitcoin ATM map
November 21, 2019https://coinatmradar.com
Many in NYC!
Check out this book – “Infinite Powers: How Calculus Reveals the Secrets of the Universe”
November 17, 2019“Infinite Powers: How Calculus Reveals the Secrets of the Universe” by Steven Strogatz.
https://www.amazon.com/Infinite-Powers-Calculus-Reveals-Universe-ebook/dp/B07FKF9DVJ
An Online Voice Recorder? We Just Dropped the Mic 😎
November 2, 2019https://www.rev.com/onlinevoicerecorder
QT:{{”
Straight Outta Your Browser
the Rev Online Voice Recorder!
…this brand-new tool allows you to record audio straight from your desktop or mobile device. No plug-ins or Flash needed. No
complications. Just push Record. Then, DOWNLOAD it: Click the aptly named “Download” button and a MP3 of your recording will start downloading!
“}}
Send Dropbox files to Evernote
November 2, 2019might be useful.. IFTTT alternative.
https://zapier.com/apps/dropbox/integrations/evernote/71/send-dropbox-files-to-evernote
Quantifying the tradeoff between sequencing depth and cell number in single-cell RNA-seq
November 2, 2019Why Is the World So Loud? – The Atlantic
November 2, 2019QT:{{”
“Stéphane Pigeon, an audio-processing engineer based in Brussels, has become the Taylor Swift of white noise, traveling the world recording relaxing soundscapes for his website, myNoise.net, which offers its more than 15,000 daily listeners an encyclopedic compendium of noise-masking tracks that range from “Distant Thunder” to
“Laundromat,” a listener request. (White noise, technically speaking, contains all audible frequencies in equal proportion. In the natural world, falling rain comes close to approximating this pan-frequency shhhhhh.) Impulse noises, such as honking, barking, hammering, and snoring, are the hardest to mask, but Pigeon has tried: While traveling in the Sahara, he recorded “Berber Tent,” a myNoise hit designed to help snorees by harmonizing the gentle whoosh of wind, the burble of boiling water, and the low rattle of snoring.
…
Farther north on Flatbush Avenue, encircled by lowing horns and a wheezing Mister Softee truck, Kanuri used his sound-meter app to measure the ambient noise—a disappointing 75.9 decibels, lower than everyone had thought but still more than 20 decibels above the threshold at which, per a 1974 EPA report, we get distracted or annoyed by sound. (Decibels, which measure volume, are logarithmic: Turn up a sound by 10 decibels, and most people will perceive its loudness as having doubled.)
…
Desperate ears call for desperate measures, and the noise-afflicted go to elaborate lengths to lower the volume. Kanuri taught himself to code so he could analyze New York City’s 311 data and correlate noise complaints with elective districts; he hoped he could hold politicians accountable. … A Wisconsin man who’d re-insulated, re-drywalled, and re-windowed his home was ultimately offered sleeping medication and antidepressants. An apartment dweller in Beijing, fed up with the calisthenics of the kids upstairs, got revenge by attaching a vibrating motor to his ceiling that rattled the family’s floor. The gadget is available for purchase online, where you can also find Coat of Silence paint, AlphaSorb Bass Traps, the Noise Eater Isolation Foot, the Sound Soother Headband, and the Sonic Nausea Electronic Disruption Device, which promises, irresistibly, “inventive payback.”” “}}
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2019/11/the-end-of-silence/598366/
Second fetal brain article…splciing and expression QTL and integration with single cell with WGCNA networks
October 29, 2019https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0092867419310724?dgcid=author
Rebecca L. Walker, Gokul Ramaswami, Christopher Hartl, Nicholas Mancuso, Michael J. Gandal, Luis de la Torre-Ubieta, Bogdan Pasaniuc, Jason L. Stein, Daniel H. Geschwind,
Genetic Control of Expression and Splicing in Developing Human Brain Informs Disease Mechanisms,
Cell,
Volume 179, Issue 3,
2019,
Pages 750-771.e22,
ISSN 0092-8674,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2019.09.021
New cell type analysis in human cortex
October 26, 2019Published: 21 August 2019
Conserved cell types with divergent features in human versus mouse cortex
Rebecca D. Hodge, Trygve E. Bakken, Jeremy A. Miller, Kimberly A. Smith, Eliza R. Barkan, Lucas T. Graybuck, Jennie L. Close, Brian Long, Nelson Johansen, Osnat Penn, Zizhen Yao, Jeroen Eggermont, Thomas Höllt, Boaz P. Levi, Soraya I. Shehata, Brian Aevermann, Allison Beller, Darren Bertagnolli, Krissy Brouner, Tamara Casper, Charles Cobbs, Rachel Dalley, Nick Dee, Song-Lin Ding, Richard G. Ellenbogen, Olivia Fong, Emma Garren, Jeff Goldy, Ryder P. Gwinn, Daniel Hirschstein, C. Dirk Keene, Mohamed Keshk, Andrew L. Ko, Kanan Lathia, Ahmed Mahfouz, Zoe Maltzer, Medea McGraw, Thuc Nghi Nguyen, Julie Nyhus, Jeffrey G. Ojemann, Aaron Oldre, Sheana Parry, Shannon Reynolds, Christine Rimorin, Nadiya V. Shapovalova, Saroja
Somasundaram, Aaron Szafer, Elliot R. Thomsen, Michael Tieu, Gerald Quon, Richard H. Scheuermann, Rafael Yuste, Susan M. Sunkin, Boudewijn Lelieveldt, David Feng, Lydia Ng, Amy Bernard, Michael Hawrylycz, John W. Phillips, Bosiljka Tasic, Hongkui Zeng, Allan R. Jones, Christof Koch & Ed S. Lein