Archive [page 7]

Denmark team demands more answers []

WUHAN, China — Denmark demanded more answers Friday following a FIFA investigation into why two men with video cameras were hiding behind a two-way mirror in the team’s meeting room.

The alleged spying happened Tuesday, the eve of Denmark’s opening match against host China at the Women’s World Cup . The men, who the team spokeswoman said were Chinese, were discovered a half-hour before Denmark was to hold a strategy meeting.

If this is going on at the Women’s World Cup, I can’t wait to see what China has in store for the 2008 Olympics. Maybe they have Bill Belichick on their payroll.

Buck Institute awarded $25 million to establish new scientific discipline of geroscience []

The Buck Institute for Age Research is launching a new scientific discipline called Geroscience, which will be focused on the interface of normal aging and age-related disease. A five-year $25 million dollar grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Roadmap for Medical Research will establish an Interdisciplinary Research Consortium in Geroscience at the Institute. The Buck received one of nine Roadmap awards granted in the U.S. This is the largest grant received by the Institute in its eight year history.

The interdisciplinary grants address health challenges that have been resistant to traditional research approaches. At the Buck Institute the award will allow scientists to employ novel and unconventional approaches to studying various diseases in the context of aging, which is the single largest risk factor for disease in developed countries. For example, researchers who study aging using worm models will be designing experiments with neuroscientists. Scientists studying nutrition and aging in fruit flies will be working on projects with a cancer specialist. Experts in human embryonic stem cells will be designing experiments with cancer and age researchers to understand how stem cells age and determine how tumor suppressor genes function as the cells develop. The award also establishes the nation’s first post-doctoral training program in Geroscience.


Switching to Consolas

This week I made the switch from Courier to Consolas, the new monospace font from Microsoft that utilizes ClearType rendering to provide improved on-screen readability. I am now using the font in my e-mail client (Thunderbird/Apple Mail), lab notebook (Journler), and text editor (TextPad/BBEdit). One major benefit to switching is that it renders well on both the Mac and the PC, whereas Courier only looks good on the Mac platform. Courier New looks great on the PC but is too thin on the Mac. Consolas also has better support for international characters, which is helpful when using Greek characters in my lab notebook.


Do web analytics suck? []

Television has Nielsen ratings. The web has a mess of competitive standards. Is there something wrong with web analytics, or will the market settle this on its own? Om and Joyce put top execs from Quantcast and Hitwise on the couch this week to find out. Plus, on the Hitlines, Gateway, Earthlink, pink slips and a flood of VC funding. Don’t miss this week’s episode of The GigaOM Show!

I still think the best analytics come from software that runs on the web server, such as Urchin. Google recently purchased Urchin and will likely integrate it with Google Analytics in the future. However, the interface is clunky and slow. Right now I use Shaun Inman’s Mint to monitor most of the traffic on my site.

Ten things every Microsoft word user should know []

Most people use word processors like MS Word as they would a typewriter — manually making section headers bold and centered, inserting hard breaks between paragraphs, etc. This formatting method is fine for short documents, but for long documents that include multiple sections, figures, tables and other elements that need to be styled consistently throughout the text, it pays to learn Word’s advanced features.

These features are easy-to-use, but poorly documented and, in my experience, underused — even by professionals that frequently write long documents. This tutorial presents ten tips to help you start using Word the smart way.

The hottest research of 2005-06 []

For the second year in a row, immunologist Shizuo Akira occupies the top tier, this time by virtue of seven Hot Papers on Toll-like receptors, innate immunity, viral recognition, and other topics. Akira and colleagues also published a 2006 report that wound up among the year’s most cited (K.J. Ishii, et al., #33 in the first table).

I found this report interesting because I just completed my preliminary examination here at the University of Michigan on the antiviral response in plasmacytoid dendritic cells. Many of the papers I cited were published by Shizuo Akira and his colleagues.

Press release: FABRICLIVE 36 - James Murphy and Pat Mahoney []

James Murphy and Pat Mahoney delve into their New York roots for FABRICLIVE 36, a hot sweaty blend of seminal disco, deep rare grooves and edgy tech-infused funk from influential artists such as Donald Byrd & 125th St, Chic, Lenny Williams, Junior Byron and Love of Life Orchestra. A delightful nod to their future, past and present (including LCD Soundsystem’s own ‘Hippe Priest Bumout’), this mix is unashamed hand-clapping fun, full of upfront rhythms, obscure treats and heart warming guilty pleasures.

I can’t wait for this one! You may know James Murphy through LCD Soundsystem, his collaborative project with DFA partner, Tim Goldsworthy (formerly of UNKLE).

Comcast ‘unlikely’ to carry Big Ten Network at launch []

Fox Cable Networks today predicted that it will not be able to reach a distribution agreement with Comcast Communications to carry Big Ten Network prior to the Aug. 30 launch. Fox, as a partner of the Big Ten Conference in Big Ten Network, has the lead role in negotiating carriage agreements on the network’s behalf.

“The fact is that Comcast is unwilling to negotiate with us, and it is now clear that it’s highly unlikely any agreement will be achieved prior to launch,” said Bob Thompson, president of Fox National Cable Sports Networks, who is working closely with Big Ten Network during its initial stages and is a member of the network’s Board of Directors. “Anyone who lives in an area serviced by Comcast who wants to make sure they don’t miss a game had better make alternative plans.

Michigan fans without DirecTV service will have to make the trek to Michigan Stadium or their local bar to watch the game against Appalachian State this weekend. The Big Ten and Comcast are in dispute over pricing. Comcast wants BTN on their premium sports tier ($6 a month) and the Big Ten wants it for free on expanded basic cable.

Aug. 28, 1845: Scientific American, the magazine for the rest of us []

1845: Scientific American, the oldest continuously published magazine in the United States, makes its debut.

Founded by Rufus Porter, a prolific inventor as well as a pretty fair painter and the scion of a wealthy New England family, Scientific American was originally printed as a single-page newsletter with a demonstrated liking for news coming out of the U.S. Patent Office.

I was not aware that Scientific American is the oldest magazine in the United States still in publication. I have a subscription to their digital service, which lets you access their complete archive in PDF format.

Easy-to-use nasal anthrax vaccine offers strong protection in animal studies []

ANN ARBOR, MI – A vaccine against anthrax that is more effective and easier to administer than the present vaccine has proved highly effective in tests in mice and guinea pigs, report University of Michigan Medical School scientists in the August issue of Infection and Immunity.

The scientists were able to trigger a strong immune response by treating the inside of the animals’ noses with a “nanoemulsion” – a suspension of water, soybean oil, alcohol and surfactant emulsified to create droplets of only 200 to 300 nanometers in size. It would take about 265 of the droplets lined up side by side to equal the width of a human hair.

The oil particles are small enough to ferry a key anthrax protein inside the nasal membranes, allowing immune-system cells to react to the protein and initiate a protective immune response. That primes the immune system to promptly fight off infection when it encounters the whole microbe.

Besides eliminating the need for needles, the nanoemulsion anthrax vaccine has another advantage, the researchers say: It is easy to store and use in places where refrigeration is not available.

Michigan seniors ready to erase some dubious zeros []

The Wolverines have finished each of the last three seasons with consecutive losses, and ending that dubious streak is why Long returned to Michigan for the 2007 season, rather than entering the NFL draft.

“That’s one of the reasons I came back,” Long said. “We haven’t finished a season strong as a group. We haven’t beaten Ohio State. We haven’t won a bowl game. We want to come out on top as seniors.”

Thanks to Long’s surprising decision, the Wolverines enter this season as favorites to win the Big Ten championship, something that has elluded them since Long’s redshirt freshman season in 2004.

When Long, a 6-foot-7, 313-pound native of Lapeer, Mich., decided to return to school for his senior season, tailback Mike Hart and quarterback Chad Henne soon followed. That trio, along with receivers Mario Manningham and Adrian Arrington, gives Michigan what could potentially be one of the most explosive offenses in college football.

And it was Long who started Michigan’s domino effect.

“When you give up $12 or $15 million, you have to be a Michigan man,” Hart said. “You have to love the school.”

Or you must really want to beat Ohio State, which knocked the Wolverines out of the BCS National Championship Game with a 42-39 win in what was one of the most anticipated games in recent history.

Reference for every character key on a Mac []

Ever wanted to type the copyright icon, or do an accent over an A without having to resort to some character palette? We have, and it takes time and is an effort. So we put together a series of help sheets that reference all of the characters that aren’t listed on your keyboard, along with their shortcut keys to make your life easier.

Comcast denies monkeying with BitTorrent traffic []

Over the past few days, these claims have been widely circulated throughout the Web. But when I spoke to Comcast spokesman Charlie Douglas earlier today, he flat-out denied that the company was filtering or “shaping” any traffic on its network. He said the company doesn’t actively look at the applications or content that its customers download over the network. But Comcast does reserve the right to cut off service to customers who abuse the network by using too much bandwidth.

I can verify that Comcast is actively blocking torrent seeds as of this morning. When Verizon FiOS is available in Ann Arbor, I’m switching both my Internet and TV over to them.

FeedBurner’s MyBrand enables RSS delivery on your domain []

I’m a big fan of FeedBurner’s RSS aggregation service, but the one thing that has kept me from using the service long term is that my RSS feed URLS would be located at feedburner.com instead of steinbaugh.com. Now, it is possible to serve up FeedBurner-powered feeds directly from my domain using this free service.

Downtown Louisville rocks []

I could hear live music filtering through to me from the Steinbaugh Pavilion. People were spilling out of the white tent area next to the pavilion and from the pavilion itself. Almost everyone had a glass of locally brewed beer in their hands. Small counter-high tables dotted the street, crowded with half-empty glasses of beer, hot dogs, burgers and popcorn. I couldn’t wait to get nearer to the music cos the lead guitar was belting out some smashing tunes.

The recently opened Steinbaugh Pavilion is named after my numerous relatives who live in Lousville. Previously, the only local institution bearing the Steinbaugh name was the local hardware store, which has since closed.

Facebook messaging just got better… []

Now you can enter a friend’s email address into the To: line when you send a message or share an album, and Facebook will email them the message. Your friends will be able to reply without signing up, and they will be able to see content you share with them. Keep in mind that all rules of privacy still apply; some Facebook content that you share (photos, groups, notes, etc.) won’t be visible to your friend.

I’m sick of people using Facebook as a messaging platform. Every time someone sends me a message or posts on my wall, I get an e-mail that tells me I have to log into Facebook. The e-mail does not contain any meaningful information regarding the message, simply that I need to log into the site.

Feature “enhancements” like the one posted above clearly show that Facebook is trying to become the new e-mail platform, at least with the hipster crowd. I for one am not comfortable with Facebook retaining that level of information. Therefore, I disabled my wall. If I could disable Facebook messaging entirely, I would do that as well.

Hip-hop’s down beat []

Today that same market is telling rappers to please shut up. While music-industry sales have plummeted, no genre has fallen harder than rap. According to the music trade publication Billboard, rap sales have dropped 44% since 2000 and declined from 13% of all music sales to 10%. Artists who were once the tent poles at rap labels are posting disappointing numbers. Jay-Z’s return album, Kingdom Come, for instance, sold a gaudy 680,000 units in its first week, according to Billboard. But by the second week, its sales had declined some 80%. This year rap sales are down 33% so far.

Mainstream, big label rap artists released mediocre albums this year, and consumers have responded by saving their money. The RIAA will probably try and spin the downturn as a result of piracy, but it really boils down to content quality.

Plain soap as effective as antibacterial but without the risk []

In the first known comprehensive analysis of whether antibacterial soaps work better than plain soaps, Allison Aiello of the U-M School of Public Health and her team found that washing hands with an antibacterial soap was no more effective in preventing infectious illness than plain soap. Moreover, antibacterial soaps at formulations sold to the public do not remove any more bacteria from the hands during washing than plain soaps.

Because of the way the main active ingredient—triclosan—in many antibacterial soaps reacts in the cells, it may cause some bacteria to become resistant to commonly used drugs such as amoxicillin, the researchers say. These changes have not been detected at the population level, but e-coli bacteria bugs adapted in lab experiments showed resistance when exposed to as much as 0.1 percent wt/vol triclosan soap.

A CSS styled table version 2 []

Veerle has a great tutorial on properly formatting HTML tables and styling them with CSS.

$40 hidden inside a 12 volt battery []

As the video shows, you simply split them open to reveal EIGHT 1.5V button-cell batteries, each one worth around $5. And as these 12V batteries come in pairs that gives you a grand total of 16 new batteries worth around $80. Not bad for an initial investment of $1.66. Kipkay also goes on to split a 9V battery for use in a battery emergency. You could say these hacks are literally “power to the people.” (Sorry, couldn’t resist).

I have a remote for my AirTunes that requires those little cell batteries. If this trick turns out to be true, it will save me some money.