Preview: Comments for Coast to Coast Bio Podcast
Comments for Coast to Coast Bio PodcastA podcast about biology, programming and everything in the middleLast Build Date: Wed, 09 Feb 2011 17:47:58 +0000
Comment on Episode 36: The USB slot on the left side by Greg Tyrelle Wed, 09 Feb 2011 17:47:58 +0000 Hey guys, thanks for the shout-out at the begining of the episode. You're right about it being difficult to do regularly. I'm aiming for once a month, and I have potental guests for at lest 3-4 episodes. Interestingly, it is not hard to convince people to be guests, more often-than-not people will just offer as soon as they know about it. E03 will be on Transhumanism, with a twist... Since we now have an ecosystem of two, it might be an idea to do a meta-science-podcast later in the year. Finally, keep up the good work with c2cbio, I catch a lot of new topics via the podcast.
Comment on Episode 13: Better engineering in Bioinformatics. Joel Dudley as blogged by Shirley Wu by Developing effective bioinformatics programming skills Thu, 24 Dec 2009 07:32:17 +0000 [...] on Coast to Coast Bio #13 we talked about Joel Dudley’s seminar on programming effectively for bioinformatics (slides). [...]
Comment on Episode 24: Science is built on incrementalism by Will the commercial research lab ever make a comeback? Sat, 29 Aug 2009 06:29:00 +0000 [...] but don’t exactly encourage the cutting edge think tank model. Hari and I have talked about science being incremental, but I think even inside incrementalism, there is an opportunity to do things differently. Or maybe [...]
Comment on Episode 25: Quarter Century by Code-itch » Blog Archive » c2cbio .25 episodes and counting Thu, 27 Aug 2009 16:03:39 +0000 [...] spent many of our Sundays recording the coast to coast bio podcast. With the last episode the c2cbio podcast has completed 25 episodes, and we are thrilled. These 25 episodes have seen us talking about everything from version control [...]
Comment on Episode 22: Hey dad, how does this plane fly? by Graham Steel Sun, 19 Jul 2009 09:27:13 +0000 FYI, I've placed a link to this page from the post by James Hendler over at NN.
Comment on Episode 21 : Interview with Ricardo Vidal , a triple time zone pajama party by Back in the saddle again Sat, 11 Jul 2009 21:51:45 +0000 [...] put Coast to Coast Bio #21 online, which is a very special episode, our first ever interview with Ricardo Vidal. We talk about [...]
Comment on Episode 17: Libraries, swallows and pythons by wdenton's status on Friday, 08-May-09 00:42:30 UTC - Identi.ca Fri, 08 May 2009 00:42:34 +0000 [...] (esp academic) should listen to this biology podcast: http://www.c2cbio.com/2009/04/05/episode-17/ (via @dchud I [...]
Comment on Episode 4 : From map-reduce for molecular dynamics to galaxy zoo by The excitement of being mentioned in a podcast « the mind wobbles (systems biology & bioinformatics) Wed, 29 Apr 2009 13:27:45 +0000 [...] former two guys for mentioning my blog post about my day talking to kids at a local school in their 4th installment of their podcast, and the latter for letting the C2C pair know about it via delicious links (you can add to the C2C [...]
Comment on Episode 15: Tim Berners-Lee and Harold Varmus by Sean Sat, 25 Apr 2009 01:17:33 +0000 It is space group 19 not 18 :)
Comment on Episode 18: I touched an electric organ by The longest Coast to Coast Bio podcast yet : business|bytes|genes|molecules Tue, 14 Apr 2009 01:24:48 +0000 [...] in at over an hour and five minutes Coast to Coast Bio #18 is the longest podcast we’ve ever recorded. Much of that length was due to a spirited [...]
Comment on Episode 17: Libraries, swallows and pythons by admin Sun, 12 Apr 2009 15:29:22 +0000 Donnie, No transcript. Your name came up in a conversation we were having about the Google Summer of Code (it's early in the podcast)
Comment on Episode 17: Libraries, swallows and pythons by Donnie Berkholz Tue, 07 Apr 2009 21:34:34 +0000 Found my name from Google. Is there a transcript anywhere?
Comment on Episode 17: Libraries, swallows and pythons by wlad Mon, 06 Apr 2009 21:40:41 +0000 Good point on Libraries as a service versus Libraries as warehouses. For example, over here at The Rock, the Library does a cool thing: weeks in advance for seminars they will send a list of recommended readings to give those interested the chance to get a decent background before the talk. For example (http://librarynews.rockefeller.edu/?p=910). This is simple but specialized librarian work (the readings are not just a listing of the speaker's last five papers, they sometimes are not even past papers from the speaker but include reviews of the subject). Granted this is only a minor time-saver and it can be superceded by say, a reasonably clever Google Scholar search. But i think it points to the direction of future roles of university librarians.
Comment on Episode 13: Better engineering in Bioinformatics. Joel Dudley as blogged by Shirley Wu by wlad Tue, 17 Mar 2009 21:33:25 +0000 good ep guys. nothing wrong with focus ;) ...but you forgot to add the links of the week to the shownotes...
Comment on Episode 13: Better engineering in Bioinformatics. Joel Dudley as blogged by Shirley Wu by Chris Lasher Fri, 13 Mar 2009 20:25:19 +0000 Also, I produced a series for using Subversion (though I've been asked to re-do the series with Bazaar or Git): http://showmedo.com/videos/series?name=bfNi2X3Xg
Comment on Episode 13: Better engineering in Bioinformatics. Joel Dudley as blogged by Shirley Wu by Chris Lasher Fri, 13 Mar 2009 20:17:06 +0000 Not to self-promote too much, but just to disseminate the information, I produced a screencast series on learning the shell that has been very helpful to a lot of people so far: http://showmedo.com/videos/series?name=pQZLHo5Df
Comment on Episode 14: Of Wolfram|Alpha, Sages and Statistics by Chris Lasher Fri, 13 Mar 2009 19:43:38 +0000 Hey, it was awesome to hear mention of Enthought! I met a couple of the members of Enthought at the SciPy 2007 Conference--very smart, great guys.
Comment on Episode 13: Better engineering in Bioinformatics. Joel Dudley as blogged by Shirley Wu by Tips and tricks for software engineering in bioinformatics (talk by Joel Dudley) « I was lost but now I live here Fri, 27 Feb 2009 19:28:34 +0000 [...] 2/27/09: Episode #13 of the Coast 2 Coast Bio podcast discusses these points in much more depth. Thanks, Deepak and [...]
Comment on Episode 9: One coast by Code-itch » Blog Archive » Using git for keeping track of crystallographic refinements Tue, 10 Feb 2009 04:18:25 +0000 [...] On Coast to Coast Bio , Atom and I have often talked about the many ways people are using git : Blog posts , publication manuscripts and database entries to name a few. Since crystallographic refinement occupies a significant portion of a crystallographers time , I decided to see how my personal git workflow would adapt to crystallographic refinement. [...]
Comment on Episode 10: Of conferences and living code by One more podcast is in the can : business|bytes|genes|molecules Thu, 29 Jan 2009 07:54:52 +0000 [...] a line from Leo is always good. Just uploaded Episode 10 of Coast to Coast Bio, our longest episode yet, and sans any [...]
Comment on Episode 8: Twenty minutes of Brenner by Coast to Coast Bio 8 and a screencast from Ensembl : business|bytes|genes|molecules Wed, 24 Dec 2008 18:03:01 +0000 [...] new podcast, the final episode for 2008, of Coast to Coast Bio is now available. You can always subscribe on [...]
Comment on Episode 7: Scientists in the cabinet, useful chemistry and reference architectures by a listener Mon, 22 Dec 2008 19:58:46 +0000 I was wondering whether it may be possible to raise the volume level. It is too low. Thanks.
Comment on Episode 7: Scientists in the cabinet, useful chemistry and reference architectures by Episode 7 of Coast to Coast Bio is up : business|bytes|genes|molecules Wed, 17 Dec 2008 16:08:29 +0000 [...] can find Episode 7 on the Coast to Coast Bio site and on iTunes (search for Coast to Coast [...]
Comment on Episode 6 : Web services, Instaseq and a blogging genomicist goes mainstream by Chris Lasher Sun, 14 Dec 2008 23:37:04 +0000 Ah, Hari, you got your new mic, I hear!
Comment on Episode 6 : Web services, Instaseq and a blogging genomicist goes mainstream by Philip McDermott Fri, 12 Dec 2008 11:36:15 +0000 Hi, interesting discussion and thanks for the mention. I’d just like to add that one of the key features of the Embrace Registry that can be missed is that it actually tests the services that are registered, rather than just cataloging them. We see this as quite a big movement forward from the traditional registry where in the past web services have gone to die. The process of regular testing has already helped a number of our users fix obscure bugs and errors in their services.
Comment on Episode 5 : Grand challenges, javascript frameworks and collaborative annotations by Link clearinghouse Dec 4, 2008 : business|bytes|genes|molecules Fri, 05 Dec 2008 05:27:58 +0000 [...] Coast to Coast Bio #5 is now available [...]
Comment on Coast to Coast Bio podcast #3 by Coast to Coast Bio #3 is now available : business|bytes|genes|molecules Thu, 13 Nov 2008 00:40:36 +0000 [...] the latest podcast earlier today. Heavy discussion around the Saunders principle and the tension between [...]
Comment on Coast to Coast Bio podcast: Episode 2 by admin Fri, 07 Nov 2008 05:56:31 +0000 Chris, Thanks :). Glad you liked it Deepak
Comment on Coast to Coast Bio podcast: Episode 2 by Chris Lasher Thu, 06 Nov 2008 04:10:32 +0000 Wow, this was packed with nuggets of importance I missed or that slipped past my filters. I really enjoyed this episode. Thanks, guys.
Comment on Announcing the Coast to Coast Bio podcast by Back to podcasting. Introducing Coast to Coast bio : business|bytes|genes|molecules Thu, 30 Oct 2008 01:01:01 +0000 [...] biology, programming and all kinds of stuff. You might see a screencast or two in there as well. Episode 1 went live today. Still rough around the edges, but hopefully will tighten up as our workflow gets [...] |
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