True. Just noting that (b) is rarely an obligation. At this point, selling business to a large corpo is such a reliable way to spoil it, that doing so basically means "We are ready to see our product being gutted".
True. Just noting that (b) is rarely an obligation. At this point, selling business to a large corpo is such a reliable way to spoil it, that doing so basically means "We are ready to see our product being gutted".
reminded me of this 🤌 stackoverflow answer stackoverflow.com/a/1732454
Keep up the good work!) BTW, I vaguely remember rumors about an ECHO movie - do you know anything new about that?
old cigar box reused for specimen storage
not a matchbox, but well worthy
One day your efforts will lift ECHO from the undeserved "mostly positive" zone.)
phylogenetic tree with way too large font
QUERY_
Table comparing subjectively assigned colors to automatically generated, per DNA extract.
RGB values were then automatically translated into color names, which fell rather nicely into color categories assigned subjectively by eye.
Unsurprisingly, most of the failed extracts were dark-colored (and also old!), though ~half of dark extracts performed just fine in PCR and sequencing.
Screenshot of QGIS program with a photo of PCR plate from underneath
Machine vision for poor people, or yet another way to misuse Quantum GIS! I wanted to know if color of DNA extract correlates with sequencing success, and to get the colors I imported a photo of extracts into QGIS as if it was a map, placed sample points, and measured their underlying RGB values.
It often works well for non-fiction academic writing, though not sure if anyone writes entire fiction books in it. Anyway, good luck.)
Looks like @obsidian.md can work for you. Desktop and mobile versions are free, and for small subscription you can sync them (or just use cloud of your choice). No fancy text formatting, but overall their text editor is sweet.
ohh no, Ustilaginomycotina is missing, Pucciniomycotina is a single tip, don't show it to mycologists, much drama ensured.)
hah, someone decided to monetize BLAST. Will be funny if it is just MMSeqs in a trenchcoat.
There is no "science-wide replication crisis" because every word in that phrase carries unfounded assumptions. 🧵
1. There is no evidence that progress has generally stalled in the sciences. Also, no one has actually tried to estimate replicability across fields.
Yes, all versions are downloadable unite.ut.ee/repository.php
And also PlutoF (UNITE's management side) has API, it may be more convenient for data retrieval plutof.docs.apiary.io#reference
Would be interesting to see the same for UNITE's SHs ;)
the beauty of humans is that even if we explicitly attempt to copy something, the noise of our lives and our brains seeps into the work. you still end up with a New messy synthesis of things
AI doesn't live a life, it may have system noise, but it doesn't have a story to tell; because its software
A press release is out about the Biodiversity Heritage Library. From 1 January 2026 the Smithsonian will no longer host the administrative functions of BHL. BHL is looking for a new home. For further information see blog.biodiversitylibrary.org/2025/04/new-...
#ILoveBHL #BiodiversityHeritageLibrary
metsamaja on liminaalnemaja
One day APIs will get as fine grained as flour, but not today.)
Do you queue also remotely? Some kind of Google/Amazon cloud?
Haha, why it's always like this - any serious work requires downloading the entire resource
Sampling was... not boring: most of the material is corticioids (sometimes as thin as <100um) the most difficult fungi to sample imo.
Corridor in herbarium, ending in pitch-black darkness
Mycologist: I know a lovely place!
Lovely place in question:
Library of herbarium
Field notebooks
Library of herbarium
Library of herbarium
The library is on site and very rich, with titles dating back to Linnaeus
fungal spore print on black paper
collection of spore prints in a box
One of a few places with a dedicated collection of spore prints (hundreds if not thousands of them!).
Spent the last 2 weeks sampling dozens of type specimens in a well maintained, almost fully digitized, and just lovely TAAM fungarium (Tartu).
Six years ago, we published a (thus far underappreciated) study where we showed how scientific communities may generate a literature populated by irreproducible results or may converge on many perfectly reproducible yet false findings *in the absence of QRPs*, challenging popular narratives.
6 retro matchboxes as specimen's storage
contd. 3
same website with mattress ads
Contextual ads peaked here, it's only downwards from now on
6 retro matchboxes as specimen's storage
contd. 2