Thursday, August 29, 2013

“Kickstarter… Projects cannot offer genetically modified organisms as a reward. (Updated...



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Wednesday, August 28, 2013

"To mosquitos, 5% DEET is just a suggestion."— Joshua Schwimmer (@joshuaschwimmer) August 28, 2013



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Monday, August 26, 2013

Friday, August 23, 2013

Another awesome lecture by an emergency physician on meta-cognition: “The Path to...



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Thursday, August 22, 2013

Saw my first case of “surfers’ myelopathy” (nontraumatic spinal cord injury in...



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A fingerprint scanner saving you 1 - 2 seconds 100 times a day = 10 - 20 hours a year. Might be...



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"Loading screens exist because when the information is returned quickly, the user perceives it to be...



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Rant: “Earning the White Coat” by Dr. David H. Newman (Update on Thrombolytics for...



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Try @SyncMetrics. RT @healthythinker: When #mhealth apps merge onto one dashboard … they will be...



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If you’re buying the new iPhone, now is the perfect time to offer your old one for sale on...



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Thursday, August 15, 2013

fotojournalismus: reuterspictures: Aftermath in Egypt Images...









fotojournalismus:

reuterspictures:

Aftermath in Egypt

Images from Cairo the day after the security crackdown.



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"Film was never this sharp. It’s sharper than real life. You shouldn’t be able to read a hair inside..."

“Film was never this sharp. It’s sharper than real life. You shouldn’t be able to read a hair inside the tear duct of someone’s eye. On one of those high-end backs, though, you can almost read what someone is thinking. It’s kind of terrifying.”

- Interview: Photographer Frank W. Ockenfels III On Shooting Breaking Bad | Popular Photography (via thisistheverge)

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scienceisbeauty: This is so nifty! Awesome Flickr group: The...



















scienceisbeauty:

This is so nifty! Awesome Flickr group: The Art of 3D Print Failure, when 3D prints go wrong and lessons from failure ()



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Wednesday, August 14, 2013

i-heart-histo: Hidden Beauty As we have seen in the short life...















i-heart-histo:

Hidden Beauty

As we have seen in the short life of my little blog, histology of fatal diseases can look as beautiful as a Van Gogh, as vibrant as a Matisse or as startlingly abstract as a Pollock. The images above are a sample of histology images taken by the medical scientists who work with devastatingly dazzling tissue biopsies and samples at John Hopkins’ School of Medicine.

This is histology forcing us to confront the fascinating beauty of some of the most frightening pathological diagnoses that appear so destructively beautiful - hidden within us.

These images are published alongside many more in a book entitled “Hidden Beauty: exploring the aesthetics of medical science” and can be seen at the book’s site.



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