Past social hour posters

Posted by Madeleine Ball Sun, 09 Dec 2007 08:23:00 GMT

Here are some previous posters I made for genetics department social hour, in reverse chronological order.

DIY framing

Posted by Madeleine Ball Sun, 09 Dec 2007 00:10:00 GMT

I just framed a couple things by myself at the Framer's Workshop in Brookline Village area. It took a while, but it was fun to do it by myself! And I guess it doesn't cost so much, either.

The first is a painting I bought on Etsy from Shayla Maddox.

The second is an awesome original of an online comic strip that I got in return for a donation a long, long, long time ago from Jeffrey Rowland. The comic strip "When I Grow Up" has since finished but you can still read it online. I'm too lazy to dig through archives to locate the exact strip, so I'll just show you my pictures. I hung it up in the bathroom, for obvious reasons once you read the strip.

NOTE TO MY PARENTS AND RELATIVES: This comic strip contains a dirty joke!!! If you read it please pretend you didn't so I won't be embarrassed!! (I'm talking to you, Mom.)

Social hour poster

Posted by Madeleine Ball Thu, 29 Nov 2007 00:13:00 GMT

So I've been doing social hour posters for a while for our lab. Maybe I'm getting lazy. This round's poster comes in two varieties: raw and interpreted. (You can click to get larger images.)

Buzz 4

Posted by Madeleine Ball Sat, 24 Nov 2007 21:58:00 GMT

I've set up a new site for comics, now this can revert to being a random thoughts blog. Maybe I'll add little notes on the subject contained within the comic. There's a new comic there right now, Winged and a Prayer. There's a captcha, so hopefully commenting will be easier.

Did you know that the gender of bees is based on ploidy? Female bees (workers and queens) are diploid, with two copies of each chromosome (like humans). Male bees (drones) are haploid, containing only one copy of each chromosome (like sperm and egg cells). Fertilized eggs turn into female bees, unfertilized eggs into males.

Worker bees can actually start laying eggs, but unlike queens the worker bee cannot mate. She cannot produce new workers or queens - only male drones. The worker bees only do this when the queen has died and the hive is queenless - thus, it's a sort of last gasp effort to get the genes out.

The Land of Milk and Honey

Posted by Madeleine Ball Sat, 17 Nov 2007 04:12:00 GMT

Dimorphism 6

Posted by Madeleine Ball Tue, 13 Nov 2007 01:05:00 GMT

Go ahead and play.

Posted by Madeleine Ball Wed, 31 Oct 2007 20:02:00 GMT

From Nature News:

When scientists released a draft of the human genome sequence six years ago, they said the data belonged to all of us -- but until now, they have been the only ones able to play with the data therein.

I call bullshit. That data has been publicly available, you can download it from NCBI's FTP site. Go ahead and play.

It makes me sad that most research is published under restrictive copyright licenses and is generally inaccessible to the public. But the fruit of the Human Genome Project *is* available. Find a different hyperbole, please don't needlessly promote the image of science as a monolithically inaccessible tax dollar sink.

Twisted

Posted by Madeleine Ball Sun, 28 Oct 2007 05:22:00 GMT

Cheezburger

Posted by Madeleine Ball Sat, 20 Oct 2007 16:30:00 GMT

Created using the cheezburger factory.

Sourdough

Posted by Madeleine Ball Fri, 19 Oct 2007 21:26:00 GMT

I've done it myself, using Exploratorium's online recipe.

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