Louisiana devolves

Andrew Jackson by dbking
Louisiana governor signs creationist bill:
[Via National Center for Science Education]

Louisiana’s Governor Bobby Jindal signed Senate Bill 733 (PDF) into law, 27 years after the state passed its Balance Treatment for Evolution-Science and Creation-Science Act, a law overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1987. Jindal’s approval of the bill was buried in a press release issued on June 25, 2008, announcing 75 bills he signed in recent days. Houma Today reports(June 27, 2008) that the bill “will empower educators to pull religious beliefs into topics like evolution, cloning and global warming by introducing supplemental materials.”
[More]

I guess they just made it harder for Louisiana students to get accepted to good universities, at least if they want to be a scientist. Should be interesting as parents sue school districts about teaching religion in their science class. This typically results in the school district losing and having to pay a whole lot of money.

But what does that matter to the politicians who pander? Of course, some school districts apparently have no problem with having creationist teachers. It took this one 11 years before the teacher was fired in Ohio for directly disobeying the school board. I mean , he only burnt crosses into the arms of students while he was supposed to be teaching science.

I am always amazed at the fortitude of those amazing students who make it through this sort of ignorance. Of course, it also explains why we do not have enough graduate students from America and have to import so many.

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Norms are changing

columns by TankGirlJones

[Crossposted at SpreadingScience]

Column on NIH and Harvard policies:
[Via Open Access News]
Karla Hahn, Two new policies widen the path to balanced copyright management: Developments on author rights, C&RL News, July/August 2008.

A light bulb is going off that is casting the issue of author rights management into new relief. On January 11, 2008, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced a revision of its Public Access Policy. Effective April 7, 2008, the agency requires investigators to deposit their articles stemming from NIH funding in the NIH online archive, PubMed Central. Librarians have been looking forward to such an announcement, especially since studies found that the voluntary version of the policy was achieving deposit rates of affected articles on the order of a few percentage points.

Since we as taxpayers pay for this research, it should not be bound up behind access control. Now, because of the NIH’s revision, it won’t.

With the article deposit requirement, researchers can no longer simply sign publication agreements without careful review and, in some cases, modification of the publisher’s proposed terms. While this may be perceived as a minor annoyance, it calls attention to the value of scholarly publications and the necessity to consider carefully whether an appropriate balance between author and publisher rights and needs is on offer.

The norm in science has been to always quickly sign over copyright so that the paper could be published. This sometimes resulted in the absurd prospect that the author of a paper could not use his own data in slides, since he no more owned the copyright of it than any other random scientist. Now there is a little leverage for the author to retain some aspects of copyright.

As institutions, as grantees, become responsible for ensuring that funded authors retain the rights they need to meet the NIH public Access Policy requirements, there is a new incentive for campus leaders to reconsider institutional policies and local practices relating to faculty copyrights as assets. …
The February 2008 vote by the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences to grant Harvard a limited license to make certain uses of their journal articles is another important indicator of an accelerating shift in attitudes about author rights management, and also reveals the value of taking an institutional approach to the issue. …

Academic pressure is coming to bear on these policies and it will be interesting to see how it all plays out. In most instances, providing open access will be the better route but now the individual institutions will be responsible for providing the necessary infrastructure.

Perhaps something like Highwire Press will appear. Here , instead of each scientific association having to develop their own infrastructure, Highwire does it for many of them, greatly simplifying publishing for all. Highwire now has almost 2 million article published with free access. Perhaps something similar for institutional storage would be helpful.

Norms are always more difficult to change than technologies. We are now witnessing a key shift in norms for sharing scholarly work that promises a giant step forward in leveraging the potential of network technologies and digital scholarship to advance research, teaching, policy development, professional practice, and technology transfer. …

What scientists expect when they publish a paper is changing rapidly. What once took 6-9 months from submission to publication can now happen in weeks. Where once all rights had to be assigned to the publisher, now the authors can retain some for their own use.

What will the norms be like in five years?

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Ask a question. Fix a problem.

drop by *L*u*z*a*
[Crossposted at SpreadingScience]

How Do I Add FriendFeed Comments to My Blog:
[Via chrisbrogan.com]

Hey, smarter people: how do I add a FriendFeed comments module under my blog comments? I want to see all these great comments. Just found these several days later:

FriendFeed

Man, so many great people saying great things, and I didn’t engage at all. : (

Not only is this blog entry a great example of how to start a conversation (i.e. ask your community), the comments are a great example of how the conversation progresses. They provide a solution, naturally, but there is also extensive debugging help to get it to work. Eventually, the creator of the needed plug-in arrives to help and ends up making his own software better.

So by asking for help, the community not only provided an answer to Chris, it helped troubleshoot and make the product even better. All in less than 24 hours. How is that for a development cycle!

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Depressing

deathstar
Image credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/D.Evans et al.; Optical/UV: NASA/STScI; Radio: NSF/VLA/CfA/D.Evans et al., STFC/JBO/MERLIN

Apparently, Belief in Evolution Makes You a Minority Figure:
[Via Genome Technology Online Current Issue]

What a day for creation theory. John Lynch at Stranger Fruit blogs about the latest results of a Gallup poll on political leaning and belief in creation, intelligent design, or evolution. Republicans emerged with 60 percent believing in creationism, 32 percent believing in ID, and just 4 percent believing in no-strings-attached evolution. Democrats were an even split on creationism and ID (38 and 39 percent, respectively), with 17 percent opting for evolution. Independents had the highest rate of belief in evolution — 19 percent — but still had 40 percent opting for creationism and 36 percent for ID.

While we’re on the subject, members of the American Society of Plant Biologists are urging Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal to veto the creation-in-the-classroom bill that’s on his desk. Pamela Ronald includes the full text of the letter at her Tomorrow’s Table blog.

I was really depressed by this until I actually looked at the data, something worth doing. It is even more depressing. They asked “which comes closest to your views:

  1. Humans developed over millions of years, God guided
  2. Humans developed over millions of years, God had no part
  3. God created humans as is within the last 10,000 years.

So we are not just talking creationism, where God did it. We are talking God did it within the last 10,000 years! 60% of the Republicans feel that mankind was created as is within the last 10,000 years. That is a really horrifying number. An overwhelming number of Republicans believe in a total fantasy for which there is not only no proof but actually a huge amount of information showing it is false. There is absolutely NO evidence at all for proposition 3.

The people who founded Jericho left behind tools and pottery that have been dated to 14,500-11,000 years ago. There is evidence of farming from 11,000 ago. But these Republicans just ignore that evidence. I wonder how they place Neanderthal in their histories. Probably just make stuff up.

But 40% for independents and 38% for the Democrats is not something to cheer about either. Why is this? Why are so many americans ignorant of such basic facts about our natural world. The data answers that question. It is going to church that produces this error.

Gallup Evolution

Those that attend church weekly are the most likely to believe this myth, probably because they hear it all the time. Most never got any education regarding evolution in school at all. This drops to 24% for those that seldom attend church (I’d be worried more about that high number except something like 20% of those surveyed believe the Sun goes around the Earth.)

I guess the one hopeful thing is that those that believe proposition 2, that mankind evolved over millions of years without God, has risen since 2000 from 9% to 14% in 2008. This is higher than the sapling error. Maybe there is hope.

But then again, these questions have been asked since 1982 and essentially 44% of Americans have always believed in something that is demonstrably false. This unchanging level of ignorance

So, while religion may be useful for many things, it is substantially responsible for perpetuating a fable that can be shown to be false by a plethora of methods. Well, at least there are a small percentage of us who can actually deal with the world as it really is. I guess this is how Dwayne Elizondo Mountain Dew Herbert Camacho gets elected in 500 years.

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Posted in Science. 1 Comment »

No laptops across borders

bags by AMagill
Electronic Search and Seziure at the Border:
[Via Group News Blog]

So, any laptop entering the US can be confiscated, held for several weeks, and completely copied, all because a Customs Agent wants to. I would figure a lot of businesses are going to be very unhappy with this approach. As GNB says:

As of April, Customs can take every electronic device you have.

US News and World Reports

Returning from a vacation to Germany in February, freelance journalist Bill Hogan was selected for additional screening by customs officials at Dulles International Airport outside Washington. Agents searched his luggage, he said, “then they told me that they were impounding my laptop.”

Shaken by the encounter, Hogan examined his bags and found the agents had also inspected the memory card from his camera. “It was fortunate that I didn’t use [the laptop] for work,” he said, “or I would have had to call up all my sources and tell them that the government had just seized their information.” When customs offered to return the computer nearly two weeks later, Hogan had it shipped to his lawyer.

How common Hogan’s experience is remains unclear. But an April ruling by the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals found that the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees Customs and Border Protection, does have full authority to search any electronic devices without suspicion in the same way that it can inspect briefcases.

But congressional investigators say that copies of drives are sometimes made, meaning customs could be duplicating corporate secrets, legal and financial data, personal E-mails and photographs, along with stored passwords for accounts with companies ranging from Netflix to Bank of America.

The practice of storing and duplicating material might be something that both opponents and supporters of seizure could agree to regulate, says Kansas Republican Sen. Sam Brownback, an otherwise staunch supporter of customs’ authority. Larry Cunningham, an assistant district attorney from New York, told the hearing: “I am aware of no authority that would permit the government, without probable cause to believe it contains contraband, to keep a person’s laptop or to copy the contents of its files.”

Customs insists that terrorism and child pornography are sufficient justification for electronics searches. And even civil libertarians agree it makes sense for customs to search luggage, which could pose immediate dangers to aircraft and passengers. But, says Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, “customs officials do not go through briefcases to review and copy paper business records or personal diaries, which is apparently what they are now doing in digital form. These pda’s don’t have bombs in them.”

Customs doesn’t make copies of the files in your briefcase. For them to copy the files on your computer is to turn over one’s life to the government.

How are you supposed to get any work done? And can Customs hold your briefcase for a couple of weeks and copy everything in it? This seems like way beyond unreasonable search and seizure. It also seems really open to abuse. Corporate espionage got a lot more interesting, I guess. I would expect businessman to be a little worried about this.

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Who is pollinating whom?

Firedoglake puts it all together. Colony Collapse Disorder is worrying because there is very little research to really determine how bad the problem is.

Most plants native to America do not require honey bees for pollination, since the honeybee is an introduced species. However, many of our crop plants need the bee because it allows us to stage large numbers of pollinators at a single time for our agricultural crops. So loss in the number of bees for commercial use could be devastating.

Again, like climate change, the worst case scenario is horrible but in this case, the research is meager in comparison. But there are some interesting developments.

Here are some quotes from Firedoglake:

A reader recently sent me an article on the deepening problems with hive collapse and honeybees:

A record 36 percent of U.S. commercial bee colonies have been lost to mysterious causes so far this year and worse may be yet to come, experts told a congressional panel Thursday.

The year’s bee colony losses are about twice the usual seen following a typical winter, scientists warn. Despite ambitious new research efforts, the causes remain a mystery….

So, how much research is being done? Not enough. This is what shook me:

So far, Agricultural Research Service Administrator Edward Knipling told the House panel, scientists believe that “various stresses” — such as parasites, pathogens and pesticides — can build up in a bee colony and cause its demise. Some research has specifically identified a particular virus, called the Israeli acute paralysis virus, which is closely associated with colony collapse.

Meanwhile, there isn’t enough money to probe all the pollen and bee samples that researchers have collected, said Penn State University senior extension associate Maryann Frazier.

There are some 2,000 samples on shelves waiting to be analyzed by the federal government for $200 a pop, she said.

“The bee research community is quite small,” she said. “The research and money has been very minimal. What we need is more manpower to tackle this.”

Further illustrating how political pollination works, Pien and bee-friendly representatives hosted a Capitol Hill briefing Wednesday that lured participants with lots of free Vanilla Honey Bee ice cream cups. Dozens of congressional staffers fluttered by for a quick taste. Haagen-Dazs has retained a D.C.-based public relations firm to help make its case, while the American Honey Producers Association paid the lobbying firm Winston and Strawn $860,000 in the last two years, records show.

The article states that the farming bill that was just approved over President Bush’s veto authorizes $20 million for bee-related research but does not guarantee that it will actually be spent. The President decides that. So, Haagen-Dazs has said it will provide $250,000 for research. That should just about pay for the testing of the 2000 samples. A lot more will need to be done as well before we can determine just how bad this could get.

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Clash of mediums

la sunset by kla4067

My mom sent me
this article from the Houston Chronicle and it took me off on a fun journey through a mash-up of old media and new media. First my rant.

This article actually ticked me off, not for the content but for the way it was presented. So many newspapers just shovel their print versions onto the internet without seeing it is a new medium with its own needs and logic. Online is a conversation while print is a monolog (although LTEs simulate a dialog, just not a very effective one.)

Why is there not a single link to any of these videos? Why is there not a single link in the article to anything? It is as if a TV program consisted of simply filming a radio broadcast, microphones , sound effects man and all.

If I am going to read something online, make the content fit the medium and put in links.

So I went and googled the author. Turns out the original LA Times article does actually have the links, even to the video referenced in the article, indicating it gets the medium. But then I looked closer and found out that the reason it has links is because it’s a blog.

Yep, the Houston Chronicle published an article from a blog from the LA Times. But it was presented as if it was just a regular newspaper article, not something written for a different medium (Think a TV show that just showed us the pages from the screenplay, not the movie itself.).

No wonder the article read so different than normal. I originally thought the guy was condescending because he was someone who did not get it. No, it is from a blog where he can be condescending because It’s a blog. And a fun one to read.

Turns out that this LA TImes writer, David Sarno, whose beat is ‘ Internet culture and online entertainment,’ produces articles with lots of personality and snark. That is what is often expected with an online blog. Because there can be lots of comments to add balance. He writes with a personal viewpoint but one that invites a reaction, which can easily be seen in the comments provided.

This blog is a great example of the online medium, and how it often differs from print. It is a conversation between people, not an authority telling us what is happening.

He can be a little snarky, have his soapbox to write with a personal point of view, with opinions that may provoke. But he also provides a soapbox for anyone else who wants to add to the conversation. He is not afraid of the response from his readers and actually uses them to help write other posts.

In fact, this article is only the latest is a series of Fred posts, all adding to the conversation. The first initially brings up Fred and talks about how the author does not understand his popularity. Couple of commenters add context.

The next is a few days later, where the author tried to base the popularity not on creativity but on marketing from a company. This idea was shot down by commenters. Thus the latest article, which now adds much more depth and backstory. It really enhances the conversation, even though there are several items of controversy that the commenters bring up..

It is obvious from these conversations that the author does not get the humor nor understand it. That is a personal issue for any type of humor. But several of his commenters do get the humor and their context is available to all. Thus a conversation which we will continue as we discover just how commercial or how creative Lucas is going to be now that he has begun to find success in Hollywood. This is how online conversations work and why the medium is different than print.

Obviously the Houston Chronicle does not get this. It is like it quoted just part of a conversation from a dinner party, totally out of context. No wonder it sounded kind of off.

I wonder if the Houston Chronicle realized this or if it even cares? Just another indication that it does not really understand the online medium?

So, I went to watch the videos. I found them pretty funny.

You know, I wrote a long rant about how wrong the author of the piece was, but I deleted that and will simply put quote a commenter to the blog:

I agree with commenter Misty who said Fred doesn’t have to appeal only to kids. In my case (60 years old), I think his show is the best thing on YouTube and I can’t get enough of him. I think if one has performed on stage or in film (as I have), or have directed (as I have), you can’t help but notice and appreciate what kind of a talent Lucas Cruikshank is…and his “numbers” or “stats” definitely demonstrate that, too. You can’t sneeze at viewer numbers in the several millions. If people (adults) stand by with shrugged shoulders and “just don’t get it,” that’s their problem. Just because you get older doesn’t mean you suddenly forget human issues such as insecurity about your body (you should see mine for God’s sake) or wish someone hot would return your affections or you want to have a better relationship with your father, and so on…all issues Fred has touched on, plus many more. Also, there is an immensely sweet human being inside there, with touching hopes and dreams coupled with ruthless disappointments, and yet always there is that infectious optimism and willingness to keep on trying (which I HOPE isn’t limited to youth). I’m sorry, I don’t want to ruin Fred by dissecting him, but only the insensitive would think he is nothing but a speeded up chipmunk voice and something only computer literate kids would understand. And what makes you think adults aren’t computer literate? I’ve been on-line since before the Internet was even fully created and had one of the very first desktop computers ever made. Computers have been part of my life ever since the punch-card and reel-to-reel batch processing days…and how hard is it to keep up, really? It’s hard only for a mind that stagnates, but I think that Fred has a remedy for what ails ya.

While it may not be everyone’s cup of tea (neither is George Carlin but he could be incredibly funny), I found it pretty amusing and creative (laughed out loud a couple of times). “My mom says that if you are mad at someone, just sue them” said with all the obvious sincerity of a 6 year old who is left with way too much time on their hands by a single Mom who is out partying too much. Fred is the only person you ever see in his world and after watching a few of the videos, the humor obviously covers some real pathos in the character.

Lucas is actually a pretty expressive actor, one of those people who can twist his face into the emotion he is trying to display. He really ’sells’ the character in ways that are very real and affecting.

When Gilda Radner did the same thing on SNL, it was viewed as a classic. Is this humor that can only be enjoyed by young people? Gilda did not think so and neither do I.

Or is it only unfunny when a 14 year old does it. Heck, several of Lucas’ sketches are better than anything SNL has done for years and he is only 14!!! A 14 year old that is watched by more people than watch most TV shows. A 14 year old from Nebraska who gets the attention of Hollywood. How does that happen and how does that change things?

Spielberg at this age was making home movies in his backyard. You can bet that if youtube was available, they would have been up there. Would this blogger have liked them? Perhaps not but that is not important here.

He allows a platform for those that agree or disagree with him to have a voice. That is how he is a different sort of journalist. This is how the medium is different than the newspaper. It is why I have added his blog to my newsfeeds. He is a journalist who not only is an interesting writer but he gets the new medium.

It fosters conversations, that provide context that lead to richer information transfer.

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Watch out for microwave popcorn

popcorn by Darren Hester

This all started out following a question my mother had. When she says research it, I usually do. And what I found out makes me glad I don’t eat microwave popcorn and I wish everyone else would stop.

Popcorn lung is one worry of microwave popcorn preparation that I had heard about. But I found some others that may also impact all of us.

Maybe not everyone has heard about the data regarding PFOA and microwave popcorn bags from a few years ago. Perfluorooctanoic acid (or PFOA) is a surfactant with many industrial uses, such as making Teflon or Gore-Tex. It is also a suspected carcinogen.

Turns out that most people have 4-5 parts per billion of PFOA in their blood. But no one really knew where the PFOA originated. Some suspected overheated Teflon pots. This paper, Perfluorochemicals: Potential sources of and migration from food packaging, from researchers at the FDA, opened a lot of people’s eyes. Here is the abstract:

Perfluorochemicals are widely used in the manufacturing and processing of a vast array of consumer goods, including electrical wiring, clothing, household and automotive products. Furthermore, relatively small quantities of perfluorochemicals are also used in the manufacturing of food-contact substances that represent potential sources of oral exposure to these chemicals. The most recognizable products to consumers are the uses of perfluorochemicals in non-stick coatings (polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)) for cookware and also their use in paper coatings for oil and moisture resistance. Recent epidemiology studies have demonstrated the presence of two particular perfluorochemicals, perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) in human serum at very low part per billion levels. These perfluorochemicals are biopersistent and are the subject of numerous studies investigating the many possible sources of human exposure. Among the various uses of these two chemicals, PFOS is a residual impurity in some paper coatings used for food contact and PFOA is a processing aid in the manufacture of PTFE used for many purposes including non-stick cookware. Little information is available on the types of perfluorochemicals that have the potential to migrate from perfluoro coatings into food. One obstacle to studying migration is the difficulty in measuring perfluorochemicals by routine conventional analytical techniques such as GC/MS or LC-UV. Many perfluorochemicals used in food-contact substances are not detectable by these conventional methods. As liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC/MS) develops into a routine analytical technique, potential migrants from perfluoro coatings can be more easily characterized. In this paper, data will be presented on the types of perfluoro chemicals that are used in food packaging and cookware. Additionally, research will be presented on the migration or potential for migration of these chemicals into foods or food simulating liquids. Results from migration tests show mg kg-1 amounts of perfluoro paper additives/coatings transfer to food oil. Analysis of PTFE cookware shows residual amounts of PFOA in the low µg kg-1 range. PFOA is present in microwave popcorn bag paper at amounts as high as 300 µg kg-1.


You can download the paper and have a look at it. They show that very little PFOA migrates onto food from non-stick pans, even when the pans are abused. But it can migrate from the paper-coating in a microwave popcorn bag into the oil, which ends up on the popcorn we eat. Actually, what probably is important is that we ingest other types of fluorocarbons and they are converted to PFOA, which complicates things.

Eating only 10 bags of microwave popcorn a year would be enough to account for 20% of the total body load. Since Americans eat about 160 million bags of microwave popcorn a year, there is a lot entering our bodies. And uneaten popcorn ends up in our trash, along with PFOA.

But if you go to the EPA page about PFOA, there is no mention of microwave popcorn bags. They mention that Teflon is not harmful and that they see no reason for anyone to worry. Here is the EPA’s answer to the question Are there steps that consumers can take to reduce their exposure to PFOA?

At present, there are no steps that EPA recommends that consumers take to reduce exposures to PFOA because the sources of PFOA in the environment and the pathways by which people are exposed are not known. Given the scientific uncertainties, EPA has not yet made a determination as to whether PFOA poses an unreasonable risk to the public. At the present time, EPA does not believe there is any reason for consumers to stop using any consumer or industrial related products because of concerns about PFOA. EPA does not have any indication that the public is being exposed to PFOA through the use of Teflon®-coated or other trademarked nonstick cookware. Teflon® and other trademarked products are not PFOA.

PFOA stands for perfluorooctanoic acid, a synthetic (man-made) chemical that does not occur naturally in the environment. PFOA is sometimes called “C8.” Companies use PFOA to make fluoropolymers, substances with special properties that have thousands of important manufacturing and industrial applications. Consumer products made with fluoropolymers include non-stick cookware and breathable, all-weather clothing. These products are not PFOA, however.


See anything interesting. The EPA does not answer the question that it asked itself! The question was not whether the EPA believed that people SHOULD reduce their exposure. It was how they COULD.

Now scroll to the bottom of the question page. Updates on Friday, June 27th 2008. So, the latest information from the EPA does nothing to help us lower our exposure to PFOA.

And it appears that more of these are a problem than just PFOA. And that PFOA can be aerosolized and dispersed into the air.

So, perhaps even refusing to eat microwave popcorn will not reduce our intake of these compounds. Well, at least Dupont has said it will voluntarily stop production of these compounds by 2015.

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Freeing journal articles

path by fdecomite
Freeing My Father’s Scientific Publications Update:
[Via The Tree of Life]

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How Green is good business

lights by The Udall Legacy Bus Tour: Views from the Road
Home Depot Solves a Customer Eco-Problem:
[Via HarvardBusiness.org]

Home Depot announced this week that it will collect and recycle compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs) in nearly 2,000 of its stores. This is great news since it eases the transition to low-energy bulbs by solving a big customer problem: what do I do with this bulb when I’m done with it? Home Depot is the not the first – IKEA and local stores have CFL recycling programs – but it brings a bigger scale and reach to solving the problem.

First, bravo. Home Depot is, in part, taking responsibility for the “end-of-life” of one of its products (in wonky terms, this is “extended producer responsibility” and it’s the law for some products in some parts of the world, such as electronics in Europe). But in the New York Times article on this program, one quote really struck me. Ron Jarvis, the company’s SVP for environmental innovation (cool title) said, “We’re trying to do the right thing…Some of the things that we do are for the community and not for the bottom line.”

The belief that doing something for the community, such as going green, is not for the bottom line usually comes from not properly valuing the entire production chain. In this case, not only is doing something for recycling good for the community, it is also good for business.

I’m always a bit frustrated at a slightly sheepish explanation for a green program that costs some money and might impact the financial performance of the company. Of course it will affect the bottom line. But I think it will help it. No doubt Mr. Jarvis meant what he said, but may be wrong, and here’s why. When are people most likely recycling a bulb? I’m going to go out on a limb and guess that it’s when they need a new one. Why wouldn’t they buy it while they’re at Home Depot recycling the old one? And what about that mop or plant or lumber they’ve been meaning to get? Solving a customer eco-problem can drive business.

Office stores do this when they recycle ink cartridges. It helps businesses to do the right thing when doing so actually helps everyone, including the companies. It will become obvious that a company’s influence and concern does not end when a product is sold. If done well, and with real purpose, this can have a tremendous effect.

From a strategy perspective, Home Depot is utilizing a critical eco-advantage mindset and approach: thinking about the value chain. Here’s how I’d recommend finding these kinds of business and green opportunities. To oversimplify…

  1. Think about – and measure if possible – the full value chain impact of your products. Where are the big impacts for energy use, water, toxic waste, and so on?
  2. Look forward in the value chain (after thinking about upstream opportunities as well). What issues do your customers face? In this case, you might hear two complaints: A) Boy are my energy bills going up; B) I have no idea what to do with my old CFL bulb.
  3. See if you can solve their environmental problem. Solving A is easy: sell them CFLs (and insulation and better windows and on and on). Solving problem B is harder but possible with scale: start a recycling program.
  4. Reap the benefits of a closer relationship with your customer who now thinks of you as a solution provider (and if you’re Home Depot, sort of apologize for it)

I think part of the apology stems from current circumstances, when the market does not fully value all the production costs of so many goods, including the cost for recycling. In a few years, this will not be necessary.

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More millennials

millennial by chelseagirl
Millennial Backlash:
[Via Clippings]

Larry Dignan has a classic rant on how Millennials will run into a wall when they go to work and confront Six Sigma and enterprise IT.  Funny, and its a good sanity check, but nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition, we live in a complex world my friends, and this demographic shift shouldn’t be underestimated.

First, this is the largest demographic shift in history.  Size matters.  When you have the NetGens, the biggest generation, entering the workforce when the Baby Boomers, the second biggest, are leaving (in some industries 1/3 of the workforce in 3 years) — it creates conditions for change.

Second, the pace of technological change is quickening.  Larry suggests that they will come to work and find out that it makes sense to centralize IT.  Trendlines and clouds suggest otherwise.  I also believe this effects management structures and practices.

Third, there is that social thing.  According to an Essex study on the Generation Gap, NetGens count 70 social connections on average, compared to those over 50 and working who count just 20 contacts.  This is a significant difference, not necessarily in how connected they are, but their views on what constitutes a connection.

Fourth, you can stereotype by generation.  Its a large group of people that have shared experiences and temporal context compounded by the influence of technology.  I don’t know, Larry, is this some masked ploy to undermine evolution to teach religion in schools? ;-P

Kidding, but what I think Larry is really saying is he has meme exhaustion.

It will be interesting to see who affects whom the most. While I don’t expect capitalism to disappear, it will adapt to the use of these technologies. Because many successful organizations will have to be nimble, learning to use innovative approaches to solve complex problems. Social networks have always permitted this.

The social networks of the Millennials will have impacts. But the way they change the world will probably not be just the way we think.

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A grain of salt

salt by Alicia Nijdam
Open salaries:
[Via Gurteen Knowledge-Log]
By David Gurteen

Now here is simple yet powerful sharing concept – a website Glassdoor.com that allows you to share your salary details with others! Here is how they describe themselves:

“Glassdoor.com is a career and workplace community where anyone can find and anonymously share real-time reviews, ratings and salary details about specific jobs for specific employers — all for free.

What sets us apart is that all our information comes from the people who know these companies best — employees.”

Credit:: Glassdoor.com

I have always admired the one or two organizations that I have read about who have been prepared to be open about their salaries but this is another way of getting close to achieving the same end.

It reminds me that some years ago I came into the office early and on going to the print room found the whole of the organization’s salary details sitting in the print hopper. Of course I rescued them and delivered them safely to the MD who had printed them out late the night before and then forgotten about them. Of course, not before I had thoroughly digested them and realized the downright lies that were being told by senior managers about how salaries were managed but of course I couldn’t act upon it.

Alexander Kjerulf, in this article has some interesting thoughts on the subject and on openness in general:

“I believe on a very fundamental level that openness is better than secrecy, in life and in business. I’m not naïve enough to share all information all the time, but my chosen approach is “Let’s make everything open by default and only make those things secret that absolutely need to be”. Would I share my list of prospective clients with my competitors? Nah. Would I share it inside the company? Heck, yeah!”

Credit:: Alexander Kjerulf

This is where I say as an old fart:”How in the world can anyone actually do this?” I wonder if in the old days Roman soldiers had this problem (i.e. everyone knowing what they got paid by seeing how much salt they had). I just get a little flusterpated about this.

Now I have to go and tell those kids to get off my lawn.

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Web 2.0 behavior

hill by helmet13
[Crossposted at SpreadingScience]

Action and Reaction:
[Via A Journey In Social Media]


Conversations are basically what Web 2.0 is all about. It uses new tools but they only accentuate what humans already do naturally – interact and exchange information with a large social network. Many of the same social skills we use in person can be adapted to online use.

Here is a nice discussion of just that at Chuck’s blog as he discusses some of the problems they have seen following a Web 2.0 rollout at his company.

We Want People To Have Conversations

And they are.

Lots of conversations, really. Mostly about work stuff. But not always.

A while back, there was a notable surge in “off topic” discussions — favorite movies, raising rabbits, anime, commute times, etc.

In a pure Web 2.0 idealized world, it’s all good, right?

Well, we’re not exactly in this progressive 2.0 world quite yet. And we have to be mindful of the transition.

There Is A Valid Business Need For Off-Topic Discussions

More and more of our teams are geographically and culturally dispersed. We want people to align and bond around common interests — whatever they might be.

Just like we spend boatloads of money to fly people around for group meetings — and subsequent “team building” events — this sort of idle chatter has a role in “enterprise 2.0″, and we don’t want to be shutting things down.

But, we also want broad adoption in our 1.0 employee base. And if certain 2.0 behaviors hamper that, well — that’s an issue, isn’t it?

So, how to deal with the innovation of a new world to play in as it bumps up against real world situations? First, identify the problems. Here are three.

Problem #1 — Clutter

With our current 1.x Clearspace implementation, we have a “home page” that dutifully records each and every thought someone shares (except blog comments for some reason). That off-topic clutter at a corporate level is downright annoying to many people.

Sure, the user can take action: set up filters, personalize, etc. There’s some of that in Clearspace 1.x, more in 2.x, and then there’s RSS feeds, etc. But all of these are highly dependent on users taking control of their content stream.

And that’s a new 2.0-ish skill that not too many people at our company have. Sure, we could tell them “here’s what you have to do to control the problem”, but we’re trying to drive broader engagement and adoption of the platform, and we’ve had more than a few people new to the environment simply say “I can’t handle this social content stream in addition to my email deluge”.

It’s one thing when they’re exposed to the business-related deluge. It’s another thing entirely when it looks like 40-50% of the stream appears to be purely social in nature.

Doesn’t make it look like a business platform, which is how it was sold to the company.

Problem #2 — Naysayers

In physics, every force results in an opposite force. And in driving corporate change, the same generally holds true. I’m not being negative, just practical.

And, not surprisingly, there are those that look at our internal social media platform with a cold, cynical eye. They don’t understand, they may be threatened, they’re not comfortable, or maybe they’re generally concerned.

Collectively, they have “voice”.

And now they have a bit more evidence for their case.

Problem #3 — The Proficient

We now have upwards of 1,000 people who are truly comfortable and really enjoy the deep end of the pool. They love being exposed to everything. They’re very comfortable controlling the content stream.

And they inherently resist any thought of control, policy, etc. — it just doesn’t work for them. And they’re quite vocal that the rest of the world has to adapt to this 2.0 world, and they better get on with it, now!

And — they have a point. But I’m looking at outcome, and less to make a philisophical statement.

He thought they had a software fix – create a ‘water cooler’ area for the off topic material. But their software made this a problem.

So what he decided to do was use normal social approaches to modify online behavior.

What We’re Doing Short Term

A couple of things, really. First, I went to the more — ahem — prolific threads, and simply reminded people that everything they write is syndicated up to the corporate feed, and that their insightful comments were widely read by several thousand people.

And that while it’s OK to get off topic, please keep in mind that we’ve got a business platform, and you may want to think twice before an extended off-topic discussion for several reasons, e.g. is this what you do all day at work?

The second thing we’re doing is engaging the community. I wrote a blog post outlining the problem and the tradeoffs, and simply asked “what do you all think we should do?”.

People appreciated that we engaged them rather than arbitrarily doing something — good 2.0 behavior. And, somewhere in the dozens of comments, the discussion became pretty clear: we should take no action to limit discussions on the platform, but we should work towards having a “default” home page for newbies that’s a little less intimidating.

He did this with social tools we already possess. For example, he quietly and respectfully told someone, in a non-judgemental way, that their behavior was not really appropriate and to please stop. Then, like a village elder, he directly asked the community what to do. The company can not hire enough annies, tutors, mentors and police to deal with everyone. The community has to use its own members to fill these roles.

It appears that Chuck’s community is doing just that, which indicates to me that it is a rich, well-developed community and that Chuck is far along on the path to success. Because he knows to do this:

So, What Do You Think?

Now that we have a clear “digital divide” in our company with regards to our social productivity platform, what’s the ideal compromise position? Or should there be compromise at all?

And — any proposed solution can’t involve a bunch of custom software, nor can it involve hiring and dedicating people to the task. Nor can it involve having tens of thousands of employees learning to control their content stream as a prerequisite for success.

An interesting challenge, to be sure ….

He checks with the larger outside community, because he also acts as a connector between communities. He engages the groups for answers so that if there are other ideas, he can quickly implement them for his community. This is how creativity and innovation can be so rapidly created with Web 2.0 approaches.

Innovation diffusion rates in a community can be greatly affected by these approaches.

Because the potential number of other communities he can engage is huge. if there is any solution out there, he does not need it to diffuse to him by Web 1.0 or even World 1.0 approaches, which could take years. Web 2.0 greatly decreases the friction of information transfer from other approaches.

The faster a community can deal with change, the more it can deal with innovation, the better decisions it can make because it has access to more information and creativity, the sooner it will gain wisdom.

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The laws are not ours

law books by losiek
Testifying for the public domain:
[Via Amy Sample Ward’s Version of NPTech]

Tomorrow I will be headed down to Salem with many others to testify in front of the Legislative Council Committee. A friend working hard on this issue, Pete Forsyth, has a great explanation on the current situation:

The topic: whether or not the laws that we, the people of Oregon write are in the public domain, or whether the State can prevent their republication by insisting on licensing arrangements.

You can read the rest of his post here.

This all came about a few months ago when a website that publishes state laws free of charge (not even any advertising) in a standard format was issued a take down notice from the LCC, citing a law that gives them authority to decide ownership of various works of the state government, and local governments within the state, including the Revised Statutes. A California-based nonprofit (Public Resource) is leading the advocacy counter and will be at the hearing tomorrow.

You can read the paper trail or declaratory statements on Public Resource’s site
You can read my written testimony

If you are an Oregonian and want to weigh in, feel free to contact members of the Committee with your thoughts, or leave comments here for me to relay tomorrow.

Thanks!

Yes, in many cases the actually legal language many of our laws are in, the laws passed by our employees, has been given to a private organization who makes us pay to read our own laws!

This does not make any real sense today when this information can so easily be put online. It reminds me of the delegation of copyright forced onto most scientific authors. Why are we allowing our government to do the same sort of delegation, making it very expensive for the citizens whose lives the laws affect to access the laws.

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This is important

RNA Tie Club from Alexander Rich

[Crossposted at SpreadingScience]

Kevin Kelly — The Technium:
[Via The Technium]

Scenius is like genius, only embedded in a scene rather than in genes. Brian Eno suggested the word to convey the extreme creativity that groups, places or “scenes” can occasionally generate. His actual definition is: “Scenius stands for the intelligence and the intuition of a whole cultural scene. It is the communal form of the concept of the genius.”

Individuals immersed in a productive scenius will blossom and produce their best work. When buoyed by scenius, you act like genius. Your like-minded peers, and the entire environment inspire you.

The geography of scenius is nurtured by several factors:

Mutual appreciation — Risky moves are applauded by the group, subtlety is appreciated, and friendly competition goads the shy. Scenius can be thought of as the best of peer pressure.
Rapid exchange of tools and techniques — As soon as something is invented, it is flaunted and then shared. Ideas flow quickly because they are flowing inside a common language and sensibility.
Network effects of success — When a record is broken, a hit happens, or breakthrough erupts, the success is claimed by the entire scene. This empowers the scene to further success.
Local tolerance for the novelties — The local “outside” does not push back too hard against the transgressions of the scene. The renegades and mavericks are protected by this buffer zone.

Scenius can erupt almost anywhere, and at different scales: in a corner of a company, in a neighborhood, or in an entire region.
[More]

Kevin discusses a specific instance of scenius but the idea is something that needs greater examination. Because innovation, creativity and new insights rarely if ever happen because of a single person in isolation. They happen in a social network made up of the right mix of people to allow innovation to blossom. However, an important aspect, especially today, is that the scene for this genius does not need to occupy the same space. The specific network can be made up of people physically separated.

An example from my set of the woods involves a single man who was able to create a scenius that transcended location. It starts at Cambridge University in England in the mid to late 1950s. Using their superb intellects and their well-connected social network, Watson and Crick were able to discern the structure of the DNA molecule. They published this in 1953.

Now this great discovery was noticed by a pre-eminent physicist, George Gamow, who, to my mind, is one of the great scientists of the 20th century, not only for his own work but for his impact on other scientists. Here is how Wikipedia starts his entry:

George Gamow (pronounced as IPA: [ˈgamof]) (March 4, 1904August 19, 1968) , born Georgiy Antonovich Gamov (Георгий Антонович Гамов), was a Russian Empire-born theoretical physicist and cosmologist. He discovered alpha decay via quantum tunneling and worked on radioactive decay of the atomic nucleus, star formation, stellar nucleosynthesis, big bang nucleosynthesis, nucleocosmogenesis and genetics.

Nice, wide ranging scientific career. Look at his accomplishments (again from Wikipedia):

Gamow produced an important cosmogony paper with his student Ralph Alpher, which was published as “The Origin of Chemical Elements” (Physical Review, April 1, 1948). This paper became known as the Alpher-Bethe-Gamow theory. (Gamow had added the name of Hans Bethe, listed on the article as “H. Bethe, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York” (who had not had any role in the paper) to make a pun on the first three letters of the Greek alphabet, alpha beta gamma.)

The paper outlined how the present levels of hydrogen and helium in the universe (which are thought to make up over 99% of all matter) could be largely explained by reactions that occurred during the “big bang“. This lent theoretical support to the big bang theory, although it did not explain the presence of elements heavier than helium (this was done later by Fred Hoyle).

In the paper, Gamow made an estimate of the strength of residual cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB). He predicted that the afterglow of big bang would have cooled down after billions of years, filling the universe with a radiation five degrees above absolute zero.

Gamow published another paper in the British journal Nature later in 1948, in which he developed equations for the mass and radius of a primordial galaxy (which typically contains about one hundred billion stars, each with a mass comparable with that of the sun).

Astronomers and scientists did not make any effort to detect this background radiation at that time, due to both a lack of interest and the immaturity of microwave observation. Consequently, Gamow’s prediction in support of the big bang was not substantiated until 1964, when Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson made the accidental discovery for which they were awarded the Nobel Prize in physics in 1978. Their work determined that the universe’s background radiation was 2.7 degrees above absolute zero, just 2.3 degrees lower than Gamow’s 1948 prediction.

I have to love any genius who authors a paper that makes such a great pun. Some of the best geniuses are great tricksters (Feynman loved to pick locks or break combination safes.)

But my story is not about Gamow and the big Bang theory. I’ll let this, from Nobelprize.org, discussing the breaking of the genetic code, provide some context for Gamow’s genius, and how he created a scenius that spanned continents:

When the structure of DNA was made known, many scientists were eager to read the message hidden in it. One was the Russian physicist George Gamow. Many researchers are ”lone rangers” but Gamow believed that the best way to move forward was through a joint effort, where scientists from different fields shared their ideas and results. In 1954, he founded the “RNA Tie Club.” Its aim was “to solve the riddle of the RNA structure and to understand how it built proteins.”

The brotherhood consisted of 20 regular members (one for each amino-acid), and four honorary members (one for each nucleotide in nucleic acid). The members all got woolen neckties, with an embroided green-and-yellow helix (idea and design by Gamow).

Among the members were many prominent scientists, eight of whom were or became Nobel Laureates. Such examples are James Watson, who in the club received the code PRO for the amino acid proline, Francis Crick (TYR for tyrosine) and Sydney Brenner (VAL for valine). Brenner was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine as recently as 2002, for his discoveries concerning genetic regulation of organ development and programmed cell death.

Early Ideas Sprung from the “RNA Tie Club”

The members of the club met twice a year, and in the meantime they wrote each other letters where they put forward speculative new ideas, which were not yet ripe enough to be published in scientific journals.

In 1955 Francis Crick proposed his “Adapter Hypothesis,” which suggested that some (so far unknown) structure carried the amino acids and put them in the order corresponding to the sequence in the nucleic acid strand.

Gamow, on the other hand, used mathematics to establish the number of nucleotides that should be necessary to make up the code for one amino acid. He postulated that a three-letter nucleotide code would be enough to define all 20 amino acids.

Eight out of 20 won Nobel prizes (although there is some humorous ways to look at this that give better clues on how this was accomplished). Not very bad odds. Much like Kelly’s mountain climbers. The scenius attracts, nourishes and sprouts geniuses. But it is the first scientific scenius I am aware of that was not tethered to a single location and some very critical things came up from these interactions. For instance, Crick delineated the 20 amino acids used to make up proteins as an intellectual exercise, written on a pub napkin. He was right.

This group worked a lot to try and figure out how RNA made protein, thus the name RNA Tie Club (Gamow made sure each had an appropriate tie for their amino acid). There were many informal and speculative papers that they wrote to each other (remember that this was a time where biology and genetics were mainly descriptive. Speculation and deductive approaches to biology were not commonly used.) Many of these approaches were flat out wrong. But these errors allowed them to eventually gain some wisdom.

Some of the papers have become parts of biology lore, because the speculations turned out to be correct and led to really important breakthroughs in the field. Here is the most important one, Francis Crick and his Adaptor hypothesis, the paper for the RNA Tie Club that developed tRNA and a degenerate genetic code as a model. On Degenerate Templates and the Adaptor Hypothesis is one of the most famous unpublished papers I know of.

To get some idea of how this all worked, check out Watson’s response to Crick Adaptor paper for the RNA Tie Club. Watson was at CalTech at the time.

Gamow. was here for 4 days – rather exhausting as I do not live on Whiskey. Your TIECLUB note arrived during visit. Am not so pessimistic. Dislike adaptors. We must find RNA structure before we give up and return to viscosity and bird watching.

So, Gamow, who was at George Washington University at the time, was in California visiting one RNA Tie Member when the paper from another member arrived. Pretty interesting network.

So much of the early innovations in molecular biology were driven by the interactions of the RNA Tie club. All because a tricky physicist created a scenius without a specific location. Think what could be accomplished today with such a network using Science 2.0 approaches.

Being able to create and foster such a scenius will be an important part of many organizations.

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