Start of Another Academic Year

September 8, 2008 – 2:32 pm

It’s September, so here we go again… Samira, Jeremy, Carolyn, and I welcomed Aran Donohue, Alicia Grubb, Zachary Kincaid, Jason Montojo, and Rory Tulk to the team today. It’ll be March or April before they’ve got research topics, but I’ll add links to their blogs when I get them. David Bolter of the ATRC and I are also starting a project with Alecia Fowler of Environment Canada, who wants to look at making web-based maps accessible to people with visual and physical disabilities.

And I’m teaching two courses: CSC301 (Introduction to Software Engineering) and CSC491 (Computer Science Capstone). Students in the former will be building an image diff/merge tool for use with version control systems as their course projects; students in the latter will get to choose a project from a list of about 15 put up by U of T profs, local non-profits, and colleagues in various startups and open source groups. I’m pitching to them on Wednesday at noon, and I’m still accepting proposals until 9:00 pm tonight.

What’s Your Favorite Online Survey Engine?

September 6, 2008 – 6:55 am

We’re running a survey this fall of how scientists use computers, and while SurveyMonkey does most of what we want, it doesn’t do everything.  We would welcome pointers to other online survey engines that:

  1. Are very reliable.
  2. Provide a wide variety of tools (including “Rank the following in order of importance” with an option to mark some “not applicable”).
  3. Don’t fill 80% of the screen with banner ads.

Anyone have experiences to share?

Science 2.0: the Future of Online Tools for Scientists

September 4, 2008 – 2:48 pm

A pub night and panel with Timo Hannay, Cameron Neylon, and Michael Nielsen, hosted by Nature Network Toronto

What does the future hold for the way we do science? Are online repositories such as GenBank and the physics preprint ArXiv, or social tools such as Nature Network, about to change science profoundly? To find out, join Nature Network Toronto for an interactive panel discussion over drinks at the pub.

Date: Sunday September 7 at 7:30pm

Place: Fionn MacCool’s (181 University Avenue, near corner with Adelaide)

About the panelists:

Timo Hannay is Publishing Director of Nature.com at the Nature Publishing Group, publishers of Nature and over seventy other scientific journals, plus numerous online resources for scientists. He is responsible for new online initiatives in social software, databases and audio-visual content. Timo trained as a neurophysiologist at the University of Oxford and worked as a journalist and a management consultant before becoming a publisher.

Cameron Neylon is a biophysicist working in molecular biology, biophysics, and high throughput methods. He has a joint appointment as a Lecturer in Combinatorial Chemistry at the University of Southampton and as a Senior Scientist in Biomolecular Sciences at the ISIS Pulsed Neutron and Muon Facility. He is developing an electronic notebook for biochemistry labs which has lead to his involvement in the Open Research movement and to his group moving to an Open Notebook.

Michael Nielsen is a writer living just outside Toronto, Canada. He is currently working on a book about The Future of Science. One of the pioneers of quantum computation, he coauthored the standard text on quantum computation that is the most highly cited physics publication of the last 25 years. He is the author of more than fifty scientific papers, including invited contributions to Nature and Scientific American.

For more information visit Nature Network Toronto (http://network.nature.com/group/toronto), or contact Eva Amsen (eva.amsen@gmail.com) or Jen Dodd (jen@jendodd.com, 519 572 2275).

Rails Reviewer Wanted

September 1, 2008 – 6:44 am

For the past few days, Blake Winton has been reviewing every single commit made by a team of students who building a medium-sized Django application. We’d really like to find someone (not necessarily in the Toronto area, but that would make it easier for me to buy her/him lunch) who’d be willing to do the same for a RubyOnRails project that Prof. Karen Reid is running. As well as generally making the world a better place, it would also be a great way to meet (and recruit) some of our most talented students.  If you’re interested, please drop me a line.

Meanwhile, we’re teaching our daughter a new verse to an old song:

The zombies on the bus go, “Brains… brains… brains…”

Parenthood turns out to be fun in all sorts of unanticipated ways :-)

Mozilla Developer Days in Toronto Sept 15-16 2008

August 31, 2008 – 9:53 am

Via David Humphrey: a two-day workshop on developing for and with Mozilla will be held at Seneca College in Toronto on September 15-16, 2008.  The first day is meant for non-Mozilla devs who want to see how they can leverage the platform, contribute, or otherwise learn about Mozilla tech for their projects; the second day is more for current Moz devs and is focused on testing strategies.  The event is free, and people can sign-up at https://wiki.mozilla.org/DeveloperDays/TorontoSept2008.

Community-Authored Books

August 26, 2008 – 2:30 pm

Via Michael Nygard:

O’Reilly is creating a new line of “community-authored” books. One of them is called “97 Thing Every Software Architect Should Know”… All of the “97 Things” books will be created by wiki, with the best entries being selected from all the wiki contributions.

The whole wiki makes for interesting (if uneven) reading.

Summer’s End

August 26, 2008 – 2:20 pm

The last of our summer students finishes at the end of this week; here’s a few links to close off another great season:

Thanks again, everyone — I really enjoyed working with you all.

If You Ever Pass This Way…

(photo courtesy of Qiyu Zhu)

A Pile o’ Links

August 26, 2008 – 7:13 am

Accumulated while on holiday—funny how sometimes I used this blog as an external strap-on memory pack.

More later, including final wrap-up on Google Summer of Code projects.

Bil Lewis Works With Biologists…

August 22, 2008 – 7:56 pm

…and occasionally finds it frustrating.

Married

August 22, 2008 – 5:22 pm

Pictures say it better than words ever could:

Looking Up

Maddie in the Back Yard

Feeding the Fish

Feeding the Fish with Mummy and Grampa

In the Big Chair

In the Big Chair

On the Beach

On the Beach

Sadie Looks Good in Hats

Sadie Looks Good in Hats

Sadie Makes Her Entrance

The Bride Makes Her Entrance

Vows

Love, Honor…

Cutting the Cake

Cutting the Cake

The Sopranos Version

The Sopranos Version

All Together Now

Families Together

Three Mothers

Three Mothers

Uh, What Just Happened?

Uh, What Just Happened?