Announcements Monday, April 11, 2005 . This is a SciScoop post by David Bradley
Hi
As some of you will already be aware, SciScoop’s rickyjames stepped down from SciScoop and passed control to me, freelance science writer David Bradley. I’d first like to thank Ricky and his colleagues for creating such a fantastic site and community over the last few years. I hope I can build on their legacy; with your continued support, I’m confident that will be possible.
A little bit about me – David Bradley is a freelance science journalist with more than fifteen years experience in writing, editing, and journalism. I’ve written for countless science magazines (New Scientist, Nature, Science, Popular Science, American Scientist etc), numerous papers, dozens of webzines, and various organizations from the National Academy of Sciences to Argonne National Laboratory.
I am now formulating plans for the future of SciScoop, please rest assured the site is not going to disappear, nor is it going to change so radically that you won’t recognise it, but do chip in with ideas if you feel there is an important feature you’d like to see added, or a not so important one you’d like to spike. I’ve already made a few minor tweaks to the site, which I hope will boost visitor numbers from the search engines and so help us build up the membership. If you run a website yourself you could help my efforts in this regard by adding a link to SciScoop, preferably using the phrase “SciScoop – Science News Forum” as the anchor text; if you’re linking to the old address SciFiToday.com then please update your link. Alternatively, you might like to render the SciScoop RSS newsfeed on your site (please email me for more info on how to do that if you’re not sure) or check out this howto article; it’s best if you don’t use the javascript approach as that’s not read by the search engines.
SciScoop is one of the best implementations I’ve seen of what Tim Berners-Lee originally had in mind when he invented the Web (a community-driven resource that is read and edited by its members, Wiki resources are a good example of that too). And, that’s down to the growing SciScoop user community. I hope those of you who have contributed to SciScoop in the past will continue to do so, maybe even increase your submission frequency, helping us to build the community into one of the strongest science writing sites on the net. I also hope new users and long-time lurkers might feel inspired to contribute an article or two in the coming weeks and months.
I’m really looking forward to growing SciScoop, I hope you’ll join in the fun!
David Bradley
Sciencebase
Previously: « The Top Three Reasons for Humans in Space
SciScoop Science News is a forum for news, views and controversial conjectures. Please contact us if would like to submit a guest post.
10 Responses to What’s the Scoop? From David Bradley Science Writer
kryptothesuperdog
April 11th, 2005 at 3:12 pm
hmm, this appears on my RSS feed but isn’t on the front page…Is this deliberate or is my computer confused?
rickyjames
April 12th, 2005 at 6:41 am
…I’m going to stick around until that total story counter in The SciScoop Scoop box hits 2000 in two or three weeks, around the first of May. I like tidy endings. After that, I’m quietly exiting stage left without any further fanfare. It’s been a great, great ride and I thank you all.
After that if you ever say to yourself “I wish there was a story / more stories on SciScoop…”, well, you know what to do:
This is a great site. David will make it better. But it will never be its very best unless you add your contribution, too.
rickyjames
April 12th, 2005 at 6:47 am
This story was originally posted as “only display within section” instead of “always display”, which is necessary to get a story to show up on the front page. I’ve toggled that switch and now the story should be appearing on the front page for everyone.
TheophileEscargot
April 12th, 2005 at 2:36 pm
I’ve never really commented much, but I’ve enjoyed reading the site. You’ve put a huge amount of work into it: thanks very much!
apsmith
April 13th, 2005 at 8:00 pm
Do tell us what you’ll be doing with all that new free time! :-)
rickyjames
April 14th, 2005 at 4:08 am
You mean besides going to Vandenberg Air Force Base for a week at the end of this month and getting ready to get shipped out to Kwaj in the middle of the Pacific this summer for rocket launch support when I’ve barely thawed out from my months this winter at Ft. Greely Alaska supporting missile defense initial activation? Hey, that pays the bills…
One project I’ve wanted to do for a long time (in fact I was working on this when Drog first contacted me to do SciScoop and since put it aside with only sporadic effort since) is write some computer code to analyze data from the Hipparcos mission and search for traces of exoplanet transits. I’ve downloaded 118,000 (!!!) webpages of data from the European Space Agency (yeah, ESA, that was no denial of service attack, that was me) so now I have a complete set of around 14 million photometric observations on a CD-ROM to wade through. Whatever I find I’m gonna write up for The Astronomical Journal as my first published scientific paper and then email Jaymie Matthews on the Canadian MOST project and request some telescope time for a few weeks to see if my most promising candidates turn out to be real planets. If they do, and I get the MOST team excited about trying to discover a new planet per week for a while, it could take years to go down my list and verify them all.
After I double the number of known extrasolar planets known to mankind and get the “explore strange new worlds” block checked off, it’s gonna be on to the “seek out new life” part of the Star Trek mantra. Back in 1998 I was working as a private engineering consultant and had a period of about 6 months between paid jobs and during that time I was fortunate enough to meet Maria Ragland (now Davis), a local scientist at the now-defunct Research Genetics that at one time employed 600 DNA techs here in Huntsville before it was bought out and moved. I told her about an idea I had to genetically engineer blue roses using an approach that avoided the acidic-tissue-deactivating-the-normal-blue-pigment-pathway problem that has bedeviled Florigene’s efforts. She thought it was a great idea and actually got me on as a guest researcher at RG for six months at no pay, allowing me to learn how to run gels and splice DNA and all that interesting stuff. I had some very interesting preliminary results in Arabidopsis test plants ((my test DNA definitely “took” in the leaves instead of the flower petals) but reality intervened and I had to go get a real paying job about the time they shut Research Genetics down. Anyway, I ran into Maria for the first time in years at one of the recent local Partnership for Biotechnology Research meetings; she’s teaching biology at UAH now and bless her heart, she told me she still has my frozen sample box with all of my DNA plasmids I worked up because she knew that someday I’d be coming back to keep working on that. So hang on, Maria, you’ve got me fired up and I’m a comin one of these days…
Thene there’s Max, the supercomputer cluster of 486-class motherboards I’ve been tinkering with for years out in my garage. I’ve only told gypsy what evil daytrading plans I have for THAT, and it’s about time I wrote the software to do it…so watch out, Wall Street.
Getting these three projects finished and off my conscience, I intend to move on to something that’s REALLY interesting and important. It will take some daydreaming to figure out just what. But my wife (who’s older than me) just got her AARP card (double gasp) and if that ain’t motivation to start paying attention to the clock and start wrapping up the long term projects you care about, I don’t know what is….
Joshua
April 14th, 2005 at 3:13 pm
Well welcome to Sciscoop!!! It will be good to have you here. I trust Ricky will probably still be a noticeable poster around here. :)
Anonymous
April 18th, 2005 at 10:19 am
Welcome, David.
I’d like to suggest a couple of small, but important changes to the RDF feed.
- allow at least a full paragraph (or two) in the <description> tag. Enough for a hook, but not enough that the site doesn’t get visited.
- include the XML orange rectangle logo behind the RDF link. This will help those people who don’t know what RDF is understand right away that it’s an RSS style feed.
Also, at some point you may want to look into converting from RDF to RSS (name recognition, etc – can’t comment on technical differences). Can someone more knowledgeable expand on this?
Thanks and good luck.
gnorville
April 18th, 2005 at 8:59 pm
You’ve picked a fabulous place to hang your hat! When I heard Ricky was stepping down I was a bit worried, but your credentials have greatly reassured me. Welcome!
Ricky – thanks for creating my favorite science site, as far as I’m concerned this is THE place for me to get my fix on what’s going on in science news. Good luck with future endeavors.
May 9th, 2005 at 3:41 am
Why thanks. I only just picked up this post, but thanks for your support. I hope I’m living up to expectations so far…