Journaling on estrip is easy and free. sign up here

Tinypliny's Journal

tinypliny
My Podcast Link

07/12/2008 21:58 #44986

Congratulations, E:boxerboi!!!!!!!!!!!
Category: e:strip
What's an absolutely spellbinding story without a montage!??
Ready?? Cue the music >>>

::DOWNLOAD SOUND::



image
I just received an awesome mail in my inbox!
image

image
(E:boxerboi) successfully completed the Musselman Triathlon Challenge in 1:38:29!
image

image
The Triathlon Challenge started early in the day...

image
It was no walk in the park!!

image
Or even a casual dance by the disco!

image
It was a genuine time-bound sweat-drenched exhausting amphibious race!!

image
A arduous triple trek through the tunnel of exertion and grit!

image
But (e:boxerboi) completed it with flying colours!!
image
image (E:boxerboi)!!!!!!
image
imageYOU ARE MY HERO!image
boxerboi - 07/15/08 08:30
thanks everyone! It was so much fun. I can't wait to do the next one.
leetee - 07/12/08 22:17
wow. incredible. finishing at all is amazing... good time. thanks for letting us know, tiny! congrats boxerboi!
paul - 07/12/08 22:13
You are totally awesome (e:boxerboi) and tiny for your homage to him.

07/11/2008 18:20 #44934

Johnny Depp is Paul C. Kozlowski
Category: the odes
Or so I think.

Since I have a deadline, quite naturally, I have been afflicted by the ODES ((e:tinypliny,38711)) and I am off gallivanting to distant realms of the www. I chanced upon Chow Chocolat's myspace page. It lists the store as a 25 year old female in Buffalo, NY. I wonder if that is the demographic of clientele they hope to attract or just how young they feel... Anyway, their page has an intriguing little song called "Berlin" by a band called "Casperous Vine". It also has a to the band.

I couldn't help following it and the revelation of the evening is that its Johnny Depp's band! According to the page, Johnny Depp a.k.a Paul Christopher Kozlowski plays the Bayan, the Accordion, several types of Guitar (including Classical, Electric, Nylon), the oud, the fretless bass, vibraphone, jew harp, jaymar, porpoise, the trither, anu, marimba, glocks, vox, didj, scrap metal, keyboard/synthesizer, mandolin, percussion, flute, cello, violin and also an exotic and colourful looking self-assembled instrument called the Gilgamesh! Casperous Vine has released a CD compilation that is reviewed here. Their music is described as avante garde progressive electro-acoustic world-fusion! Kozlowski also plays in another rather interesting band called the Terrible Elephant. Give a listen to the song called "roompa" on this and you'll know what I mean.

image

Is there a limit to this man's seemingly endless and fascinating qualities?!

- Passionate Cook
- Founder of an innovative band (and probably plays in two more).
- Composer of exotic music
- Can build musical instruments from Scratch.
- Plays several musical instruments
- Works at Chow Chocolat
- Looks heartbreakingly like Johnny Depp!
- Has a very charming smile and is extremely down-to-earth.
- Shook hands with Hillary Clinton

While I was google-stalking this captivating personality, I found (e:Jim)'s Flickr stream! Yep. Just like that Bacon bloke is six degrees away from everyone on the planet, I am convinced that (e:Jim) is just a google-stalk away from everyone! (e:Jim) and (e:James) are virtual friends with another Flickr photo-enthusiast called Planet Tyler whose Summer '07 muse was none other than Johnny Depp Kozlowski!


Buffalo is an incredibly personal city. :)

_________
PS: Readers having trouble placing this post in context should refer to this post about Chow Chocolat: (e:tinypliny,44289)
tinypliny - 07/11/08 18:51
Gee. So this Depp Doppelgänger's last name was Ulrich and he was possibly related to some Ulrich in Buffy who resembled that Ulrich from Metallica. Something tells me you would be excellent at the Bacon association game. Hahaha...

Chow Chocolat apparently has a stall at the Farmer's Market at Bidwell. So maybe they might be at the Taste as well. Who knows. Their chocolate (both drinking and eating) is nothing short of amazing! :)
metalpeter - 07/11/08 18:31
Yeah Johnny Depp is a pretty Handsome dude, I guess that guy kinda looks like the Younger Depp. But that brings up a question when Depp started acting there was a guy who looked a lot like him and I thought was about as good named Sket Ulrich (not sure if he is related to the Ulirch from Buffy who looked just like lars ulrich of metallica I'm not sure if the two actors names are spelled the same or not but Lars and the Professor or who ever he was from Metallica do spell there names the same) well what ever happened to him? I wonder if Chow Chocolat will be part of the taste of Buffalo? Well maybe you will find out before me, and maybe I'll see you there and maybe if I do I'll yell your name and then just to mess around offer you some thing with meat in it or some of what ever cold beverage I'm drinking. There are so many people that often I never see anyone I know. Later I will check out that place's my space page, Happy Friday!!!!!!

07/09/2008 20:40 #44915

Nifty Research Tools and Software
Category: i-tech
I found a host of nifty and useful research tools out there that are totally worth sharing multiple times. These might be just the life-savers, organizers and new-idea germinators that graduate students and serious researchers are looking for. Can't guarantee that they would make your life easier though...

1. Keep tabs on what's happening in the peer-reviewed research world. From the website:
Discussing and Creating Peer-Reviewed Research: Research Blogging

Do you like to read about new developments in science and other fields? Are you tired of "science by press release"? Research Blogging is your place. Research Blogging allows readers to easily find blog posts about serious peer-reviewed research, instead of just news reports and press releases.


The RSS feed is here:

The real question is however, just how many RSS feeds can one read before it turns into an unmanageable information overload and just becomes toxic??

2. Making a Checklist and sticking to it: The Tada list

It has a very simple interface that I use to make a checklist of things I need to do everyday. Finishing the tasks on the list actually is very satisfying. I find that the more I use it, the more disciplined I want to be in my reading and work goals. I know I can very well make lists on paper. But if I use an online interface (a) I don't have to worry about losing my lists, (b) I can access and tick off my list from anywhere (Well, almost. Any place that has net access). (c) Save paper! (d) copy out the list if I need to be in a really remote location, or maybe a conference.

3. An excellent comparison of Reference Managers: This is an exhaustive wiki about all the reference managers out there. Some of them are free, web-based and help you access your references anywhere and anytime. The next time that dreaded hard-disk crash happens or worse, your laptop or USB drive gets stolen, you don't have to worry about your dissertation references anymore. I currently use RefWorks - that is free via my University and via Roswell. However, I am actively exploring other free and open-source alternatives such as:
-- Connotea from the Nature Publishing Group ->
-- Zotero - a Firefox Extension for Reference Management ->


4. Synchronizing Notes, PDF Annotations, Anywhere, Anytime: Note-Taking Software Comparison: If you print out PDFs just because you can't mark them up online/on-screen, there is help! By using some of these FREE note-taking software you can mark and highlight those PDFs on-screen, avoid all that paper clutter and save all those reams of paper (and trees). I currently use Jarnal - a platform-independent, open-source, free Java-based note-taking software ->

Options. Options. So many Options.
tinypliny - 07/09/08 23:04
It's interesting you say that because that very thought is also related in a tangential way to the future of the tissue repository at Roswell. They are planning to set up microarray libraries for all the breast tumour tissue they have in the repository. Microarrays are an indepth analysis of the DNA/RNA (and thus potentially proteins) that a tumour generates. This is called the expression profile of the tumours.

These DNA, RNA and proteins (expression profile) make up the tumour's "signature". Thus, a microarray might be used to recognize a tumour and classify it on the basis of its signature DNA/RNA and proteins (or expression profile). However, tumours have a lot of DNA and produce tons and tons of various RNA sequences (and thus proteins) and their expression profiles can be mind boggling. As we speak, new expression profiles are probably being discovered and characterised.

The problem is not every RNA sequence produced by these tumours can be profiled because of the huge amount of effort and cost involved in building a microarray library that is so detailed as to included every RNA sequence ever discovered. So the researchers now have to pick and choose what DNA/RNA sequences are the most relevant for the classification of the breast tumours and would most likely be used by investigators in their future research. This is necessary to cut down the costs. Also, we have limited amount of tissue and not an endless quantity. Hence, the need for careful consideration.

The dilemma is, research is evolving so rapidly that we cannot possibly know if the profiles that are used to classify tumours today will still be relevant tomorrow. I wonder how we will decide what goes into the microarray library. Would it still be useful, say ten years from now? Would we have wasted all the money to drill for so much information and yet be faced with a lack of information some years down the line? The meeting is next week. The decisions that will be made will be very crucial to the future of tissue-based research at Roswell. And it will all boil down to one question: How much information could we possibly afford today so that it might be helpful tomorrow?
paul - 07/09/08 22:19
I think about this all the time. At work we will be intergrating some blogging technology I am developing into the new intranet. It is hard to tell what happens when there is too much info. Luckily, computers are good at sorting and searching and you don't have to read everything. In my opinion it is better to put too much information in now and find ways to make it usable later than to not collect any info at all.

07/10/2008 17:51 #44920

Linkage Disequilibrium Blocks/Triangles
Category: science
I just had a zen moment in the interpretation of Linkage Disequilibrium Maps. (Also called LD maps, LD blocks, LD triangles - take your pick.) Turns out I was actually sweating 1st grade stuff!

I found that NO ONE explains this EXTRAORDINARILY SIMPLE thing in their umpteen papers, reviews, tutorials and what-nots. I just want to post this here so that when people google this simple little question, they find an equally simple and straight-forward answer!

This is an example of what a very small section of a Linkage Disequilibrium Map or an LD Map looks like.
image

Concentrate on the upper part of the map.
image

The thick blue line represents a strand of a chromosome. The white bars on the blue line of the chromosome are SNPs (Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms) that have been identified and sequenced. This means that we know what initial Nucleotide base has morphed into what final Nucleotide base. (Thus making it a polymorphic locus - or a position on the chromosome that exists in more than one form. The two forms are the intial nucleotide base and the final nucleotide base.)

These SNP locations or loci are labeled in this picture as 1, 2, 3, ... and so on. Each of these SNPs has a name that starts with rsXXXXX where XXXXX is some numeric code. Each SNP is represented by a labeled grey triangle below the thick blue line (the chromosome).
image

The purpose of an LD map is to tell us whether any two given SNPs are INHERITED TOGETHER in an offspring. In other words, we want to know if any two given SNPs are in Linkage Disequilibrium.

An example: Are say, SNP #5 and SNP #9 in linkage disequilibrium? You trace down the column leading from grey triangle #5 or SNP#5 (Name: rs2299433) going toward SNP #9 (rs2237717). Do the same for SNP #9 going toward SNP #5.
image

The square in which the columns leading from SNP #5 and SNP #9 intersect is the one you should focus on. I have encircled it above. As you can see its a LIGHT RED and has a number, 75. Thus SNP#5 and SNP #9 have a correlation of 0.75 and are in fairly high linkage disequilibrium with each other.

In simple terms, if your square of focus is a deep red, then the two SNPs you are interested in have the highest correlation with each other and have a highest Linkage Disequilibrium. Thus, one of them can easily act as a proxy for another. The lighter the shade of red, the lesser is the correlation between the two SNPs. For example, SNP #5 and SNP #7 have a low correlation (0.32) with each other. Thus, you cannot reliably take SNP #5 and say that it could possibly act as a proxy for SNP #7.

LD Maps also tell us about HAPLOTYPE blocks. See the blocks labeled, "Block 1 (49kb)", "Block 2 (23kb)", "Block 3 (93kb)" ... and so on.
image

These triangles or the blocks of dark red represent SNPs that are all in high linkage disequilibrium with each other and thus are all inherited together. They are also on the same section of the chromosome. These SNPs form a HAPLOTYPE. Every big red triangle or block in the LD map indicates a HAPLOTYPE on the corresponding stretch of the chromosome above. You only need to look at one or maximum a couple SNPs in a haplotype to know about the fate of the entire section of the chromosome that forms a Haplotype. It saves money and time.

The HapMap Consortium project has painstakingly constructed such an LD map for each and every known SNP in the entire human genome. Their LD maps look somewhat like this (using the haploview software: )

image

Though it is complicated, if you followed the simple tutorial above, you should be able to make sense of even complicated maps such as these. You are most welcome to leave a comment or drop me an email if you need further clarification!

I don't care who is laughing at this ridiculously detailed explanation of a kindergarten concept in genetics and genomics. Personally, I am just EXTREMELY relieved to finally know it well enough to be able to explain it. :)
YesThatCasey - 03/26/14 00:18
What a cool little slice to pop up. I need to read this later
raddna - 03/26/14 00:10
Awesome explanation. Totally simplified.
tinypliny - 07/10/08 21:47
Wow!! You should totally apply! You'd make an awesome Epidemiologist!! Let me know if I can propel your thoughts a bit more toward Epi. I think (e:boxerboi) is seriously considering Epi as well. The future is in Genetic/Molecular Epi and population studies.
terry - 07/10/08 21:21
More and more I think this may be where I am heading... From chemistry to biology to biochemistry to microbiology to genetic epidemiology...seems logical to me.

Can't wait to join you.
tinypliny - 07/10/08 20:48
That's funny, (e:heidi). :)
Thanks for commenting! Just to make it a bit more clear, I think I should add a simplified explanation of why exactly its called Linkage Disequilibrium when two SNPs are inherited together. The first part is easy. The SNPs are linked together on the same chromosome-> hence "Linkage". It's a disequilibrium because if they had not been linked together (or had been independent of each other), the offspring would be as likely to not inherit the two SNPs together as they would be to inherit them together. So there would be a 50/50 chance of getting them together or not getting them together, from the parents. Thus, if you examined a huge number of offspring and looked to see whether they have any two independent/unlinked SNPs, you would find an equilibrium between the condition of inheriting the two SNPs together and the condition of inheriting only one of the SNPs.

A more rigorous and mathematical explanation of the above is called the Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium/Principle/Law in Genetics. :::link:::
heidi - 07/10/08 19:27
Wow, Tiny! That's really cool. Not that I'd ever heard of linkage disequilibrium before just now... but learning the word "disequilibrium" alone was worth reading this. :-)

07/07/2008 20:15 #44897

Three Cheers to E:boxerboi
Category: heroes
My current inspirational summer hero is (e:boxerboi). He is taking on the formidable MUSSELMAN TRIATHLON CHALLENGE!!! this weekend!

image

You could walk by his office and not notice the absolutely cool bloke who works there. But beneath his calm and almost zen-like efficiency lies the makings of a genuine hero! While lesser souls on the third floor show varying degrees of wimpiness and run around in circles, (e:boxerboi) quietly comes by and conquers the world! Like a true hero, he has a magically unceasing and very much hidden stash of some very lethal weapons.

1. Chuckles
image

2. Blueberries
image

Don't underestimate the power of these weapons of choice. They are jam-packed with massive undercurrents of overwhelming charm. Needless to say, I have been totally swept away and I hereby appoint him the

Hero of the Extreme 3rd Realm of Planet K
image

Join me in wishing him all the very best of luck in his mission to conquer the Musselman World not once, not twice but a WHOLE THREE TIMES!!

THREE CHEERS to you, (e:boxerboi)!!! You ROCK!!!