プロフィールのカバー写真
プロフィール写真
David Basanta
フォロワー 17,789 人 - Cancers grow and change following Darwinian-style evolution.
Cancers grow and change following Darwinian-style evolution.

フォロワー 17,789 人
David さんの投稿

Too many PhD students?
“Since 1977, we've been recommending that graduate departments partake in birth control, but no one has been listening.” bit.ly/1lWYHRS

The 2Scientists podcast for November!
A belated Happy Thanksgiving to everyone. Special thanks go out to Megan Detloff of +Drexel University for being our latest podcast guest.

Also, huge thanks to Small Monuments for letting us use the track "Nan". We hope you all enjoy!

One fun podcast and one fun guest!
写真写真写真写真写真
Simon Garnier - They're Swarming!
写真 12 枚 - アルバムを表示

Great start to November I'd say...
写真写真写真写真写真
#pintTPA 11/02/15
写真 5 枚 - アルバムを表示
Thank you so much to everyone who came out on Monday for our ‪#‎pintTPA‬ event. To our speakers: Sarah Fontaine, Kim Luddy and Mya Breitbart. To our host Krishna Reddy and last but not least to the guys at Florida Avenue Brewing Co who kept those tasty beers flowing.

Cheers all, and hope to see you at the next one!

The guys that bring you +Pint of Science US (and that includes myself) are also responsible for a monthly science podcast whose name now is 2Scientists. Be sure to follow us here for the latest news on who will be interviewing, where and on when the podcasts get released.

I think this will be of interest to people like +Artem Kaznatcheev

Good news to all of those living in Asturias!

Anyone interested?
写真
Ladies and gents, we'll have a number of new cities joining us for ‪#‎pint16‬. Will yours be one of them? Watch this space for more details!

This is a great CrashCourse history episode on the way the technology of the industrial revolution, the railroad in particular, changed the way our society, communities, and consciousness are structured. The video is inspired by Wolfgang Schivelbusch's The Railway Journey: The Industrialization of Time and Space in the Nineteenth Century, which seems like a great book. I'd be interested in reading it, and as always you can make that easier by gifting it to me: http://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/2N0S7EQVYGYRA/

I particularly like the discussion of how railroad travel encouraged reading and discouraged socialization. This becomes really obvious on any modern metro train, where even eye contact is to be avoided.

/cc +Forrest Barnum, +David Basanta
他の投稿を読み込んでいます。お待ちください