3,459 Matching Annotations
  1. Dec 2015
    1. AB_10003146

      Antibody ID: AB_10003146

      Target Antigen: LC3

      Vendor: Novus Go To Vendor

      Cat Num: NB100-2220

      Proper Citation: (Novus Cat# NB100-2220, RRID:AB_10003146)

      Reference:

      Clonality: unknown

      Clone ID: None

      Host Organism: rabbit

      Comments: manufacturer recommendations: Immunofluorescence, Immunohistochemistry-Paraffin, Immunoprecipitation, Western Blot; Immunofluorescence; Western Blot; Immunohistochemistry; Immunohistochemistry - fixed; Immunoprecipitation mouse, zebrafish/fish, this antibody reacts with human, rat and mouse lc3 protein, though the mouse detection is weaker than the human no other species have been tested the immunogen used for this antibody production has 100 homology with rat and zebrafish, 92 with mouse, 91 with cow, and 84 with xenopus proteins, bovine, plant, human, rat


      resolver lookup

    2. AB_87643

      Antibody ID: AB_87643

      Target Antigen: Lamp2 See NCBI gene

      Vendor: Innovative Research

      Cat Num: 51-2200

      Proper Citation: (Innovative Research Cat# 51-2200, RRID:AB_87643)

      Reference:

      Clonality: polyclonal antibody

      Clone ID: None

      Host Organism: rabbit

      Comments: manufacturer recommendations: ELISA; Western Blot; ELISA, Western blotting rat


      resolver lookup

    3. AB_2134767

      Antibody ID: AB_2134767

      Target Antigen: Lamp2 See NCBI gene

      Vendor: DSHB

      Cat Num: ABL-93

      Proper Citation: (DSHB Cat# ABL-93, RRID:AB_2134767)

      Reference: PMID:22740045

      Clonality: monoclonal antibody

      Clone ID: None

      Host Organism: rat

      Comments: Useful for western blot mouse


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    4. AB_2134500

      Antibody ID: AB_2134500

      Target Antigen: Lamp1 See NCBI gene

      Vendor: DSHB

      Cat Num: 1D4B

      Proper Citation: (DSHB Cat# 1D4B, RRID:AB_2134500)

      Reference: PMID:21344404

      Clonality: monoclonal antibody

      Clone ID: None

      Host Organism: rat

      Comments: Useful for western blot mouse


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    5. AB_839504
    6. AB_2120309

      Antibody ID: AB_2120309

      Target Antigen: Hspa8 See NCBI gene

      Vendor: Novus

      Cat Num: NB120-2788

      Proper Citation: (Novus Cat# NB120-2788, RRID:AB_2120309)

      Reference:

      Clonality: monoclonal antibody

      Clone ID: None

      Host Organism: mouse

      Comments: Useful for western blot, immunoprecipitation human, mouse


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    7. AB_398141

      Antibody ID: AB_398141

      Target Antigen: GM130 See NCBI gene

      Vendor: BD Biosciences

      Cat Num: 610822

      Proper Citation: (BD Biosciences Cat# 610822, RRID:AB_398141)

      Reference: PMID:19757494

      Clonality: monoclonal antibody

      Clone ID: 35/GM130

      Host Organism: mouse

      Comments: manufacturer recommendations: Immunofluorescence; Immunoprecipitation; Western Blot; IF, IP, WB canine, human, mouse, rat, dog, human, mouse, rat


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    8. AB_2107448

      Antibody ID: AB_2107448

      Target Antigen: GAPDH antibody [6C5]

      Vendor: Abcam Go To Vendor

      Cat Num: ab8245

      Proper Citation: (Abcam Cat# ab8245, RRID:AB_2107448)

      Reference: PMID:24899721

      Clonality: monoclonal antibody

      Clone ID: None

      Host Organism: mouse

      Comments: manufacturer recommendations: IgG1; IgG1 ELISA, ICC, ICC/IF, IHC-Fr, WB; Immunocytochemistry; Immunoprecipitation; Other; Western Blot; ELISA; Immunohistochemistry - frozen; Immunofluorescence; Immunohistochemistry; Chromatography human, mouse, rat, baboon, chicken, dog, fish, monkey, pig, rabbit, xenopus laevis, zebrafish, porcine, canine, non-human primate, rat, human, zebrafish/fish, chicken/bird, mouse, xenopus/amphibian, rabbit


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    9. AB_397829

      Antibody ID: AB_397829

      Target Antigen: EEA1 See NCBI gene

      Vendor: BD Biosciences

      Cat Num: 610456

      Proper Citation: (BD Biosciences Cat# 610456, RRID:AB_397829)

      Reference:

      Clonality: monoclonal antibody

      Clone ID: None

      Host Organism: mouse

      Comments: manufacturer recommendations: Immunofluorescence; Immunoprecipitation; Western Blot; IF, IP, WB canine, chicken/avian, human, mouse, rat, chicken, dog, human, rat


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    10. AB_2087827

      Antibody ID: AB_2087827

      Target Antigen: CTSL2, CTSL1 See NCBI gene

      Vendor: Santa Cruz Biotechnology

      Cat Num: sc-10778

      Proper Citation: (Santa Cruz Biotechnology Cat# sc-10778, RRID:AB_2087827)

      Reference:

      Clonality: polyclonal antibody

      Clone ID: H-80

      Host Organism: rabbit

      Comments: manufacturer recommendations: ELISA; Immunofluorescence; Immunoprecipitation; Western Blot; Western Blotting, Immunoprecipitation, Immunofluorescence, ELISA human, mouse, rat


      resolver lookup

    11. AB_637896

      Antibody ID: AB_637896

      Target Antigen: CTSD See NCBI gene

      Vendor: Santa Cruz Biotechnology

      Cat Num: sc-6486

      Proper Citation: (Santa Cruz Biotechnology Cat# sc-6486, RRID:AB_637896)

      Reference:

      Clonality: polyclonal antibody

      Clone ID: C-20

      Host Organism: goat

      Comments: manufacturer recommendations: ELISA; Immunocytochemistry; Immunofluorescence; Immunohistochemistry; Immunoprecipitation; Western Blot; Western Blotting, Immunoprecipitation, Immunofluorescence, Immunohistochemistry(P), ELISA human, mouse, rat


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    1. AB_2113602

      Antibody ID: AB_2113602

      Target Antigen: Glutamate receptor 1

      Vendor: Millipore Go To Vendor

      Cat Num: AB1504

      Proper Citation: (Millipore Cat# AB1504, RRID:AB_2113602)

      Reference: PMID:16680782,PMID:16856139,PMID:18300259,PMID:18335497,PMID:18615559,PMID:18924138,PMID:19006199,PMID:19034952,PMID:20394057,PMID:20963825,PMID:21192079,PMID:21452196,PMID:22006647,PMID:22434607,PMID:24920620

      Clonality: polyclonal antibody

      Clone ID: None

      Host Organism: rabbit

      Comments: manufacturer recommendations: WB, IH(P), IP; Immunohistochemistry; Immunoprecipitation; Western Blot horse, r, m, h, eq


      resolver lookup

    1. Maybe the ingenious Craig-Satoshi-Nakamoto-Wright, like most ordinary people, can’t stop losing access to his PGP keys and keeps having to upload different keys to the keyserver.

      Reality check, most ordinary people never heard of PGP!

    1. the software uses 'fuzzy' logic to map annotations to their approximate original location

      I'd say, rather, "...uses a 'fuzzy' text-matching algorithm to attach annotations to their correct locations."

  2. Nov 2015
    1. ust that it needs to be done well

      Although my review of the TED5000 was somewhat critical, I can see in hindsight that it wa very well done. And having real time whole-house power use on a display in the dining room was a powerful behavior changer.

    2. There’s no buffer in the system, aside from a few reservoirs where they can occasionally pump water uphill.

      The Northfield Mountain facility mentioned here is one of those. I'd heard the large pipes running uphill along Route 9 near Bennington Vermont are part of such a system, it must be that one.

    3. What if there were an “npm” for scientific models?

      Paging Brad Holtz.

    4. But climate change happens in the physical world. The technology to address it must operate on the physical world. We won’t get that technology without good tools for programming beyond the screen.

      Great point. From this perspective Arduino hacking really is retro.

    5. Protocols for moving data around were the big thing for a few decades. Then it was moving money around. The next big thing will be moving energy around.

      We need it to be sexier than bitcoin. Not sure how that happens.

    1. nif-0000-00003

      Keywords: neuronal morphology, neuroinformatics, branching analysis, digital reconstruction, analysis, comparison

      Resource ID: nif-0000-00003, SCR_003487

      Parent Organization: Computational Neuroanatomy Group

      Mentioned In Literature: PMID: 21811639, PMID: 22442703, PMID: 22701737, PMID: 23162433

      Proper Citation: http://cng.gmu.edu:8080/Lm, RRID:nif-0000-00003

      Related Condition: None

      Supporting Agency: None

      Relation: listed by:nitrc, 3dvc,

      Reference: PMID: 18451794

      Website Status: Last checked up;


      resolver lookup

    1. nif-0000-31484

      Keywords: None

      Resource ID: nif-0000-31484, SCR_008567

      Parent Organization: None

      Mentioned In Literature: PMID: 12184816, PMID: 14975064, PMID: 17257054, PMID: 17257057, PMID: 17318258, PMID: 17347681, PMID: 17415408, PMID: 17476314, PMID: 17476315, PMID: 17479163, PMID: 17559308, PMID: 17571923, PMID: 17571925, PMID: 17616978, PMID: 17677000, PMID: 17677002, PMID: 17941713, PMID: 18820746, PMID: 19014582, PMID: 19387463, PMID: 19455412, PMID: 19478833, PMID: 19834601, PMID: 20084104, PMID: 20109202, PMID: 20169129, PMID: 20407788, PMID: 20650002, PMID: 20687918, PMID: 20798844, PMID: 20807872, PMID: 20808828, PMID: 20927192, PMID: 21044289, PMID: 21106059, PMID: 21209901, PMID: 21286901, PMID: 21307958, PMID: 21687662, PMID: 21775626, PMID: 21863892, PMID: 21977294, PMID: 22046305, PMID: 22456035, PMID: 22479336, PMID: 22529796, PMID: 22529796, PMID: 22701513, PMID: 22768269, PMID: 22867627, PMID: 22936971, PMID: 22984548, PMID: 23206951, PMID: 23263487, PMID: 23304434, PMID: 23421767, PMID: 23451773, PMID: 23597063, PMID: 23606954, PMID: 23626754, PMID: 23658707, PMID: 23826311, PMID: 23837500, PMID: 23857501, PMID: 23888168, PMID: 23888168, PMID: 23901912, PMID: 23930146, PMID: 23936250, PMID: 23966344, PMID: 24085376, PMID: 24086773, PMID: 24418414, PMID: 24427285, PMID: 24428733, PMID: 24636452, PMID: 24666273, PMID: 24738831, PMID: 24789100, PMID: 24836286, PMID: 24840250, PMID: 24896256, PMID: 24976866, PMID: 25038754, PMID: 25179422, PMID: 25328529, PMID: 25330372, PMID: 25358728, PMID: 25358745, PMID: 25474422, PMID: 25522424, PMID: 25530881, PMID: 25703589, PMID: 25823458, PMID: 26064784, PMID: 26083713, PMID: 26151496, PMID: 26161690, PMID: 26171855, PMID: 26328221

      Proper Citation: http://www.sas.com, RRID:nif-0000-31484

      Related Condition: None

      Supporting Agency: None

      Relation: None

      Reference:

      Website Status: Last checked up;


      resolver lookup

    1. rid_000042

      Keywords: data collection, statistics, predict

      Resource ID: rid_000042, SCR_002865

      Parent Organization: None

      Mentioned In Literature: PMID: 12184816, PMID: 12694630, PMID: 15028120, PMID: 17096597, PMID: 17176579, PMID: 17371595, PMID: 17411345, PMID: 17450239, PMID: 17497033, PMID: 17525791, PMID: 17549228, PMID: 17571922, PMID: 17604453, PMID: 17677000, PMID: 18466578, PMID: 18625052, PMID: 18959777, PMID: 18976469, PMID: 19017725, PMID: 19265027, PMID: 19402973, PMID: 19476655, PMID: 19503753, PMID: 19592570, PMID: 19604382, PMID: 19774085, PMID: 19778516, PMID: 19911209, PMID: 19936244, PMID: 20003383, PMID: 20046870, PMID: 20194112, PMID: 20231894, PMID: 20412572, PMID: 20422020, PMID: 20444296, PMID: 20502888, PMID: 20512882, PMID: 20537185, PMID: 20584331, PMID: 20668685, PMID: 20727165, PMID: 20835381, PMID: 20885919, PMID: 20939918, PMID: 20969789, PMID: 21048948, PMID: 21060689, PMID: 21072126, PMID: 21087513, PMID: 21088689, PMID: 21211046, PMID: 21249131, PMID: 21249201, PMID: 21304584, PMID: 21311936, PMID: 21379334, PMID: 21429200, PMID: 21448435, PMID: 21494569, PMID: 21494606, PMID: 21504621, PMID: 21562079, PMID: 21573228, PMID: 21605392, PMID: 21633698, PMID: 21637822, PMID: 21713003, PMID: 21738809, PMID: 21829449, PMID: 21912650, PMID: 21931639, PMID: 22013510, PMID: 22039473, PMID: 22046443, PMID: 22096599, PMID: 22152397, PMID: 22174772, PMID: 22216234, PMID: 22348011, PMID: 22456035, PMID: 22467443, PMID: 22473874, PMID: 22479243, PMID: 22479488, PMID: 22481898, PMID: 22516794, PMID: 22545143, PMID: 22548123, PMID: 22558149, PMID: 22594439, PMID: 22719790, PMID: 22798048, PMID: 22837844, PMID: 22853778, PMID: 22873416, PMID: 22883105, PMID: 22888284, PMID: 22905142, PMID: 22911808, PMID: 22935351, PMID: 22952897, PMID: 22969714, PMID: 22985048, PMID: 23028662, PMID: 23028726, PMID: 23029079, PMID: 23032943, PMID: 23145257, PMID: 23155368, PMID: 23185621, PMID: 23281216, PMID: 23304137, PMID: 23316315, PMID: 23318557, PMID: 23346054, PMID: 23404944, PMID: 23409160, PMID: 23446658, PMID: 23451025, PMID: 23469248, PMID: 23472208, PMID: 23497707, PMID: 23508459, PMID: 23510227, PMID: 23512915, PMID: 23521843, PMID: 23533586, PMID: 23555003, PMID: 23555686, PMID: 23560052, PMID: 23565240, PMID: 23592957, PMID: 23613715, PMID: 23613784, PMID: 23614002, PMID: 23630146, PMID: 23632458, PMID: 23633531, PMID: 23697479, PMID: 23714429, PMID: 23718556, PMID: 23721202, PMID: 23738216, PMID: 23799005, PMID: 23810313, PMID: 23826933, PMID: 23901337, PMID: 23935525, PMID: 23937410, PMID: 23956957, PMID: 23967059, PMID: 24024214, PMID: 24086632, PMID: 24086658, PMID: 24151622, PMID: 24164967, PMID: 24179852, PMID: 24198999, PMID: 24222779, PMID: 24237863, PMID: 24253340, PMID: 24278126, PMID: 24278166, PMID: 24391992, PMID: 24421979, PMID: 24459619, PMID: 24486144, PMID: 24489498, PMID: 24489795, PMID: 24497992, PMID: 24508649, PMID: 24523588, PMID: 24599189, PMID: 24607068, PMID: 24632740, PMID: 24632832, PMID: 24648499, PMID: 24658092, PMID: 24669199, PMID: 24676032, PMID: 24688591, PMID: 24765099, PMID: 24885576, PMID: 24887491, PMID: 24916917, PMID: 24932237, PMID: 24936421, PMID: 24940743, PMID: 24967074

      Proper Citation: http://www-01.ibm.com/software/uk/analytics/spss/, RRID:rid_000042

      Related Condition: None

      Supporting Agency: None

      Relation: None

      Reference:

      Website Status: Last checked up;


      resolver lookup

    1. By enabling all users to simulate the feature manually and by enabling API-wielding users to simulate it programmatically, Trello meets our needs well enough.

      An API-wielding user might be a developer doing deep integration with another product, or a toolsmith doing ad-hoc integration for a team. I'm in the latter camp. It's refreshing that Trello provides easy affordances for toolsmiths, and I wonder to what extent that scenario -- vs the pro dev scenario -- was specifically contemplated.

    1. Biological networks in ischemic tolerance - Rethinking theapproach to clinical conditioning

      I am annotating a downloaded copy of this PDF.

    Annotators

    1. Nile Rat, (Arvicanthis niloticus) NR_0801_Sagittal_Giemsa_RetinalProj

      This is anchored to the selection.

      http://wiley.biolucida.net/download.php?type=file&accessid=aaf49f5dbe3c2bdf4336e375b700214fa108505d&file=C:/Users/biolucidaservice/AppData/Local/MBF%20Bioscience/.imagedata/wileyadmin/catalog/thumbnails/1094.jpeg

    2. This is collection 45

    1. The bridging of the digital and physical seemed oddly and unexpectedly fresh, prescient, like a rich vein worthy of continued mining.

      VR promoters view Bret Victor's current effort to connect the physical to the virtual with great suspicion. But I can't wait to see more of his experimentation.

    1. A young boy living in unincorporated Windsor in the 1980s felt lucky to have his best friend live in the house behind him. The only problem was that his parents would not let him walk to his friend’s house even though it was so nearby. The reason was that it was too long and unsafe of a walk on city streets. The solution was to put a ladder over the fence. This ladder became a symbol of what was wrong with the design of Windsor.

      Excellent lead for a story about how architecture can thwart or promote safe cities.

    1. Safari View Controller brings the sharing and Reader capabilities of Safari to any app, while at the same time hiding information about the URLs being viewed from the app that displayed the web view
    1. \displaystyle T = \sqrt{\left( \prod_{c = 1}^{n}{s(C)} \right)^{\frac{1}{n}}R_{\text{valid}}}

      $$\displaystyle T = \sqrt{\left( \prod_{c = 1}^{n}{s(C)} \right)^{\frac{1}{n}}R_{\text{valid}}}$$

      Missing some fonts?

    1. Feed current page to vi

      test

    Annotators

  3. jakehartnell.github.io jakehartnell.github.io
    1. higgledy-piggledy

      there's a word i need to use more often

    1. Some 43% report reading a book—in any format—on a daily basis, a rate similar to older adults.

      43% of millennials open a book every day? And that rate is comparable to that of older adults?

      I want to believe that, but daily? I would like to know more about this study.

  4. Oct 2015
    1. This paper presents the Metadata And Citations Jailbreaker (

      test

    1. Of all countries globally

      This annotation's prefix will cross text nodes.

    2. African tropical moist deciduous forest

      This annotation falls within a text node.

    1. Why does OAuth suck? Because it’s proprietary. It’s not a standard, it’s a just a made up word that roughly translates to, “Good [bleeping] luck”.

      My heart sinks when I approach a new OAuth flow. Virtually guaranteed to be a horror show.

    1. SEQUENTIAL INNOVATION, PATENTS,AND IMITATION

      x

    1. How does modern annotation work? What are the emerging standards? Why is annotation becoming an important mode of collaboration? Jon Udell, product manager for Hypothes.is, will show how users of the tool are finding answers to these questions.
    1. Meanwhile I'll use the Spectre x360 with Windows 10, which, despite flaws, is a sweet combination. But the smug superiority I was planning to unleash on my hipster Mac friends will have to wait.
    1. I just tagged a group annotation and realized you can’t search for it on the stream. Querying the stream as a logged-in user: https://hypothes.is/stream?q=tag:test123 -> 0 results Querying the API as a logged-in user: https://hypothes.is/api/search?tag=test123 -> 1 result
    2. The left tab is an H blog post with H embedded. Its local storage — where we remember stuff — is keyed to the URL. But with no embed, the local storage is keyed to the extension’s id. So if you switch tabs embed<->embed or extension<->extension things stay the same, but if you cross those wires they may differ. Maybe we can always remember stuff using the URL key?
    3. Select a group annotation, then begin another. Selected annotation remains visible, new annotation not visible. Clear selection. New annotation still not visible. Scroll to end of sidebar. New annotation finally visible.

      Select a group annotation, then begin another. Selected annotation remains visible, new annotation not visible. Clear selection. New annotation still not visible. Scroll to end of sidebar. New annotation finally visible.

    4. A selected-then-edited annotation goes missing until reselected:
    5. Here’s a minor detail with the post control. Both actions — switching scope and posting — are contingent on min input being supplied to the editor (text or a tag). Prior to that, the control still drops down, implying that scope-switching is available even before the control lights up and is ready to post. Possibilities: – don’t drop down until the button lights up and is ready to do – do drop down, and actually enable scope switching before the button lights up and is ready to go

      Context: It seems to be possible to switch scopes before the annotation is ready to post, but isn't possible.

    6. if the extension is not active I can be logged in but without group controls: Oh, I see. This had not occurred to me before but you can be logged in two different ways: Quite confusing if you assume, as I did, that I could reply to the group from the stream.

      Context: Cannot reply to a group from the stream.

    7. Selected group: Hypothesis Groups Testing Expected: Focus on that group Actual: Focus on Public, had to switch away and then back to group to focus on it.

      Context: Although the group scope is sticky, annotations displayed when visiting a page in that scope may not reflect the group until after a refresh.

      At https://hypothes.is/blog/2015-10-06-test-narrative-jon-groups/.

      I continue to suspect weirdness when H is also embedded as in this case. Will repeat this for the wsj url that does not embed h.

    8. How is the RSS feed seeing it?

      Oh, I get it.

      So: we now have to contemplate adding RSS/Atom authentication for group feeds.

      Context here: I realized that groups can't use RSS/Atom to monitor activity unless using an RSS/Atom reader that can have and use H credentials which is a hairball. We should probably enable it but I'm bumping the priority of the all-up Notifications epic.

      More context: @robertknight suggests offering a special group RSS link on the landing page, Great idea!

    9. Focus goes to deleted group, however.

      Context: Can now leave a group, but the focus after doing so needs cleanup.

    10. we allow group names that differ only in a part of the name not normally visible

      https://hypothes.is/groups/Bvd724/2015-10-06-test-narrative

      https://hypothes.is/groups/VNO92Q/2015-10-06-test-narrative

      It’s important that we do, so that a name like “Mr. Smith’s English Class” need not be globally unique. But should we:

      – Prevent me from creating two names that look alike?

      – Add the hash to the tooltip so a person who happens to belong to two groups differing only by the hash has a way to distinguish them?

    11. we allow group names like #&*()qwer. Should we?

      Image Description

    12. So the group name isn’t sent in the API call. That’ll be easy to fix, at which point group query on the stream will work, subject (as always) to permissions, so you’ll need to be a logged-in group user to see results for that group.

      Context here is that a group query you'd expect to work on the stream doesn't yet.

    13. The POST button says Only Me but the card above still says 2015-08-06-test-narrative. Should it adjust?

      Maybe just remove the group name from the "to GroupName" line?

    14. I have to check each group to find which has the in-flight annotation that I can continue or cancel.

      So maybe switching scopes should auto-cancel an in-progress annotation?

    15. There used to be just one key in local storage: hypothesis.privacy (value: private or shared. that’s the sticky setting, across all tabs) Now we’ve added this key: hypothesis.groups.focus (value: __world__ or groupname) So when I switch from Public to a group I should expect that to travel with me from tab to tab. Checking: it does. Likewise hypothesis.privacy. Checking: Yep. So the effective privacy is a combo of hypothesis.groups.focus and hypothesis.privacy. Changing either governs behavior across tabs in a sticky way.

      The wrong default dwhly reported may not be a bug, but rather an unexpected result of sticky privacy persisting not only across tabs but now also across the Public/Group scoping.

    16. From another logged-in-group-member’s perspective it should look like just Jon’s anno and Dan’s reply. Dan could verify that.

      Checking that private-within-group is indeed private-within-group.

    17. I’ll make one more public anno to convince myself Slack is reading the feed promptly.

      Slack: Can you hear me now?

    18. how will I know they did?

      Notification might be overkill. Maybe viewing group membership is enough.

      (When you click this link in the RSS feed you are really going to wish for direct linking.)

    19. Why?

      There's no point in reusing existing names. Or is there, as a template for variants?

    20. So, I’m not sure about our baseline here.
    1. Relaying a report from Conor from a private group:

      "When I created this highlight, it was associated with the group (as I was scoped by the group) but was "Only Me" - I wanted to make this viewable to the group so I hit edit, added a tag, changed the scope to the group. Success. When I then changed the scope back to public, this group highlight I had made was in the public stream. It then disappeared from Public on page reload."

    1. I believe that thousands of cumulative impressions of background music assigned to “romance” and “grief” and “heroism” have laid down layers of scar tissue on our ability to feel something when tonal symphonic music is made or written in the 21st century.

      The sonic equivalent to the light pollution that makes it hard to see the night sky?

    2. I believe that one reason vinyl and phonographs are hot again is that musically oriented people crave something of a shrine for their music — a device that is for music only.

      Also of course the aforementioned liner notes courtesy of the aforementioned mavens, and delivered in a dedicated uninterruptible format.

    3. but what’s lost is the maven class that infuses the culture with informed enthusiasm
    1. Also, when I reply as “Only Me” the annotation should *not* show group membership.

      Context here: In a reply to a group annotation, switching to Only Me leaves the name of the group on the card.

    2. a bogus search returns everything in the stream

      Yes. Unrelated to groups of course.

      Context here: if you get anything wrong in the syntax of a stream query it fails in bad way by acting as if you queried for everything. So it's not obvious that your query failed.

    3. When replying to an annotation that’s already been created within a group, the POST dropdown should default to the group. Also, the group membership should *not* show on the card until it’s actually been created.

      Exploring a possible workflow here: tag these with group_test_needs_card or group_test_has_card and then use

      https://hypothes.is/stream?q=tag:group_test_needs_card

      https://hypothes.is/stream?q=tag:group_test_has_card

      to review.

    4. Also, when I reply as “Only Me” the annotation should *not* show group membership.
    5. When replying to an annotation that’s already been created within a group, the POST dropdown should default to the group.

      I've checkout out sticky privacy, it behaves as I think it should but there's a new wrinkle, see:

      https://hypothes.is/a/875qI8OiShmc0gvFwuRE_Q

    6. The group:<id> does not seem to work for /stream

      seanh [11:13 AM] Huh, I'm surprised that searching by group:<id> doesn't seem to work

      seanh [11:14 AM] But it does work in the API, how odd

      seanh [11:15 AM] Oh, something in our frontend code is mangling the search request

    1. procrastatweeting, dronevertising and roomnesia, a condition in which people forget why they walked into

      I eagerly await the opportunity to use "roomnesia"!

    1. Holacracy is a trademarked and licensed Ponzi scheme? Of course! Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.

  5. Sep 2015
    1. 32.0033408569401

      Legal intervention/homicide, black males, rate per 100,000, year: 2013.

      A very precise number! :-)

    1. PubPeer commenters and moderators remain hidden from the scientific community at large

      That's not going to end well.

    2. It would avoid any possible awkwardness on either side, and if the discussion were constructive, then both author and commenter would profit from the outcome.

      What's not to like?

      Oh.

    1. We can't find the exact position of this annotation

      Apart from how we word this, it would be nice to link to a more complete explanation of what orphans are, ways they can occur, and (eventually) ways to control their visibility in various contexts.

    1. eam delenit senserit

      Annotation tagged green and red.

    2. vix consul labore

      Annotation tagged green.

    3. Mea ne illud malorum

      Annotation tagged red

    4. A page note

    5. Ea quis referrentur

      A regular annotation

    1. 11

      row 11

    2. AMGAffiliated Managers GroupFinancials208.8023.638.8446.74174.43230.6311.430.99274.624.61http://www.sec.gov/cgi-

      A whole row.

    3. AETAetnaHealth Care

      Part of a row.

    1. expected 1, got 2

      Wasn't expecting this.

      Unrelated to https://github.com/hypothesis/h/issues/2540, this query used to AND the tags, now it ORs them?

      (For the compound-tag-filtering I'm demonstrating in the alt stream I was relying on AND)

    2. expected 2, got 6
    1. We think the most important thing we can do is: Build a self-sufficient team and do absolutely everything we can to keep it together.
    1. I like to look for bouncebacks

      Me too!

    2. Find the patterns in the stories of people who do get your product. Figure out what converted them and got them so excited to keep using your product every day or every week. In the early days, your main focus should be to attract and create more and more of those “core users” who deeply use your product.

      That's been my approach.

    1. In 1692, a basic medical kit looked little different from an ancient Greek one, consisting as it did of beetle’s blood, fox lung, and dried dolphin heart

      Among many reasons I am thankful to live in this century, modern medicine ranks high on the list. It's easy to find fault with the US health care system, and lord knows there are problems, but ... compared to prior centuries? Oy.

    1. Innovation does not happen with "design by committee". The most important job of the leader is unleashing the creativity of individual engineers by just setting clear goals, and trusting them. 

      Is there a word for the opposite of micro-management? Perhaps simply "leadership"?

    1. A Pretext for Wallace Stevens' "Sunday Morning", Sidney Feshbach, Journal of Modern Literature (1999)

      ...the last by Phoebus (Apollo), "the killer from afar" (or a Dionysian Apollo followed by an Apollonian Dionysus). This nexus of the south-voyaging northern sun is behind the famous and oft-abused lines: Supple and turbulent, a ring of men Shall chant in orgy on a summer morn Their boisterous devotion to the sun. . . . (pp. 69-70) Following Santayana, Stevens invokes an Apollonian sun as the force of nature25 stripped of its mythic garment, rendering it as a positivistic material force to be celebrated "naked" as Whitman might... (line-75)

    2. Wallace Stevens' Ice-Cream, Richard Ellmann, The Kenyon Review (1957)

      ...bounty to the dead?" and calls to her mind the beauty of the landscape. But when she continues to long for some imperish- able bliss as contrasted with the cyclical, seasonal landscape, he alvises her: Death is the mother of beauty; hence from her, Alone. shall come fulfilment to our dreams And our desires. Although shc strews the leaves Of sure obliteration on our paths, The path sick sorrow took, the many paths Where triumph rang its brassy phrase, or love \WThispered a little out of tenderness, She makes the willow shiver in the sun For maidens who were wont to sit and gaze Upon the grass, relinquished to their feet. She causes boys to pile new plums and pears On disregarded plate. The maidens taste An3d stray inmpassioned in the littering leaves. The threat of sometlhing contrary to love, of obliteration, is what gives love its force. If there were no door there would be no room, but we are interested... (line-60)

    3. Wallace Stevens: "The Sound of Right Joining", Jacqueline Vaught Brogan, Texas Studies in Literature and Language (1986)

      ...its words with meaning. This idea is extended in the next to last stanza where an alternative "devotion" to the tradi- tional devotion of Sunday morning is offered- that is, that "bois- terous" chant " to the sun, / Not as a god, but as a god might be, / Naked among them, like a savage source (CP, 70). The simile deliberately sustains the interaction of opposing possibilities, Stevens: "Sound of Right Joining" • 113 exposing the relation between ideas of union and of separation, even at the... (line-79)

    4. The Argument of "Sunday Morning", Lyle H. Smith, Jr., College Literature (1986)

      ...in fact, arranged formally as a debate. The first stanza introduces the lady as the poet's inter locutor and states the question of the contrasting claims of "complacencies of the peignoir" and the " blood and sepulchre. The second stanza opens with a kind of "first negative"?"Why should she give her bounty to the dead?" She should not do so, of course, and stanzas two and three argue the point, ending with a first conclusion?"The... (line-19)

    5. The Argument of "Sunday Morning", Lyle H. Smith, Jr., College Literature (1986)

      ...their warm fields Return no more, where, then, is paradise?" Her question is answered in the remainder of the stanza, then restated in stanza five, as the lady insists on her need for assurance of some " imperish able bliss. Stanzas five and six are devoted to admonishing the lady against such desire. Stanza seven presents a counter-vision designed to reassure the lady that other beautiful things can be conceived that compensate... (line-60)

    6. Slave Songs of the United States (2011)

      ...for the Lord"] [Hunt till you find him, Hallelujah, And a-huntin' for de Lord; Till you find him, Hallelujah, And a-huntin' for de Lord.] 65 [Page 14]19. GO IN THE WILDERNESS. [Musical Notation for " Go in the Wilderness ] [I wait upon de Lord, I wait upon de Lord, I wait upon de Lord, my God, who take away de sin of the world. 1. If you want to find Jesus, go in the wilderness, Go in de wilderness, go in de wilderness,... (line-33)

    7. A history of the penal laws against the Irish Catholics, from the Treaty of Limerick to the union., Henry Brooke Parnell, LSE Selected Pamphlets (1808)

      ...faith with him in any affair of barter, particulaily if they had already received from him their consideration, and that a valuable one; it will be necessary to make some further ob¬ servations upon the violation of the treaty of Li¬ merick, in order that no one may have a pretext on which he can escape the fair conclusion that ought to be drawn from what has been advanced, that the English government and nation are,... (line-34)

    8. American Art News, Vol. 4, no. 24, American Art News (1906)

      ...the most beautiful flowers. But what a responsibility for him who dared force the unfolding of the divine flower, the new impression of art. Translated by Elise Lathrop. Under the iniiocent title of " A Tomb in Palestine, a picture by Verestchag in, which, when exhib,ited with its comn panion picture in Vienna some years ago, nearly caused a riot, was sold at the American Art Galleries last week to Mfr. Peter V. Burnet... (line-24)

    9. Recombination of South Pacific Market Experiences: The Case of Wallis, Paul van der Grijp, La Ricerca Folklorica (2007)

      ...Noumea. On the reverse side of the tapa the name of the producer and its price was inscribed, and the proceeds sent to Wallis by diplomatic mail. Michon handed over the money to the women, who distributed it among themselves: (... (line-87)

    10. Behold, I Send My Messenger, C. T. Ruddick, Jr., Journal of Biblical Literature (1969)

      ...cycle which were read before and after Passover (Easter), one can simply match the other pericopes to the corresponding Pentateuch lessons. Verbal or thematic parallels are evident in a great number. 1. In the Wilderness Mark 1 1-s Gen 6 9-7 24/Exod 16 4-27 John came baptizing in the wilder- The people turned to the wilder- ness: ness: kv ri Ep/j/( (4). ELS TrYv Ep7pqov (16 10). Baptism takes away sin by water. The flood... (line-33)

    1. on extended wings.

      Review: Walter Pater: The Aesthetic Moment by Wolfgang Iser; David Henry Wilson, Dan O'Hara, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism (1988)

      ...actively self- expressive beauties of nature rouse our desire to emulate them in art and song, even as the poem reminds us that all beauteous forms must ever "sink,! Downward to darkness" and death-albeit " on ex- tended wings. We are thus left with "Ambiguous undulations" evoking our unresolvable ambiva- lences. Such is the aesthetic moment, as Iser finds it in Pater, Stevens's precursor in such modern pathos. The two problems...

    2. Ambiguous undulations

      Review: Walter Pater: The Aesthetic Moment by Wolfgang Iser; David Henry Wilson, Dan O'Hara, The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism (1988)

      ...our desire to emulate them in art and song, even as the poem reminds us that all beauteous forms must ever "sink,! Downward to darkness" and death-albeit "on ex- tended wings." We are thus left with " Ambiguous undulations evoking our unresolvable ambiva- lences. Such is the aesthetic moment, as Iser finds it in Pater, Stevens's precursor in such modern pathos. The two problems with this otherwise fine minor study are...

    3. in the wilderness

      Black Religious Music, David Evans, The Journal of American Folklore (1971)

      ...Norfolk Jubilee Quartet with interlocking antiphonal parts. "Let Me Tell You About Jesus" is a particularly strong piece with excellent antiphony that uses old lines like "I heard the voice of Jesus." " In the Wilderness adds a new refrain to old stanzas from "Amazing Grace." "All the Way" and "Waiting for Me" are more in the i950s group style with nonsense bass and chorus singing a repeated phrase in parallel thirds....

    4. this dividing and indifferent blue

      Epiphany and Its Discontents: Coover, Gangemi, Sorrentino, and Postmodern Revelation, Arthur M. Saltzman, Journal of Modern Literature (1989)

      ...to probe for them. Wallace Stevens' "Sunday Morning" complains of a sky deserted by divinity. As they are conventionally manifested in literature, our teleo- logical urges disdain the implications of " this dividing and indifferent blue 44 and promote causal rigor and interpretive design. We have learned to depend upon the author to endow his art with continuity and consequence, to ensure "the gluey whine of connectedness"45 so that...

    5. Death is the mother of beauty

      "A High-Toned Old Christian Woman": Wallace Stevens' Parable of Supreme Fiction, George S. Lensing, Notre Dame English Journal (1972)

      ...meditative, deliberate- ly incorporating religious overtones, "A High-Toned Old Christian Woman" is irreverent and even raucous in presentation. The former poem embraces the lot of mortal man where " Death is the mother of beauty ; the latter parades a "bawdiness,/ Unpurged by epitaph." "A High-Toned Old Christian Woman" is, in fact, only tan- gentially connected with the New Testament and Christian dogma. It is, as Joseph Riddel...

    6. holy hush of ancient sacrifice.

      Seven Modern American Poets (1967)

      ...are at church. Coffee, oranges, and "green freedom" are here and now; but she is troubled, like all of Stevens' metaphysicians, with thoughts of a conflicting opposite, in this case, heaven and the " holy hush of an- cient sacrifice. The contention in her mind between life and death, present and past, earth and heaven is the structure of the poem. "We live in an old chaos of the sun," where it is good to be alive; but this woman...

    7. We live in an old chaos of the sun,

      Seven Modern American Poets (1967)

      ...conflicting opposite, in this case, heaven and the "holy hush of an- cient sacrifice." The contention in her mind between life and death, present and past, earth and heaven is the structure of the poem. " We live in an old chaos of the sun, where it is good to be alive; but this woman longs for some "imperishable bliss." Living wins by death's assistance; for life's beauty depends on death. Sinking like a tired bird into blackness is inevitable,...

    8. imperishable bliss.

      Seven Modern American Poets (1967)

      ...in her mind between life and death, present and past, earth and heaven is the structure of the poem. "We live in an old chaos of the sun," where it is good to be alive; but this woman longs for some " imperishable bliss. Living wins by death's assistance; for life's beauty depends on death. Sinking like a tired bird into blackness is inevitable, but the "ambiguous undulations" of the descent redeem it: She hears, upon...

    9. Ambiguous undulations

      Seven Modern American Poets (1967)

      ...to be alive; but this woman longs for some "imperishable bliss." Living wins by death's assistance; for life's beauty depends on death. Sinking like a tired bird into blackness is inevitable, but the " ambiguous undulations of the descent redeem it: She hears, upon that water without sound, A voice that cries, "The tomb in Palestine Is not the porch of spirits lingering. It is the grave of Jesus, where he lay." We live...

    10. Complacencies of the peignoir, and late

      a new annotation

    1. JATS for Reuse (JATS4R) was formed to provide guidelines and tools to standardise the use of the NISO standard Journal and Archiving Tag Set (JATS) for tagging XML in publishing workflows.

    Tags

    Annotators

    URL

    1. Reading books again

      I'm in the same boat, Hugh. It's a struggle, but I am determined to prevail.

    1. Each project is conveniently presented as arXiv + Github + Links + Discussion.
  6. Aug 2015
    1. published today in the New England Journal of Medicine

      Why not cite the article?

      link

    2. Michael Eisen's reactions:

      twitter

      "@benoitbruneau @manoliskellis "The key to obesity discovered by computer scientists" - COME ON"

    1. surgical table from Mizuh OSI, which allows for live imaging guidance and manipulation in real time to confirm the hip replacement implants are precisely placed. 
    1. Packages can be used to populate caches associated with multiple URLs without making multiple requests.

      Alex Russell, a Googler who loves Chrome but hates app stores, is passionate about this.

      Interesting chatter at https://mobile.twitter.com/fabricedesre/status/636014195893342208

    1. In social psychology, the fundamental attribution error, also known as the correspondence bias or attribution effect, is the tendency for people to place an undue emphasis on internal characteristics (personality) to explain someone else's behavior in a given situation rather than considering the situation's external factors.

      In Mindware, Richard Nisbett says Image Description

      Agree on the importance. Wonder if "lack of empathy" says it shorter and better.

    1. It occurred to me that the ideal setup would be a router where the WAN's gateway was a system running a transparent proxy. Thus simply by connecting the device to the router, the transparent proxy software would capture HTTP and HTTPS traffic
    1. Worse, most of our reading is elementary reading, or skimming — a far cry from syntopical reading, which seems more fertile for the mind willing to do the work
    1. Bears take over Rockaway Township pool

      In this frame the momma bear dispays her agility:

      bear agility

    1. All important innovations in snowboarding, windsurfing and skateboarding equipment

      These products were malleable enough to enable lead users to express in their use of the products the ideas that designers could then adapt for next-gen products.

    1. annotation

      Annotations can include:

      • links
      • lists
      • tags
      • math $$\int_0^\infty e^{-x^2} dx=\frac{\sqrt{\pi}}{2}$$
      • and images
    2. discuss

      Every annotation can become a discussion topic.

    1. open annotation layer

      This is an example. The annotation lives in the cloud, and is shown here by means of the open-source app you are now using to read it.

    1. Why not enable Slack to search Google Groups directly? Can you, for example, add Google Groups as a provider of results to Slack's search system?