Relationships Among Scientific Paradigms
See the site for a interesting graphic display of the relationships.
Relationships Among Scientific Paradigms
See the site for a interesting graphic display of the relationships.
Google Summer of Code will pay about 800 students $4,500 to work on open source software development projects this summer at over 50 open source organizations including: Gaim, Drupal, EFF, Haskell.org, OpenOffice.org, Subversion and WordPress. Applications opened March 14th and are due by March 24th.
See the site for many more details. Find internship opportunities via externs.com (a curiouscat.com web site): engineering internships – science internships.
Related: Three summers of open source – A Career in Computer Programming – science and engineering career posts
Highly recommended for those interested in the macro view of engineering education in the USA, India and China. Where the Engineers Are is an excellent article building off the work mentioned in previous posts including: Worldwide Science and Engineering Doctoral Degree Data, USA Under Counting Engineering Graduates and House Testimony on Engineering Education. The data they have collected and interpreted shows that China has moved ahead of the USA in doctoral degrees in engineering and India has not been growing there doctoral graduate counts.
The bottom line is that China is racing ahead of the United States and India in its production of engineering and technology PhD’s and in its ability to perform basic research. India is in particularly bad shape, as it does not appear to be producing the numbers of PhD’s needed even to staff its growing universities.
Related: China Outpacing Rivals in Producing Graduate-Level Engineers, Study Finds – Engineering the Future Economy – The World’s Best Research Universities – Engineering Education: Can India overtake China? – Chinese Engineering Innovation Plan
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Researchers Learn What Sparks Plant Growth:

In January we had a long stretch of warm weather. Shoots for early blooming flowers sprouted in my front yard. Then we had about 6 weeks of winter weather. I was wondering how the flowers would do (they do fine with a few days of freezing weather after sprouting – since they have evolved to bloom early). They did fine, photo above (by John Hunter, March 11th).
Related: More Nutritious Wheat – What Are Flowers For?
£25 fridge gadget that could slash greenhouse emissions by David Adam:
Related: The Magnetic Fridge – Electricity Savings – Engineers Save Energy – MIT’s Energy ‘Manhattan Project’ – Personal Water Wheel Power
New Magnetic Switching Method Could Dramatically Speed Up Data Storage
Dense Ice Revealed at Mars’ South Pole

Borneo’s clouded leopard identified as new cat species:
Photo: WWF-Canon / Alain Compost
Related: Far Eastern Leopard, the Rarest Big Cat – Island leopard deemed new species – Cat Family Tree
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This and other flying insects have plagued the worlds of science and engineering ever since the first calculation of bumble-bee flight was attempted at Göttingen University in the 1930s. Conventional aerodynamics suggested the insect should not generate enough lift to fly. The sums caused consternation.
In the past few years, however, remarkable advances have been made. The so-called “bumble-bee paradox” was solved by Dr Charles Ellington and colleagues from Cambridge University when, with the help of a robot insect, they highlighted the bee’s secret: extra lift is generated during a downstroke by a spiral vortex that travels along the leading edge of each wing, from base to tip.
Related: Incredible Insects – World’s Lightest Flying Robot – Autonomous Flying Vehicles
Open Access Launches Journal Wars
“When it’s the taxpayers that are underwriting projects in the federal government, they deserve to access the very things they’re paying for,” said Cornyn spokesman Brian Walsh. “This research is funded by American taxpayers and conducted by researchers funded by public institutions. But it’s not widely available.”
Great. The idea that people will actually buy some crazy excuse like: “It’s inappropriate for the government (to interfere).” as a reason that publicly funded research should be kept from the public is frustrating. And even more so because some people actually might buy it. But for those that can think, I believe it confirms that they have no good arguments against proposal. If the best argument for opposition to open access requirements is trying to confuse people into thinking something that makes no logical sense they must not have any good reasons.
Is there any part of “you must make the research openly available” that is interfering with the science involved? Interfering with an outdated business model maybe, but that is all. And really not even that because you can retain that business model if you want. I can’t see how anyone can sensibly argue that it is in the interest of science to keep information inaccessible.
Related: The Future of Scholarly Publication – Open Access Legislation – Anger at Anti-Open Access PR – Publicly Funded Research Open Expectations