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ComputingInternet SafetyPi-holeRaspberry PiRPiInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

I have been running a pi-hole to block ads on my home network for a while. It’s great! Not only are ads blocked, but it speeds up internet browsing because… the ads do not load. I wondered if it would be possible to use a pi-hole to make a child-safe internet experience to protect the little people in the house. Sure, there are ways to do this in most routers but they are not ideal.

The Digital CellBooksWritingInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Long-time readers might remember the short-lived series on quantixed called The Digital Cell. There is a reason why I stopped these posts, which I can now reveal… The Digital Cell will soon be a book! Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, The Digital Cell is a handbook to help cell and developmental biologists get to grips with programming, image analysis, statistics and much more.

PublishingImpact FactorJIFJournal Of Cell ScienceNature CommunicationsInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

There is an entertaining rumour going around about the journal Nature Communications . When I heard it for the fourth or fifth time, I decided to check out whether there is any truth in it. Sometimes it is put another way: cell biology papers drag down the impact factor of Nature Communications , or that they don’t deserve the high JIF tag of the journal because they are cited at lower rates. Could this be true?

ComputingFunPublishingBashCitationsInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Time for an update to a previous post. For the past few years, I have been using an automated process to track citations to my lab’s work on Google Scholar (details of how to set this up are at the end of this post). Due to the nature of how Google Scholar tracks citations, it means that citations get added (hooray!) but might be removed (booo!). Using a daily scrape of the data it is possible to watch this happening.

Adventures In CodeComputingFunGenerative ArtIgorInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

A while back I visited Artistes & Robots in Paris. Part of the exhibition was on the origins of computer-based art. Nowadays this is referred to as generative art , where computers generate artwork according to rules specified by the programmer.

Adventures In CodeFunMusicAudacityPaulstretchInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

I was recently reminded of the wonders of paulstretch by a 8-fold slowed down version of Pyramid Song by Radiohead. Paulstretch is an audio manipulation widget that can stretch or compress the time of an audio recording. Note that it doesn’t “slow down” or “speed up” a recording, it resamples the audio and recasts it over a different time scale while maintaining the pitch.

Adventures In CodeComputingGarminRstatsRunningInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Garmin Connect has a number of plots built in, but to take a deeper dive into all your fitness data, you need to export a CSV and fire up R. This post is a quick guide to some possibilities for running data.  There’s a few things that I wanted to look at. For example, how does my speed change through the year? How does that compare to previous years? If I see some trends, is that the same for short runs and long runs?

PublishingScienceBioRxivFluorescent ProteinsKnocksidewaysInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

We have a new preprint out – it is a cautionary tale about using GFP nanobodies in cells. This short post gives a bit of background to the work. Please read the paper if you are interested in using GFP nanobodies in cells, you can find it here. Paper in a nutshell: Caution is needed when using GFP nanobodies because they can inhibit their target protein in cells.

PublishingJIFMetaMetricsInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Anyone that maintains a website is happy that people out there are interested enough to visit. Web traffic is one thing, but I take greatest pleasure in seeing quantixed posts being cited in academic papers. I love the fact that some posts on here have been cited in the literature more than some of my actual papers. It’s difficult to track citations to web resources.

Adventures In CodeComputingFunDatavizEmojisInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

Our lab is international. People born all over the world have come to work in my group. I’m proud of this fact, especially in the current political climate. I’ve previously used the GoogleMaps API to display a heat map on our lab webpage. It shows where in the world people in the lab come from. This was OK, but I wanted to get an R based solution to make this graphic to make it easier to automate updates.

PublishingCitationsMetricsInformatique et sciences de l'informationAnglais
Publié

I read this recent paper about very highly cited papers and science funding in the UK. The paper itself was not very good, but the dataset which underlies the paper is something to behold, as I’ll explain below. The idea behind the paper was to examine very highly cited papers in biomedicine with a connection to the UK. Have those authors been successful in getting funding from MRC, Wellcome Trust or NIHR?