Genomics Blog
In the last Twitter Snips I used a painting from around 1640 to make a point about the modern world of Twitter and this week I came across yet another painting to help make a point.
This one is a 1922 painting by Paul Klee called the "Twittering Machine" and it is currently at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
Klee certainly had no inkling of the online Twitter but he may just have had a sense of the noise that could be created when you tether live birds to a machine (in this case driven by a hand crank). The modern online Twitter has the potential to become nothing more than a 140 character noise machine, driven by technology. It is no better, or worse, than the people who add the content. Just like a printing press can be used for propganda, a video camera for pornography or dcumentaries, and a radio can bring us up-to-date news or music, Twitter is what you make of it and we try to make the most of this unique and sometimes controversial site.
As the Communications Director for Genome Alberta I use it for a number of things.
- When we had a statement read in the legislature wishing us good luck in our projects I was able to enlist the help of an MLA throughh Twitter.
- Links from people or organizations we follow help us find content for GenOmics and many original GenOmics stories make it back to Twitter which helps drive web traffic to our pages
- The Twitter community helps us re-post important information such as the recent announcement about the Genome Canada Large Scale Applied Research Competition
- We post links to all our blog entries and newsletters
- Twitter has helped us get new links from other blogger and science writers
In short Twitter has helped take an orginzation with a limited budget and small number of staff reach out across Canada, into the United States, and across the Atlantic.
Every 2 weeks here on Twitter Snips we give you a list of some of the more interestingly , and some just plain fun, postings we've come across. We've also offer a little bit of information on jsut who these people are - check the links and find out a little more for yourself.
@AlbertaOilMag The top 10 petroleum sector jobs that need new blood: http://ow.ly/1S6fc #oil #oilsands #natgas #ableg #energy
@biophase Looking for a biotech/scientific job in SoCal? Check out our postings at http://www.biophaseinc.com!
@chrisadieni Lookit! I'm the featured postdoc of the month on @postdocsforum http://bit.ly/97sHLy Special thanks to @scisu
@dvergano "NIH chief Collins faces stem cell donation dilemma." Includes me on complex ethics of the case http://bit.ly/9BCM5X #HeLa
@eyeondna Who's doing what on YouTube? My posting today - Checking in on Pharma and YouTube http://ow.ly/1YfR8
@matthewherper You know, when you quote Francis Collins in full, his genome predictions weren't that far off. http://ow.ly/1XHml
@NikonSmallWorld In honor of the 8th Annual ISSCR Meeting this week, check out this image of stem cell neurons: http://bit.ly/986xJd
@jwoodman Best article I've read on Nutrigenomics ... http://bit.ly/aLT6rw
@AlbertaOilMag A mix of RSS and tweets from Alberta Oil Magazine staff
@chrisadieni Originally from Montreal, attended grad school in Ottawa, and now a postdoc in State College, at Penn State where he is researching cancer biochemistry.
@dvergano is a science and society reporter at USA TODAY.
@eyeondna Mark Senak is an author of books, newspaper and magazine pieces related to drug marketing and promotion as well as HIV specialty pieces. And of course... a blogger
@matthewherper Matthew Herper is a reporter with Forbes covering science and medicine
@NikonSmallWorld is the Twitter account for Nikon's annual competition recognizing excellence in photography through the light microscope
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Comments
Christopher Dieni - www.google.com/profiles/cdieni
Thanks for the mention once again!
-- Chris