Monday, October 22, 2007

greetings from the Pacific!

Hey all,
 
Greetings from the Pacific Ocean! Things are going well here - we're still underway to our first site, but things are starting to slowly materialize into actual science. I've also (finally) passed over the seasickness hurdle, though that certainly took long enough! We've seen lots of seabirds, and flying fish, and today I got my first glimpse of a manta ray and a dolphin! Our weather has also finally cleared up, at least for the moment.
 
We have a blog up and running about this cruise - a variety of different scientists are contributing both posts and pictures, so be sure to check that out. The address of the blog is:
 
 
Hope you enjoy! Feel free to pass this along to anyone who might be interested (or whose email addresses I couldn't remember or got wrong).
 
~Ruth

Wake Up

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Here goes nothing...

Well, I hope this post works! I am emailing you from Panama City to let you all know that I have arrived here safe and sound!
 
Today we met up with most of the scientific crew that is going to be on the ship with us and took a tour with some of them to the must see sights here in Panama. We visited the canal and watched some ships going through the locks. We also visited the rainforest, which is right alongside the canal. The rainforest trip was actually on a boat (like we wont get enough time on a ship as it is) and we were boating right inbetween these huge tankers and containerships, even the same one that we saw go through the locks! We also saw lots of animals: a crocodile, a few monkeys that came down on the boat and ate the bread the pilot was holding out for them, some eagle type birds, a midnight heron, an iguana, lots of pretty butterflies, and my favorite, a two toed sloth! All in all, it has been a great day. We are loading up our ship tomorrow with all the equipment and everything, and will be spending tomorrow night onboard, though we will not be leaving port until thursday morning.
 
Well, that is your Panama update! Next in the series an update from the R/V Seward Johnson!
 
Love,
Ruth

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Anchors aweigh!!

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Well, it is T-minus 7 hours until I leave to go to the airport, and I just wanted to say goodbye! I should be back sometime in the morning on Nov. 19th! Until then, adios! I'll miss you guys!

Love,
Ruth

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Stress Theory 101

Pilfered from another blog Kari's Page of Rants but highly relevent to grad students everywhere.

"The fact that I have been having a particularly slothful week, despite the further fact that I really can't afford sloth right now, has led me to procrastinate (again) by refining my theory regarding stress and its relation to space-time. No, I am not an absolute freaking crackpot. After years of careful study and observation, I have concluded that there is a fundamental Law of Stress that grad students can, if necessary, harness. An understanding of this Law will allow one to finish one's dissertation...eventually.

It runs as follows:

1) Without deadlines, Stress remains a latent force only; the deadline is the catalyst that allows the utilisation of Stress. The so-called "false deadline" is insufficient as a catalyst. Though it may activate an initial Stressful reaction, this reaction is difficult to maintain without a genuine deadline.

2) The more stress factors (the dissertation, jobs, family issues, financial strain, lack of chocolate) involved, the more powerful the Stress will become. However, without a deadline, these outside factors will fail to activate the Stress reaction in the subject and will instead bring about Lethargy, Procrastination, and the Tendency to Blame Problems on Software Bugs.

3) The stress factors combine with the deadline to create in the subject a state known as Panic. Panic is not yet true Stress; it is an initial stage marked by its promotion of inactivity. At this point, the Stress is still latent. Panic can be recognised via the presence of tears, pacing, nervous Web-surfing, occasional hyperventilation, long coffee breaks with bored friends, and an apparent lack of progress on the piece of work in question.

4) As the deadline becomes more prominent, Panic will deepen and narrow in its focus, and most of its indicators will disappear, replaced briefly by wide-eyed terror and then more permanently with the ability to open necessary documents and begin work on them. The reaction is now in its most crucial stage. A withdrawal of the deadline will cause failure and residual hyperventilation. If the deadline holds steady, the subject will enter Stress and become subject to the Speed of Stress.

5) The Theory of Stress-Speed claims that the imminence of a deadline, in combination with an apparent lack of enough time to meet that deadline, will cause the space-time continuum itself to become warped. Effectively, the subject experiences what seems to be the slowing of time to a crawl. Activities that should take hours are done in minutes; the world appears to move in slow motion, though in actual fact, the subject is working much faster than seems possible to outside observers. The subject is now in a state of heightened concentration fueled by Panic.

6) The Speed of Stress is notable for this property: it always "slows time" just enough that the subject will finish all necessary activities two minutes before the deadline. The factor of two minutes is a constant that researchers have so far not been able to explain adequately.

7) The passing of the deadline causes a complete failure in the reaction; space-time reverts to apparent normality as the Speed of Stress ceases to apply. Occasionally, a side-reaction will occur, prompting an extended return of Lethargy and Procrastination, both of which states will continue until the introduction of another deadline.

This Law has been demonstrated time and time again by graduate students around the globe. I am currently stuck on #2. Do not follow in my footsteps. If you want to achieve the Speed of Stress, for heaven's sake, get a deadline."

"http://www.massey.utoronto.ca/alumni/rantingkari2006.html" Monday, October 2, 2006 post

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Lola

Is gone. She was a good car, and she decided to donate her parts for the good of other Acuras everywhere. Bye Lola :(

Sunday, October 7, 2007

DIY: Halloween Special

Even though I won't be here for Halloween, I thought I'd share THIS link to a do-it-yourself make your own fairy wings page.

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Monday, October 1, 2007

weekly random game dose

This week's topic: Nomic Games
Where the rules evolve as you play.
*Calvinball, where the only firm rule is that you must never play it the same way twice!
*1KBWC (aka - 1000 blank white cards)

Presenting: your sugary sweet monday morning video


via videosift.com