If the electric Mini can have motors in its wheels why can't science geeks get molecular motors in their labs?
I'm hooked on seratonin too... and oxytocin... But before you stage an intervention, let me explain... I'm
not a science geek (although I do love a good dinosaur or galaxy discovery) but in my search for inner peace following my marriage break - up — which keeps being thwarted by 3 am mental gymnastics ---LSB-...]
Not exact matches
But back in the day, in 1998, she was just an 18 - year - old computer
geek, sitting in her dream class at her dream school, getting the stink eye from her computer
science professor and trying
not to cry.
11 cheap gifts guaranteed to impress
science geeks Science comes up with a lot of awesome stuff, and you don't need a Ph.D, a secret lab, or government funding to get your hands on some of the coolest disco
science geeks Science comes up with a lot of awesome stuff, and you don't need a Ph.D, a secret lab, or government funding to get your hands on some of the coolest disco
Science comes up with a lot of awesome stuff, and you don't need a Ph.D, a secret lab, or government funding to get your hands on some of the coolest discoveries.
Last but
not least, check out the fun
geek girls»
science guide.
one of the students would inevitably shout, sarcasm dripping from the o. Laws was clearly
not among
science geeks here.
that you don't have to completely «
geek out» to reach this level,» says Stephen Scott, a senior research scientist in the Computer
Science and Mathematics Division at ORNL who has been a RAMS mentor for nearly as long as the program.
«To a planetary -
science geek like me, you couldn't design a better experiment to understand the Kuiper belt.»
At the same time, we wish to help students (1) experience authentic processes of
science, in particular discussion / debate about experimental data and their interpretation (including «grey areas»), (2) recognize the creativity and open - ended nature of research, and (3) see the diversity of people who undertake research careers (i.e.
not just the genius /
geeks of popular culture).
I'm a
science geek, but also put a lot of value into clinical experience, and so far my
n = 1 experiment has sold me.
Sci - fi fans — Doom is definitely
science fiction in that it is set in the future, has space travel and other futuristic elements, and advanced technology, but it isn't really appealing to
science fiction
geeks in the way that another best - selling video game, «Half Life», is.
Furthermore,
science - loving tech
geeks don't even find the eye - catching 3D visuals they may expect to get from this platter.
Though certainly
not without some merit, this is definitely
not a disc that those who aren't scientists or at least
science geeks would return to regularly.
Old Norman Osborn (Willem Dafoe) is a
science geek who tries to prove that his human «enhancer» doesn't also cause raving insanity.
There are people who like
science but don't want to be
geeks because
geeks are the opposite of cool.
At the British
Science Association (BSA) what we're trying to do is to show that science isn't just for geeks, that it isn't something that should be seen as elitist, but it should certainly be something everyone has a
Science Association (BSA) what we're trying to do is to show that
science isn't just for geeks, that it isn't something that should be seen as elitist, but it should certainly be something everyone has a
science isn't just for
geeks, that it isn't something that should be seen as elitist, but it should certainly be something everyone has a say on.
Also, Girl
Science Geeks don't sound fastastical enough to be fun or hilarious enough to get past the initial query letter... but there are a lot geeky girls that read.
In an irony
not appreciated except by building
science geeks ventilation air in the summer months in most parts of North America brings moisture into crawlspaces and deposits this moisture on surfaces that are below the ventilation air dew point.
I also didn't realize he'd coined the term «Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation» (AMO) off the cuff in an interview (that's the kind of trivia that a
science geek like me delights in).
I'm
not going to comment on the
science since it's been years since I was involved on CPDN, my role was that of computer
geek, and I forget everything by now anyway!
It's written in a slightly different style to the usual Skeptical
Science fare (eg - more broad,
not quite for climate
geeks).