Friday, June 09, 2006
This blog has (finally) gone to SEED
So, the day has finally arrived - the Big Move to SEED scienceblogs. Go check out the brand new front page and all the old and new bloggers there (you'll have to do it right after noon - I am posting this now because there is a planned Blogger outage coming in a few minutes).
My new blog, a fusion of all three of my blogs, will be a new brand, with a new name - A Blog Around The Clock, reflecting my age and musical taste, my usual blogging frequency and the area of my scientific expertise, all in one title.
The Banner was designed by Carel Pieter Brest Van Kempen who also runs a delightful science/art blog Rigor Vitae.
The new URL is http://scienceblogs.com/clock/, the new Atom feed is http://scienceblogs.com/clock/atom.xml and the new RSS feed is http://scienceblogs.com/clock/index.xml.
Please change your bookmarks, blogrolls and newsfeeds to reflect this move.
As I said before, Circadiana and The Magic School Bus will be closed (but not deleted), while Science And Politics will slow down and will re-focus on local North Carolina topics, including local politics (which includes following the career of John Edwards), and perhaps an occasional post for my readers from the Balkans. If you are still interested in those topics, you are welcome to retain the bookmarks, blogrolls and newsfeeds for Science And Politics as well, but I will not be insulted if you do not, as my main blogging effort will be over there, on my new SB blog.
I encourage you to go and check all 24 newbies over on SEED - all wonderful bloggers you should read if you are interested in science. Let me introduce my new fraternity-mates to you:
Carl Zimmer, the NYTimes science/evolution reporter, is moving The Loom from here to here.
Matt Nisbett, an expert on political communication and writer of a monthly column for the Skeptical Inquirer Online is moving his blog Framing-Science from here to here.
My fellow North Carolinian, medblogger Abel PharmBoy, is moving Terra Sigillata from here to here.
James Hrynyshyn, another fellow North Carolinian, is moving Island Of Doubt from here to here.
My favourite cognitive psychology blogger Chris is moving Mixing Memory from here to here.
Philosopher of biology John Wilkins is moving Evolving Thoughts from here to here.
Mike The Mad Biologist is moving from here to here.
I thought that one of my favourite science bloggers George Wilkinson has quit blogging, but no, he is also moving Keat's Telescope from here to here.
Reveres, experts on Avian Flu, are moving Effect Measure from here to here.
Karmen is moving her beautiful Chaotic Utopia from here to here.
Sandra Porter is moving Discovering Biology In A Digital World from here to here.
Nick Anthis is moving The Scientific Activist from here to here.
Joseph is moving Corpus Callosum from here to here.
Jake Young, another one of several neuroscientists joining the team, is moving Pure Pedantry from here to here.
Shelley Batts, another neuroscientist, is moving Retrospectacle from here to here.
Evil Monkey is moving Neurotopia from here to here.
Mike Dunford is moving The Questionable Authority from here to here.
Mark Chu-Carroll is moving Good Math, Bad Math from here to here.
David Ng and Benjamin Cohen are moving from Science Creative Quarterly and Annals of Science to World's Fair.
The Cheerful Oncologist is moving from here to here.
Dr.Charles is moving the eponimous Examining Room from here to here.
Dr. X is moving Chemblog from here to here.
The rowdy bonobos from Dr. Joan Bushwell's Chimpanzee Refuge are moving from here to here.
Steinn, an astrophysicist, is moving Dynamics Of Cats from here to here.
Finally, Jonah Lerer is a SEED staffer, starting his own blog called The Frontal Cortex.
There were very few surprises for me on this list. Two good blogfriends of mine (Revere and Mike the Mad Biologist) managed to keep me in the dark about their move until two days ago. On the other hand, two bloggers who I thought were going to accept the invitation are not on the list (yet?). Almost all of the others I knew about beforehand.
The SEED overlords intend to add more bloggers before the end of the year so keep an eye on SEED - that is where the SciBlogging action is now and is going to be in the near future.