2012
You are browsing the archive for 2012.
By bluerasberry on 2012-04-30
I arrived in NYC on Thursday afternoon 26 April. I would be subletting, and Marty who gave me the room also gave me transit instructions to get to it. The transit was easy for me to use and I got to my neighborhood and everything was much nicer and more convenient than I was expecting. […]
Posted in New York City, personal | Tagged concert
By bluerasberry on 2012-04-22
I soon move to New York City to work as Wikipedian in Residence for Consumer Reports. A Wikipedian in Residence is a Wikipedia ambassador to an organization. In my case, I will work at Consumer Reports and help the organization establish relationships with Wikipedia. Consumer Reports is a famous United-States based consumer advocacy group. It […]
Posted in biobanks, clinical research, Seattle, Wikipedia, work | Tagged bioethics, blood, campus ambassador, malaria
By bluerasberry on 2012-03-31
I was going to Suzzallo Library this afternoon when just outside the library a baby squirrel fell out of a tree! I did not know it was a squirrel at first, but then a crow swooped down and pecked at it. Immediately I saw a parent squirrel looking very worried coming down the tree, and […]
Posted in animal, Seattle | Tagged rescue, rodent
By bluerasberry on 2012-03-25
Peggy Porter spoke representing the Consortium Biospecimen Resource (CRS), which is a biobank housed at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. She said that the organization has good procedures in place to conduct informed consent, collect specimens, and manage the sharing of specimens to researchers, but in her organization and in the industry in general there […]
Posted in biobanks, clinical research, education, health, presentation, research, rights, Seattle | Tagged net generation, social media
By bluerasberry on 2012-03-24
John T. Slattery is a member of the Department of Bioethics & Humanities at the University of Washington and of the Washington Phenotyped Biospecimen Resource. He was one of the speakers at that Friday 23 March communication conference. He spoke about a need to increase the information available to and usable by people receiving healthcare […]
Posted in biobanks, clinical research, education, Seattle | Tagged bioethics, conference, free as in freedom, John Slattery, open source
By bluerasberry on 2012-03-24
Yesterday Friday 23 March there was an informal meetup for people interested in ethics, biobanking, and modern media in Seattle. It was by invitation. I think most people who attended knew many of the other people in the room, and what I took away from the meeting was that we all share a common problem […]
Posted in biobanks, clinical research, health, presentation, research, Seattle | Tagged biotech, conference
By bluerasberry on 2012-03-21
I am posting some examples of silly ads in this post. These are not my ads and they are not clickable – they are for illustration purposes and I explain them in this post. I do not feel that the mainstream media perspective about Wikipedia or other encyclopedias is reasonable. In this post I am […]
Posted in education, Open access, Wikipedia | Tagged advertising, book, publishing
By bluerasberry on 2012-03-12
On three of us members of the HIV Vaccine Research Unit Community Advisory Board made a video to inform potential new members about what it would mean for them to join our group. The video was to have two purposes – to introduce HIV vaccine research and to introduce the concept of layman meeting in […]
Posted in biobanks, clinical research, drug, education, non-profit, research, rights, Seattle | Tagged HIV vaccine, videography
By bluerasberry on 2012-02-16
On Monday 13 February Sharon Terry of Genetic Alliance was in Seattle and gave a talk at the Public Health Cafe. The Public Health Cafe is a community science presenation organized by the UW Center for Ecogenetics and Environmental Science. I love it! I had seen Sharon’s YouTube video explaining why she got into the […]
Posted in biobanks, clinical research, education, health, non-profit, Open access, presentation, research, Seattle, Wikipedia | Tagged Genetic Alliance, Jon Izant, Public Health Cafe, Sage Bionetworks, Sharon Terry
By bluerasberry on 2012-02-09
Lee’s hamster seemed unhappy for a couple of months. He was not running on his wheel and when he was in his ball he hardly wanted to explore. He seemed healthy otherwise and explored his pen and liked to run around on the floor. He was eating normally and liked to be petted. Eventually we […]
Posted in animal | Tagged hamster, rescue, rodent, surgery