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Volunteer for Science

July 30th, 2008 | 5 Comments | Posted in Life

This Metro advertisement caught my eye a few weeks ago.

From the Institute of Neuroscience at Trinity College Dublin:

We wish to recruit members of the general public age 18-90 to our volunteer research panel. We study various aspects of human behaviour such as memory, attention and thinking. Our research aims to increase our understanding of how the mind and brain work, with a view to trying, in the longer term, to develop methods for assessing and treating conditions such as age-related memory problems and attention deficit disorder.

Volunteers who can easily reach central Dublin may be invited to take part in one or more studies, and if they do, a nominal honorarium will be offered.

Please leave your name and number at 01 89628684 before 3rd August.

I’ve called them up and left my name and number on the answering machine and I’m very much looking forward to volunteering my time to Science. 

It’s a pity that Irish research projects don’t reach out online, the same way that the Irish Blood Transfusion Service don’t, as pointed out by Damien. They are really missing out on the abundance of altruistic internet users and the numerous socially persuasive situations online (blogging, twitter, messageboards, etc.,) that would enable researchers and organizations to recruit many more volunteers. These kinds of blog posts are the first step though.

Right now I’m loving/hating…

July 15th, 2008 | 15 Comments | Posted in Life

Loving everything that encompasses the giant ego of William Shatner. Despite having always claimed a love for him, it only ever went as far as an affection for his role in Star Trek and the collaborative album with Ben Folds, Has Been. More recently however, the GF bought me his autobiography Up Till Now, (which I can’t recommend highly enough) and my eyes were opened up to the greatness that is William Shatner and his current alter ego Denny Crane. Hating that it took reading his autobiography to realise that Boston Legal is actually a spin-off of The Practice and that the last few episodes of this show introduced the likes of Denny Crane. I originally was of the opinion that the first season of Boston Legal started far too abruptly and I hadn’t continued watching it, until now that is.

Loving taking a trip down retro science fiction lane. I recently came across the blog of Adam “Mojo” Lebowitz who works as the visual effects supervisor on Battlestar Galactica, having previously worked on Star Trek Voyager and Babylon 5. Not only does he have interesting insights into his current work, he has also been posting some great behind the scenes stories and images about the visual effects from Babylon 5 and Voyager, making me want to go watch them all over again. Hating that I don’t have either of them on DVD.

Loving how easy Spiceidipity has made baking mouthwatering treats, without even having to worry about evil additives, because everything is 100% natural. Over the weekend the GF, Katie and I went to work on the Brownie Mix and the Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookie Mix. By literally just adding some eggs, butter and a little icing we ended up with all of these amazing treats. Hating how completely addicted I am to the cookies, though I do now have a whole new appreciation for oats!

Right now I’m loving/hating…

June 17th, 2008 | 11 Comments | Posted in Life

Loving learning Yoga poses on the Wii Fit (video). I’ve always had an interest in yoga but was wary of it’s pseudo-spiritual side. Yoga on the Wii Fit removes the unnecessary parts and concentrates on deep breathing and stretching. The balance board that comes with the game tells you if you are in the right position, to make it as effective on your muscles as is possible. The Wii is teaching me well, because I’ve even started doing some of the poses without it, just to relax. I’ve also been enjoying the really fun balance games and exhausting aerobics. Hating how I managed to pull a muscle in my leg by overdoing it in the muscle exercises section, clearly I haven’t gotten to that stage yet.

Loving taking artsy Polaroid photos with the packs of film my GF got me. I’ve been trying to turn each and every picture into a mini work of art for my bedroom wall. There’s something very pure about Polaroid photos, it’s almost as if they are the antithesis of digital. With my digital camera I can take 1000+ photos and it’s fine if a high percentage of them are a waste. But with a Polaroid camera you must compose the picture so carefully, because the film has become so rare and expensive, so taking great photos is far more difficult, yet much more satisfying. Next, I’m going to start scratching to create even more art. Hating that Polaroid is no longer producing the film and that I might have to give up this new hobby sooner than I’d like.

Loving writing stories and notes into moleskin notebooks. Ever since I bought a Filofax last year I’ve been enjoying the freedom of jotting down random useless thoughts (and some useful ones) onto paper, rather than typing them out. I’ve gone a step further and further into geekdom by picking up some moleskin notebooks, they remind me of school copies, but cool. I wrote a small draft of this post in one. Just like taking a Polaroid there is something so wholesome about the act of putting pen/pencil to paper. I also love the slightly cut off corners, it makes the paper feel unworldly. Hating how expensive they are, astronmically expesnive in comparison to standard notebooks.

Book Inbox (11)

June 16th, 2008 | 31 Comments | Posted in Life, Photos

Whilst doing a late Spring clean this evening I decided to finally organise my overflowing bookshelf - which earlier today consisted of 3 squashed and disheveled shelves of books, 1 shelf of music/games and 1 shelf of DVDS. So, I put all my music/games in storage, which has given me a 4th shelf for my books to finally breath. During this reorganisation, I made a pile out of the books that I’ve not had the chance to read yet (or started reading and put aside).

Since the start of the year I’ve been reading nothing but journal articles and books for college, and since college ended term I’ve been indulging in a lot of fiction (Jeff Lindsay and Kathy Reichs in particular - don’t read into that too much!) but every single time I’ve looked at these books on my shelf individually, I’ve wanted (very much!) to start reading them, I just lack that extra motivation.

Sinead\'s Inbox

To motivate myself to read them all - I’ve set them aside on one half of my new 4th shelf (which just happens to be at eye level), and I plan on making sure that I get through all of them by the end of the Summer. They won’t be joining their comrades until they are read, so it’ll be like a Book Inbox, currently 11 unread books, and since there is nothing worse than a full inbox, I’m hoping these will be read quite soon.

What’s in your Book Inbox?

Right now I’m loving/hating…

April 28th, 2008 | 14 Comments | Posted in Life

Loving movie-tastic Dublin this week. Heading down to the preview screening of Vexille this evening, all courtesy of the Cinemagic International Film Festival (via Darragh and JazzBiscuit). They’re showing some truly classic movies (like Jaws!) in both Movies @ Dundrum and Cineworld on Parnell Street. Hating that I can’t make it to Toy Story on Wednesday morning. Now that will be a special screening - what a classic! Also heading to the preview screening of Iron Man in Cineworld on Wednesday night courtesy of the newly launched website Movies.ie – it really does pay off to be connected… to the internets of course!

Loving everything that Jason Segal and Tina Fey are in, have been in, and are going to be in. Examples being - Forgetting Sarah Marshall, How I Met Your Mother and Freaks and Geeks from Jason Segal, and then there is Baby Momma, 30 Rock and Saturday Night Live from Tina Fey. I highly recommend 30 Rock if you’re looking for a new comedy to start watching. I’ve become a total video junkie. Hating that neither of those two current TV shows (30 Rock and How I met your…) are ever on terrestrial or digital in Ireland and must be downloaded. Who ever it is that decides what American TV shows to buy in (rubbish like Desperate Housewives for instance) to show on RTE and TV3 should be fired.

Right now I’m loving/hating…

March 26th, 2008 | 8 Comments | Posted in Life

Loving the B3TA Star Trek image challenge. These are the ones that have made me laugh my ass off - USB Data, Cyberspace the final frontier, Star Trek the Blome Generation and 2 Girls 1 Cup. Hating that the site’s questionable content (the “occasional” badly drawn cock) means that I can’t access it from work.

Loving the work of Maria Schneider (staff writer at the Onion), her web-comic strips over at Pathetic Geek Stories are inspired by user submitted geeky childhood/teen confessionals that she illustrates, quite brilliantly. Setting up a dialogue with the individuals who submit their stories enables her to bring extra realism to each comic, thus making them hard not to identify with. Hating that I’m terrified to submit my own, as I do have some terribly embarrassing (thus humorous!) stories locked deep inside.

Loving Play.com, especially their fast delivery. Admittedly this site could use some work, especially in regards to the structure of it’s categorisation system, I actually use Amazon to browse but Play to purchase. The reason for this is because Play offer such good value for money and complete transparency, meaning that you known exactly how much you’re going to pay for an item before you’ve even added it to your shopping basket (as postage is included in each item price, rather than added on at the end). Being able to view the site in Euro is also a huge benefit, I hate trying to shop online and converting currency as I go along, it’s too messy. Hating Playtrade, half of the items I have tried to purchase from these “Playtraders” have turned out as being out of stock because they don’t update their inventories often enough.

Loving that the IFI is finally showing Grindhouse - the Planet Terror and Death Proof double-feature, including all the fake and fantastic movie trailers in the middle. Hating that it’s a Saturday and Sunday matinée showing only. Walking out into the light of day after these will not be pleasant.

Right now I’m loving/hating…

February 26th, 2008 | 4 Comments | Posted in Life

Loving that Dublin has gone all lesbian-music-scene this week with Tegan and Sara playing in my new favourite venue the Button Factory (though it was my favourite as the TBMC too - go figure!) tomorrow night and Uh Huh Her playing the Village on Sunday. Hating that I’m 100% sure that I’ll have a hangover for the later, and that’s mostly because of this.

Loving Anton Yelchin’s portrayal of a modern day Ferris Bueller in the new movie Charlie Bartlett (can’t wait to see him in the new Star Trek movie). Hating that the trailer gives away the entire storyline.

Loving how Google Reader puts less strain on my eyes, by allowing me to read all my blogs in a lovely gmail formatting style (which this video is definitely paying homage to). Hating that it took me so long to figure out that rss readers were a good thing.

Loving debut irish albums “Carry the Meek” by the one and only Ham Sambo and “Forget Romance, Let’s Dance” by my new favourites (old favourites of Jens!) We Should Be Dead. Hating that I’ve yet to see WSBD live, this will hopefully be rectified at Ladyflash a.s.a.p!

The Phoenix - Top Shelf Magazine?

February 21st, 2008 | 4 Comments | Posted in Life

This morning I went to the local newsagent (local to the office, so that would be a Centra on Amien’s Street) and searched the magazine stand for the new issue of The Phoenix. I did eventually find one partially hidden behind the RTE Guide only to discover it was an older edition, this is when I heard a rather gruff voice from behind me inquire…

“You’re not into that kind of thing are you?”

It was at this moment that I felt like I was reaching for the top shelf.

I did eventually get my hands on one at lunch time and there in the lower right hand corner of the cover is my older brother Dave. Yey Dave!

In Soviet Russia Time Travels You

February 20th, 2008 | 4 Comments | Posted in Life, Technology

Dad got me to listen to the Right Hook last night as there was a really interesting piece on the so-called “Atom Smasher” the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). It is scheduled to begin operation in May of this year and will be the largest (27km long) and highest-energy particle accelerator in the world (until completion of an even bigger accelerator proposed - the International Linear Collider (ILC) which will be 40km long). Building bigger and more powerful accelerators seems to be considered the next major step for physics and there are some interesting reasons why.

Particle accelerators literally smash subatomic particles together (hence the name “Atom Smasher”). They do this by taking a particle, such as an electron, speeding it up close to the speed of light and colliding it with an atom, thus allowing for the investigation of the atom’s internal parts. This produces an explosion, which itself mimics the conditions in the moments after the Big Bang, though in a much smaller scale. The more powerful the particle accelerator, the further back in time it can effectively peer (albiet simulated), and the higher the chances are of discovering something new.

Russian mathematical physicists (video, article) are claiming that the secrets of time travel will be revealed by the LHC. Their central hypothesis is that the massive energies created by the subatomic collisions within the LHC could be powerful enough to rip space-time itself, thus creating wormholes. It has been theorised that wormholes not only create shortcuts between two positions in space, but also between two positions in time. This leads us to the secondary hypothesis that the LHC could be the first ever time machine. It is being theorised that 2008 could be “Year Zero”, for time travelers. Einstein suggested that it would only be possible to travel back as far as the first doorway in time. Thus allowing travelers from the future to have access to the past.

Less of this science was actually explained during the Right Hook, but some interesting commentary was made throughout, which brought my Dad and I to a conclusion of our own:

The moment the LHC is turned on someone from the future will go back in time and destroy it.

Time Travel would allow wars to be fought across time, rather than space. It would be too much of a temptation to go back in time and eliminate your opponent. This would be, of course, too chaotic for any society to flourish in. Ultimately the decision would be made to prevent time travel becoming a possibility all together, thus the destruction of the LHC.
Personally, I will only be convinced that time travel is at all possible if the LHC (or the even bigger ILC) explode in a grandiose fashion.

Another possibility is that microscopic black holes will be created within the LHC. Which, unlike time travel, would be NO fun whatsoever.

Life in Cold Blood

February 12th, 2008 | 3 Comments | Posted in Life, Rants

I had a lazy moment on Sunday where I ended up watching the first two episodes of the new series of America’s Next Top Model. If it weren’t for my reality-tv-obsessed younger sister my comfortable-shoe-wearing self wouldn’t be seen dead watching anything Tyra Banks related. But, I cannot possibly deny the marvel of watching pretty young girls bullying each other into submission until they’re all crying (does crying shed pounds?), fumbling, wrecks.

Last night, as I tried to relax after a rather unpleasant dentist visit, I had the choice between a new episode of the above, or watching Life in Cold Blood (which I had caught last week and thoroughly enjoyed). I chose the later because, well, I love David Attenbourgh far more than any skinny girl who-has-had-the-worst-life competition. I’m sincerely glad that I did and was “rewarded” with an extremely vivid dream involving the ownership of two pet frogs that I was determined to keep wet (although there was no water available) or they would die.

What made a big impression on me last night was the news that amphibians the world over are being threatened by a highly contagious fungus. Also, according to many biologists we are entering the sixth mass extinction, but amphibians in particular are declining at a far greater pace than any other species. Personally I think that amphibians are one of the most fascinating species on the planet - their reproductive cycles are remarkable in complexity (which at this point is probably their greatest downfall) and they are so incredibly adaptable and diverse in nature. It is a pity that in such a short period of time there may no longer be any amphibians left in the wild.

There is a somewhat depressing and yet fascinating article about this issue on the Open University website.