Search results for: associate chaplain urzula glienecke
Weekly changes - 02/11/2020
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/lcfg/2020/11/04/weekly-changes-02-11-2020/
This week has been a fairly busy one which sees us continuing to enhance the new Ubuntu 20.04 platform. There is a wide variety of changes touching on network, systemd, nvidia graphics, mail clients and the usual software updates. Here’s a summary… Ubuntu Kernel The Informatics test kernel for Ubuntu has been updated to 5.4.0-52.57, […]
Glimmer of hope XXII
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/roythompson/2020/05/27/glimmer-of-hope-xxii/
Weight gain and lockdown: empiricism vs. physical modelling Summary Life in lockdown has disrupted our daily lives, creating the perfect setup for putting on pounds. In a poll of 1,000 people, nearly half of the women and almost one-quarter of the men reported that they had gained weight “due to COVID-19 restrictions”. I presume […]
Back in the USA
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/cbovill/2020/01/21/back-in-the-usa/
Sorry for the lack of activity on the blog for the past 6 weeks. The first 3 weeks were spent back in the UK for a medley of Christmas parties, regular check-ups with the NHS (making the most of being back!), and time with family and friends. Most of the rest of the time since […]
DamID: Where does it bind?
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/institute-genetics-cancer/2020/01/06/damid-where-does-it-bind/
It is no secret that DNA organisation in the nucleus is not random. Chromatin architecture is a highly dynamic structure and as it’s been long known in biology, changes in structure relate to changes in function. Indeed, various DNA binding proteins can affect chromatin folding and alter gene expression[1]. Hence, identifying protein-DNA interactions is important […]
Welcome!
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/davereay/2018/08/08/hello-world/
Prof Dave Reay, Chair in Carbon Management & Education Climate-smart Food – New Open Access book for 2019 (published by Palgrave) Online Masters in Carbon Management The Online MSc in Carbon Management at the University of Edinburgh Teaching on the MSc Carbon Management Climate Change Impact Videos from Online Carbon Management Students New Books Climate-smart […]
Digital Christmas, Kindness and Fatigue
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/digitalcitizen/2020/12/18/digital-kindness-fatigue-christmas/
Digital Kindness I originally started this blog post back in November, intending to publish it in time for World Kindness Day (which, rather ominously, fell on Friday the 13th this year), but it ended up on the back burner as other projects took priority and digital fatigue began to set in. I’d wanted to approach […]
The Economics of the Sports Business
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/sport-matters/2020/12/08/the-economics-of-the-sports-business/
By Professor Wray Vamplew University of Edinburgh The Economics of the Sports Business Does the Business of Sport Differ from ‘Real’ Business? Much of the economics associated with sport are conventional. Funds have to be raised, wages have to be paid, and resources have to be allocated to the production process. Yet in some […]
Current Projects - summary
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/scphrp/past-projects/
GroundsWell Website https://ukprp.org/what-we-fund/groundswell/ Twitter @GroundswellCon SCPHRP Researchers: Professor Ruth Jepson is one of the three co-Directors of GroundsWell. Other SCPHRP members on the project include: Stephen Malden, Craig O’Donnell and Emma Carroll-Monteil. UKPRP award £7.1 million for 5 years, with additional in-kind investment from the consortium’s partners Community-engaged and Data-informed Systems Transformation of Urban Green […]
Learning Sprint 4 | The Commons: Reflective Analysis
‘…consider how the arts and contemporary theory structure “the commons” anew: how the commons becomes both a goal and a trope in post-millennial art and cultural theory.’ (Amy J. Elias) In this Sprint, I was introduced to a completely new concept – the commons. As I progressed in my studies, I realised that although the […]
Alternative formulations for statistical theories: 2.
Alternative formulations for statistical theories: 2. Carrying on from my previous post, I thought it would be interesting to look at the effect of the different formulations on statistical closure theories. In order to keep matters as simple as possible, I am restricting my attention to single-time theories and their forms for the transfer spectrum […]
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