First edit in a while, glad to have ya back!
Good chattin with you yesterday. I'll have to check out Gilbert Di Paolo's lab at the Taub Institute, maybe I can make a friend.
Haven't heard from you in a while, whatcha been upto man?
Feel like rockin some OneSci gear at SfN?
id buy a hoodie if it had a fat picture of the tree logo...
I just got a OneSci hoodie from here
Add a protocol for something, anything, for 5 internets.
That picture is just a random picture. You gotta click on the link if you wanna check out the real stats. How's the recruitment of Jeorge Cham going? He'd be nice to have on our team. BTW, I noticed your user page was triaged from Google search. I don't know if this is something you even care about, but in case you were wondering how google search-rank works, it was sac'd because, the ratio of original content - to - content found on other websites, is very low. The best way to get it back in there is just to sit down and type some more shit about yourself without looking at anything one the web. Google sniffs out the new, untold stories on the internet. If you plagiarize, it knows, ohhh it knows everything. Bradley Monakhos
Wow, that cartoon is dead on!
this website pulls up on the 3rd page... http://www.onesci.com/User:Bradley_Monakhos
It's because Google has not indexed your user page yet. It will eventually. The best way to speed up the indexing of your page is to add links from other sites to your OneSci page. The GoogleBot Spider crawls the internet and follows every link it comes across in order to build an index of pages. If there are links from other websites to your page on OneSci, it moves your page up in the relevant results section, and increases the ranking of the entire OneSci website.
If you wanted to see your page come up when you google "David Linsenbardt" then you would want to put a few links on places like facebook or a blog or any other site you can. Also, if you can do it with HTML, a link using you actual name would be better than a link that says Go Here.
Here is the David Linsenbardt Vita
Hi, I'm David Linsenbardt, you can find my vita here
1) Do NIH funding regulations mandate data be published in certain 'types' of journals? if so what kind and why? 2) Where do you draw the line? - at what point is data worthy or not worthy of being viewed by scientists, or perhaps more importantly, the general public? Does 'badly conducted' research, reviewed by 2 individuals standards, mean that the information is not worth viewing? It could be argured that the current peer review process at least eliminates data that would otherwise waste the time of interested individuals... Im not so sure - what is important is that the data is presented in a way that 'speaks the truth and nothing but the truth'. What we need is an accountability system - who better than the world...?
You are now...
sweet man - i am honored with this responsibility... It is my civic duty and I will use whatever skills i posses (or can develop) to advance science as it was meant to be.
id go here: a page where scientists could upload pictures of their science. for example, double and triple flourescent staining, and then people could rate them. the images could have a brief description 'newly proliferating cells of the rat dentae gyrus colocalized to activated microglia" (likely not a real phenomenon...). are images taken from science done with institutional funding property of the individual? i dont think so but i could you assign an ISSN for one of these in the same way you can for posters etc?
I think this is a great idea. Feel like spearheading it? I don't believe images can be given an ISSN. However, images can be covered under the OneSci License (like I said below). If you have questions about our license, you can check it out at Creative Commons. Remember, our specific CC is - BY-ND 3.0 - Free to use with attribution with no derivation.
i am working on the networking bit - update coming soon...
do I "have the right to distribute the(OneSci) image." or is this something that i need permission for?
You mean like this:

[[File:Pub Med.png|link=http://pubmed.com]]
Also, if you want to get rid of the table of contents on your user page, copy and paste this code at the very end of the page:
__NOTOC____NOEDITSECTION__
perfect man - thanks a million David Linsenbardt
Are you getting settled in your new lab? How do you like Indianapolis?
everything is going about as could be expected - my days are spent unpacking boxes and putting together behavioral various behavioral monitoring and/or molecular biology equipment. in my spare time i clean filth from unused space... im trying to make a thumbnail link like you did with the left margin for pubmed etc. - is there a way i can see that html or 'wikiml'?
Look best around 2000 - 3000 pixels
I see that you've been doing some exploring! Starting to make sense yet? Don't worry, after a while the markup language will be second nature, and you'll be formatting pages like a champion wiki-warrior from the future. Here are two pages that might help you out:
I also noticed that you have brackets around your outbound links. That's because anything that links to another website only needs 1 bracket on both sides. For example, say you want to link to University of Indiana, you would want to do this:
[http://www.psynt.iupui.edu/ U of I]
For pages on OneSci you would need two brackets.
A couple of other things. Click on the Questions link at the top of the page for clarification about putting peronal pages under your own Namespace
But other than that, your personal page is looking pretty good, I must say.
Check out the News page when you get a chance.
And leave 3 ~~~ (tildes) after any post to sign your name.
Leave 4 ~~~~ (tildes) after any post to sign your name and date.
Bradley Monakhos 16:10, 8 July 2009 (UTC)
hey brad the RSS feed on the home page is feezed up. for some reason half of the images are cropped as you scroll down - any idea why? David Linsenbardt
Brad, see link: http://www.onesci.com/File:Poster_submission_error.png David Linsenbardt