Episodes

  • Sandra Gesing
    Feb 17 2023

    An interview about FAIR software, workflows, and virtual research environments (VREs) / science gateways with Sandra Gesing, currently a Senior Research Scientist and Scientific Outreach and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) Lead at the Discovery Partners Institute at the University of Illinois, Chicago.

    • https://galaxyproject.org/
    • https://dpi.uillinois.edu/
    • https://sciencegateways.org/
    • https://www.rd-alliance.org/groups/fair-virtual-research-environments-wg
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    41 mins
  • Christophe Blanchi
    Jan 18 2023

    https://doi.org/20.500.14132/chris -->
    https://doi.org/20.500.14132/chris?noredirect -->
    https://www.dona.net/team/christophe-blanchi

    Digital Object Identifier Resolution Protocol (DO-IRP): https://www.dona.net/sites/default/files/2022-06/DO-IRPV3.0--2022-06-30.pdf

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    1 hr and 12 mins
  • Vineeth Venugopal
    Oct 31 2022

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interatomic_potential

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    59 mins
  • walk-and-talk: DIKW pyramid/hierarchy
    Sep 27 2022

    DIKW pyramid / DIKW hierarchy - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DIKW_pyramid

    "Data becomes information when it is stored *in* a given *formation*."
    From B. Fong and D. I. Spivak, “Seven Sketches in Compositionality: An Invitation to Applied Category Theory,” Ch. 3 - Databases, arXiv, Oct. 12, 2018. doi: 10.48550/arXiv.1803.05316.

    "There are only three things we can do with data. We can accrete data by adding it to an existing collection, reduce data by discarding information from an existing collection, or reshape data by placing it in a different kind of collection."
    From Z. Tellman, *Elements of Clojure*, Ch. 4 - Composition. Monee, IL: Lulu.com, 2019.

    types of information: situational, methodological, philosophical (epistemological, axiological, ontological)
    From Dorian Taylor, "2022-05-11 types of information", (May 11, 2022). Accessed: Sep. 27, 2022. [Online Video]. Available: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zNUNgZ6RTmQ

    Inductions vs deductions vs abductions
    Informed by M. K. Bergman, A Knowledge Representation Practionary: Guidelines Based on Charles Sanders Peirce. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-98092-8.

    "programs must be written for people to read, and only incidentally for machines to execute."
    From preface to first edition (and included in subsequent editions) of H. Abelson, G. J. Sussman, and J. Sussman, *Structure and interpretation of computer programs*, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

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    9 mins
  • I Fought the Law
    Sep 7 2022

    `.split()`s on strings and `filter`s on `None`
    I fought the Law and the Law won
    I fought the Law and the Law won
    I needed spec compliance; I got none
    I fought the Law and the Law won
    I fought the Law and the Law won

    I varied my output with the latest fad
    Breakin' every downstream run
    Needed Postel more than I ever had
    I fought the Law and the Law won
    I fought the Law and the

    Scatterin' parsing like a shotgun
    I fought the Law and the Law won
    I fought the Law and the Law won
    I lost robustness and I lost my fun
    I fought the Law and the Law won
    I fought the Law and the Law won

    I varied my output with the latest fad
    Breakin' every downstream run
    Needed Postel more than I ever had
    I fought the Law and the Law won
    I fought the Law and the

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    1 min
  • Martynas Jusevičius
    Aug 29 2022

    - Linked Data
    - Project Jupyter (Notebook, Lab, etc.)
    - UI Blocks: Block Protocol
    - Personal Knowledge Graphs: Roam, Logseq, Obsidian
    - Solid: decentralized data stores
    - Resource Description Framework (RDF)
    - Twitter: Martynas, AtomGraph
    - LinkedDataHub (Apache-2.0 license)
    - AtomGraph: Website, GitHub

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    30 mins
  • FAIR-Enabling Services
    Aug 19 2022
    I was thinking about FAIR-enabling resources and wanted to distinguish between things that actually have to be running in order for data to be alive and for you to actually find it, access it, interoperate with it, and reuse it, versus "one-time" things that those services will need.
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    10 mins
  • Stuck Data Mining Again (Lodi)
    Aug 9 2022

    Just about a week ago,
    I set out to download.
    Seekin' supplementary data,
    lookin' for a pot of gold.

    Things got bad, and things got worse,
    I guess you will know the tune.
    Oh lord, stuck data mining again.

    Rode in on semantics,
    I'll be hand-waving out if I go.
    Trying controlled vocabularies,
    must've been seven of 'em or more.
    No corresponding authors
    have replied to my emails yet.
    Oh lord, I'm stuck data mining again.

    The man from Stack Overflow
    said I was on my way.
    My code kept raising exceptions.
    I was reading tracebacks for days.
    I wanted to run a one-off benchmark.
    Looks like my plans fell through.
    Oh lord, stuck data mining again.

    If I only had metadata
    that was machine-actionable
    every time I've had a dataset
    that I's told was interoperable.
    You know I'd catch the FAIR train
    and breeze through my planned reuse.
    Oh lord, I'm stuck data mining again.
    Oh lord, I'm stuck data mining again.

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    2 mins