Arnold Moene

4 Followers
8 Following
13 Posts
Director of BSc and MSc programs in Earth science @WUR. Teaching (thus learning) about land-atmosphere interactions +turbulence as a hobby. Father of four.
While researching my recent newsletter post about radio frequency allocations, I stumbled upon this lil gem. NOAA runs a "Dial-A-Buoy" service where you can...dial a buoy. Call 888-701-8992. Once connected, press 1 then then buoy ID number. You can try it out for buoy 44065 in New York Harbor. https://www.ndbc.noaa.gov/dial.shtml#:~:text=Some%20buoys%20report%20wave%20directions,touch%20tone%20or%20cell%20phone.
NDBC - Dial-A-Buoy

Want to become my colleague or know someone who wants to?
#PhD position on atmospheric #oxygen and #co2 measurements at the Carbon group within MAQ in Wageningen:
https://www.wur.nl/nl/vacature/phd-using-atmospheric-oxygen-to-unravel-biosphere-co2-exchange-1.htm
PhD Using atmospheric oxygen to unravel biosphere CO2 exchange

WUR

#Introduction

Hello! We are The Carpentries, an organisation committed to building global capacity in essential data and computational skills for conducting efficient, open, and reproducible research.

You can find out more about us at:https://carpentries.org/about/

About Us

The Carpentries is a fiscally sponsored project of Community Initiatives, a registered 501(c)3 non-profit organisation based in California, USA. We are a global community teaching foundational computational and data science skills to researchers in academia, industry and government.

The Carpentries
The Origins of Python | Lambert Meertens | Inference

Python is arguably the most popular programming language worldwide. Since its debut in 1991, Python’s accessibility and rich functionality has helped it gather a huge userbase. Its design was influenced by creator Guido van Rossum’s involvement with an earlier language, ABC. Lambert Meertens, one of ABC’s developers, recounts Python’s origins and how ABC’s design philosophy shaped its successor.

Inference
We (@weareseismica) started a researcher-run journal and here we report how we did it and how it's going so far: https://seismica.library.mcgill.ca/article/view/255
The launch of Seismica: a seismic shift in publishing

Seismica, a community-run Diamond Open Access (OA) journal for seismology and earthquake science, opened for submissions in July 2022. We created Seismica to support a shift to OA publishing while pushing back against the extreme rise in the cost of OA author processing charges, and the inequities this is compounding. Seismica is run by an all-volunteer Board of 47 researchers who fulfil traditional editorial roles as well as forming functional teams to address the needs for technical design and support, copy editing, media and branding that would otherwise be covered by paid staff at a for-profit journal. We are supported by the McGill University Library (Québec, Canada), who host our website and provide several other services, so that Seismica does not have any income or financial expenditures. We report the process of developing the journal and explain how and why we made some of the major policy choices. We describe the organizational structure of the journal, and discuss future plans and challenges for the continued success and longevity of Seismica.

Seismica
#introduction
I'm trying to migrate away from the #birdsite
In work life, I split my time between managing a bachelor and master program in #earthscience, and teaching on land-atmosphere interactions, both @ Wageningen University (NL). My education interests range from classroom didactics to university-level curriculum development.
In daily life, I'm a husband and dad of 4 daughters. Interested in music (passive + a bit of choir singing) and nerdy stuff like home automation.

one thing I think that might be lost on newcomers is the fact that this past week has been BANANAS for everyone who's been on the site for years, and if you feel like people are being snippy or pushy about social norms, that's probably why.

on a normal week when people talk about "hey please CW that" or "please don't spam your tweets here with a crossposter" or whatever they're more likely to do so patiently and explain the reasoning behind why we do things that way but on a day like today things are more likely to get a little snippy or terse.

don't take it personally! the old timers are trying to maintain social norms in the face of a flood of change, and they're worn out. keep that in mind if you think to yourself "hm; this place doesn't seem that friendly". give it some time to get back to normal before you bounce.

The past few days have extracted a heavy toll from me. While it's nice to see your work finally taken seriously in the mainstream, the 12-14 hour workdays I've had to pull to handle everything is anything but...