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Diffusive transport of nanoscale objects through cell membranes: a computational perspective

Soft Matter, 2020, 16,3869-3881
DOI: 10.1039/C9SM02338K, Perspective
Ziyang Xu, Lijuan Gao, Pengyu Chen, Li-Tang Yan
Clarifying the diffusion dynamics of nanoscale objects with cell membrane is critical for revealing fundamental physics in biological systems. This perspective highlights the advances in computational and theoretical aspects of this emerging field.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Using microprojectiles to study the ballistic limit of polymer thin films

Soft Matter, 2020, 16,3886-3890
DOI: 10.1039/D0SM00295J, Communication
Shawn H. Chen, Amanda J. Souna, Christopher L. Soles, Stephan J. Stranick, Edwin P. Chan
In this work, a microballistic impact test called laser induced projectile impact test (LIPIT) was used to study the perforation behavior of polycarbonate thin films to demonstrate the importance of film thickness on the film's ballistic limit.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Different-shaped micro-objects driven by active particle aggregations

Soft Matter, 2020, Advance Article
DOI: 10.1039/D0SM00160K, Paper
Chen Wang, Hongyuan Jiang
We study the dynamics of passive micro-objects in the active bath. The motion of micro-objects depends on the pattern of active particle aggregations.
To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.
The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry




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Peers and Politics, c. 1650 - 1850: Essays in Honour of Clyve Jones


 

A collection of essays in honour of Clyve Jones who has made an incomparable contribution to our understanding of the history of the Westminster house of lords – its politics, procedures and business – and to the history of the English and Scottish peerage more generally



Read More...





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The Network week in review: Jan 20 - Jan 24


This week we go inside the World Economic Forum and we learn how smart manufacturers are using robots! Read below to learn more.
More RSS Feed: newsroom.cisco.com/rss-feeds ...




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Four doctors, two nurses of Rajah Muthiah hospital test positive

Efforts on to trace other health workers who were in contact with them




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NLCIL employee dies of burn injuries

Sarbuddin, 54, a permanent employee of NLC India Ltd (NLCIL), who had suffered severe burn injuries in a fire that broke out in a furnace in Unit VI o




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[ASAP] Goodbye Juan José Sáenz (1960–2020): A Bright Scientific Mind, an Unusually Prolific Friend, and a Family Man

ACS Photonics
DOI: 10.1021/acsphotonics.0c00526




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The Accidental Side Project

Drew McLellan puts the chairs up on the tables, sweeps the floor, and closes off our season, and indeed the entire 24 ways project with a look back at what it’s meant to run this site as a site project, and what impact side projects can have on the work we do. Will the last one out turn off Christmas the lights?


Brought to you by The CSS Layout Workshop. Does developing layouts with CSS seem like hard work? How much time could you save without all the trial and error? Are you ready to really learn CSS layout?


Fifteen years ago, on a bit of a whim, I decided it would be fun to have a Web Standards version of something like the Perl Advent calendar. A simple website with a new tip or trick each day leading the readers through December up until Christmas.

I emailed a bunch of friends that kept web design and development themed blogs (remember those?) suggesting the idea and asking if they’d like to contribute. My vision had been that each post would be a couple of paragraphs of information. A small nugget of an idea, or a tip, or a suggestion. What happened was something really amazing. I began to receive really insightful blog posts containing some of the most valuable writing I’d seen online all year.

Look at this piece from Ethan Marcotte on Centered Tabs with CSS, or this detailed piece on scripting block quotes from Jeremy Keith. I was blown away, and the scene was set.

Part of the original design. Photo by Bert Heymans.

Collaboration

What I hadn’t anticipated in 2005 was that this little side project would turn into a fixture of the industry calendar, would introduce me to a raft of field experts, and would have me working with an eclectic team of collaborators for fifteen long seasons.

And that last point is crucial. I’ve by no means produced this alone. Rachel Andrew has been a constant supporter in helping each year to see the light of day and producing our ebooks. After a couple of years, Brian Suda stepped in to help me plan and select authors. In 2008, I managed to persuade Tim Van Damme to replace my very basic site design with something altogether more fitting. In 2010, Anna Debenham came on board initially to help with the production of articles, but rapidly became a co-producer working with me on all aspects of the content. Owen Gregory joined up that same year to help with the proofing and editing of articles, and for many years did a fantastic job writing the home page article teasers, which are now but a shadow of their former selves.

Tim Van Damme’s 2008 redesign.

Also in 2010, we produced a book in collaboration with Five Simple Steps and raising funds in the memory of Remy and Julie’s daughter, Tia Sharp.

The Five Simple Steps 24 ways book. Photo by Patrick Haney.

In 2013, Paul Robert Lloyd stepped up to the plate to provide us with the design you see today, which not only subtly shifts colours between each day, but across the years as well. Compare the reds of 2005 to the purples of 2019, and the warm tones of a Day 1 to its correspondingly cool Day 24. It’s a terrific piece of work.

Paul Robert Lloyd’s design plays subtly with colour shifts.

In 2014 we won a Net Award for Best Collaborative Project at a fancy ceremony in London. Many past authors were there, and as it was an aware for our collaborative efforts, we all posed with the glassware for photos.

We all went to a right fancy do.

Looking back, looking forward

But even I, Sea Captain Belly Button am not enough of a navel gazer to just be writing an article just about this website. As we draw our fifteenth and final year to a close, it’s important to reflect on what can be learned. Not from the articles (so much!) or from the folly of committing to a nightly publishing schedule for a month every year for fifteen years (don’t do it!) but from the value in starting something not because you have to, but just because you want to. From scratching an itch. From working with a friend just because you love spending time with them. Or for doing something because you see the opportunity for good.

As web designers and developers, we have the opportunity to turn the skills we use in our profession to so many different purposes. In doing so you never know what good might come from it.

Seeing the good

This week I asked around to find out what good others have seen from their side projects. Long time 24 ways contributor Simon Willison had this to say:

Simon went onto explain how it was a website side project that got him his first job in tech. After that, his personal blog lead him to getting a job at Lawrence Journal-World where he created Django. On his honeymoon, Simon and his new wife (and 24 ways contributor) Natalie Downe created Lanyrd, and Simon’s more recent Datasette project landed him a JSK Fellowship at Stanford. That’s an impressive record of side projects, for sure.

Others had similar stories. My good friend Meri Williams is currently CTO of challenger bank Monzo, as well as being a trustee at Stonewall and Chair of The Lead Developer conference.

Again, an impressive list of achievements, and I’m sure both Simon and Meri would have eventally found other routes to their individual success, but the reality is they did it through side projects. Through being present and active, contributing a little to their communities, and receiving so much more back in return.

Of course, not all projects have to be directly related to the web or software to be fulfilling. Of course they don’t. Mark Small and Jack Shoulder embraced their love of a good rear end and created MuseumBums, informally cataloging perfect posteriors for your perusing pleasure. On its success, Mark says:

Jack adds:

I had so many heartwarming responses to my request for stories, I really recommend you go over to the thread on Twitter and read it. It’s been one of my favourite set of replies in a long time.

Focussing on what’s important

As the years progressed, more and more publications sprang up both at Christmas and throughout the year with how-to articles explaining techniques. As a natural response, 24 ways started mixing up solution-based articles with bigger picture takes on a wider range of topics, but always with a practical takeaway to impress your friends.

After the embarrassment of white dudes that dominated the early years, we actively sought to open the opportunity to write to a wider and more diverse range of experts. While I don’t think we ever got as much racial diversity in our lineup as I would have liked to have achieved, I’m very proud that each season has been closely gender-balanced since 2012. This is something that was never forced or remotely hard to achieve, all it took was an awareness of the potential for bias.

Calling time

With all the benefits that side projects can bring, it’s also important to be mindful of downsides. Not every project will take flight, and those that do can also start to consume valuable time. That’s fine while it’s fun and you’re seeing the benefits, but it’s neither fun or healthy long-term to have no time away from something that might otherwise be your job.

Spending time with family, friends, and loved ones is equally important especially at this time of year. Just as anyone who does a lot of sport or fitness will tell you about the value of rest days between your activities to let the body recover, time away from ‘work’ is important to do the same for your brain.

Having run this site every Christmas for 15 seasons, it’s time to take a breather and give it a rest. Who knows if we might return in the future, but no promises. It’s been a good run, and an absolute privilege to provide this small tradition to the community I love.

So from me and the whole 24 ways family, Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good night.

Anna and Drew at the 2014 Net Awards dinner.

About the author

Drew McLellan is a developer and content management consultant from Bristol, England. He’s the lead developer for the popular Perch and Perch Runway content management systems, and public speaking portfolio site Notist. Drew was formerly Group Lead at the Web Standards Project, and a Search Innovation engineer at Yahoo!. When not publishing 24 ways, he keeps a personal site about web development, takes photos, tweets a lot and tries to stay upright on his bicycle.

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Cigarette taxes and teen marijuana use [electronic resource] / D. Mark Anderson, Kyutaro Matsuzawa, Joseph J. Sabia

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Drug courts [electronic resource] : a new approach to treatment and rehabilitation / James E. Lessenger, Glade F. Roper, editors

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Reluctant warriors: Germany, Japan, and their U.S. alliance dilemma / Alexandra Sakaki, Hanns W. Maull, Kerstin Lukner, Ellis S. Krauss, Thomas U. Berger

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Leadership decapitation: strategic targeting of terrorist organizations / Jenna Jordan

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Human rights in twentieth-century Australia / Jon Piccini

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Homeland security and public safety: research, applications and standards / editors, Philip J. Mattson and Jennifer L. Marshall

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Japan rearmed: the politics of military power / Sheila A. Smith

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Automation and utopia: human flourishing in a world without work / John Danaher

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The suspect: an Olympic bombing, the FBI, the media, and Richard Jewell, the man caught in the middle / Kent Alexander & Kevin Salwen

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Cold War Exiles and the CIA: plotting to free Russia / Benjamin Tromly

Dewey Library - JK468.I6 T76 2019




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Triggered: how the Left thrives on hate and wants to silence us / Donald Trump Jr

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Militarization: a reader / Roberto J. González, Hugh Gusterson, Gustaaf Houtman, editors ; in collaboration with Catherine Besteman, Andrew Bickford, Catherine Lutz, Katherine T. McCaffrey, Austin Miller, David H. Price, David Vine

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A republic of equals: a manifesto for a just society / Jonathan Rothwell

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Citizenship: what everyone needs to know / Peter J. Spiro

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Human rights in the age of platforms / edited by Rikke Frank Jørgensen ; foreword by David Kaye

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Beyond smart and connected governments: sensors and the internet of things in the public sector / J. Ramon Gil-Garcia, Theresa A. Pardo, Mila Gasco-Hernandez, editors

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The end of European security institutions: the EU's common foreign and security policy and NATO after Brexit / Benjamin Zyla

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Aiding and abetting: U.S. foreign assistance and state violence / Jessica Trisko Darden

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Why veterans run: military service in American presidential elections, 1789-2016 / Jeremy M. Teigen

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Exploring Patterns of Behaviour in Violent Jihadist Terrorists: an analysis of six significant terrorist conspiracies in the UK.

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Murder, Inc.: the CIA under John F. Kennedy / James H. Johnston

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Proceeding of the VI International Ship Design and Naval Engineering Congress (CIDIN) and XXVI Pan-American Congress of Naval Engineering, Maritime Transportation and Port Engineering (COPINAVAL) / Vice Admiral Jorge Enrique Carreño Moreno, Adan Veg

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The morals of the market: human rights and the rise of neoliberalism / Jessica Whyte

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The anti-black city: police terror and black urban life in Brazil / Jaime Amparo Alves

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Tyranny comes home: the domestic fate of U.S. militarism / Christopher J. Coyne and Abigail R. Hall

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Gunslinging justice: the American culture of gun violence in Westerns and the law / Justin A. Joyce

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Corruption in contemporary politics: a new travel guide / James L. Newell

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Race on the brain: what implicit bias gets wrong about the struggle for racial justice / Jonathan Kahn

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The gang paradox: inequalities and miracles on the U.S.-Mexico border / Robert J. Durán

Hayden Library - HV6439.M58 D87 2018




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Electronic warfare signal processing / James Genova

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