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1.) And Adding to Our Confidence Levels...

2.) The Rest Is Noise

3.) It's in the Fine Print

4.) Sounds Promising, But We're Not Sold Yet

5.) This Week in PLoS

6.) New Jobs? We're There

7.) That's One Long To-Do List

8.) Crotchety, Too

9.) It's the Journey

10.) Scrutinizing Blood

11.) For Fans of "Dancing with the Stars"

12.) A Mayor, A Maverick, and Microbes Galore

13.) Changes to NSF Funding Policy

14.) A Day (or Years?) To Forget

15.) Curing the Disease, Not the Symptom

16.) Afterward, You Might Need a Vacation From Science

17.) This Week in Science

18.) Live from Philadelphia, It's ASHG

19.) Adam Smith Would be Proud

20.) What's in the Job Description?

21.) Obsolete, Generic, and General? Sounds Great

22.) This Week in Nature

23.) Perhaps It's a Display of Gratitude for the Hospitality

24.) A Bad Day for Hypochondriacs

25.) Not Just Home to Hipsters Anymore

26.) Just Don't Call It 'Affirmative Action'

27.) Want to Work for the Government?

28.) DNA, RNA, Epigenetics, and the Battle for a Baby's Brain

29.) This Week in PLoS

30.) Another Player Joins the Fray

31.) In This Climate, You Need All the Help You Can Get

32.) No Stopping Synthetic Bio

33.) Looking for Origins

34.) No Answers Yet

35.) Get Ready for Genopolitics

36.) Sys Bio at the OB/GYN's Office

37.) In Case You Were Confused About Ontology...

38.) Stirring Up the Junk DNA Realm

39.) In the Grand Scheme of Things, This Feels Like Progress

40.) Our Love/Hate Relationship with Systems Biology

41.) This Week in Science

42.) For Better or For Worse

43.) Not So Different After All

44.) Tricking Out Your iPhone for Biology

45.) This Week in Nature

46.) The Mammoth in the Room

47.) In Case You Didn't Have Enough Profiles to Keep Up

48.) Supremes on Science

49.) Another Chance to Chew the Fat Over Personalized Medicine

50.) Teaching Made Easy With Wikis

51.) Tastes Like Chicken -- the Same Chicken We Had Last Week

52.) Your Five-Year Plan Should Probably Not Include Winning the Lottery

53.) So Many Lawsuits, So Little Time

54.) Survey Says: Potential Bias, But Excellent Data Quality

55.) This Week in PLoS

56.) We'll Return to Our Regularly Scheduled Programming in a Moment

57.) Just Think of All the Time This Could Free Up for Pipetting Contests in the Lab

58.) The Sanctity of Data

59.) A Good Day for Clouds

60.) Synthetic Bio in Review

61.) Thanks for the Alphabet, and for Those Telltale Genes Too

62.) No Mention of a Consolation Prize for Navigenics

63.) Excuse Us, John and Barack, But Do You Have Time for a Cheek Swab?

64.) This Week in Science

65.) Taking Nominations

66.) Testing Little Johnny

67.) This Week in Nature

68.) Pass the Tissues

69.) Tough Times for GWAS

70.) Don't Forget to Pack a Hazmat Suit in Your Hurricane Emergency Kit

71.) Even Rose-Colored Glasses Don't Help This Picture

72.) A Better Understanding of Clubfoot

73.) All About the Benjamins

74.) Genome-wide Studies in PNAS

75.) Rounding Up the Data

76.) It Could Be Worse. We Could Be the Sarah Palin of Science

77.) To Take Flight, Bump Up the Size of Your Genome

78.) There's More Than Your Trusty Autoclave

79.) This Week in PLoS

80.) Methylation Might Bring You Down

81.) Teaching With Wikis

82.) Strange Bedfellows, and All That

83.) Retiring, But Not Reticent

84.) In Case You Just Weren't Sure How Supportive She Was Going to Be

85.) Imagining the Future

86.) Let Them Stay Home with the Kids

87.) But If the Patent Generates $1 Million, Maybe It's a Wash

88.) Sheesh, Now You Want to Know How It Works, Too?

89.) From Delight to Disappointment, All in a Single Week

90.) A Leaner Merck Says, 'So Long, Seattle'

91.) This Week in Science

92.) Wait, More Freedom to Work with Stem Cells? We're Not Used to That

93.) A Long Way to Go, But Making Strides

94.) In This Economy, $100K Looks Awfully Good

95.) This Week in Nature

96.) NIH Could Use a More Targeted Approach

97.) Everything You Wanted to Know About Personal Genomes (and Then Some)

98.) If Only TV Networks Would Pay You Millions to Film Your Lab in Action

99.) Binding Data For Everyone

100.) Powerful, and Friendly-Sounding, Too

101.) Wasn't High Tech Supposed to Usher in the New World Order?

102.) We Could Start by Pretending Not to Care

103.) Finding Your Name

104.) They'll Need a Long Marquee for All the Names

105.) This Week in PLoS

106.) All Things 23andMe

107.) A Whole Lotta Personal Genomes

108.) The Gene for Lymphatic Vessels

109.) Our Accomplishments Pale in Comparison

110.) Thanks, But No Thanks

111.) C'est La Vie

112.) Sure, It's Risky, But...

113.) This Week in Science

114.) A New Way to Classify Bacteria

115.) Glad It's Secure

116.) Quicker, Sure…

117.) We Find That Tossing It Out The Window is Cathartic

118.) This Week in Nature

119.) The Father of Cell Biology Has Died

120.) Open Access Scholarly Publishers Association Launches

121.) TB Older Than We Thought

122.) Cloud Computing at Microsoft

123.) It Could Go Either Way

124.) Plus, They Are Cute

125.) At Last, a Genetic Explanation for Mr. Clean

126.) Sadly, Looking Sharp Doesn't Prevent You From Being a Lousy Instructor

127.) The Frustration of Impact Factors

128.) This Week in PLoS

129.) Happy Open Access Day

130.) But Marketing 'Variants of Small Effect' Just Doesn't Have the Same Ring

131.) No, There Were No Spit Parties on Campus

132.) Probably a Wise Move for Someone Rumored to Be a Possible Science Advisor

133.) Approaching Critical Mass?

134.) If They Get a Lot of Attention, Does It Really Matter Whether They're Right?

135.) It'll Be Worth the Wait

136.) New Alignment Methods Needed. Anyone?

137.) Nanopore Sequencing Takes Center Stage

138.) This Week in Science

139.) Award Season Has Just Begun

140.) On the Bright Side: Innovation and a Move to Open Source

141.) Remember, Pfizer, There's No Such Thing as Bad News

142.) This Week in Nature

143.) Looking at the Bigger Picture

144.) Why Choose OA?

145.) So Close to Free

146.) We Feel Your Pain

147.) Tweaking, or Falsifying?

148.) Add More Laureates to That List

149.) The Virus Whisperer

150.) Score One for Open Access

151.) Hey, We're Not Done Yet

152.) Nobel, Shmobel

153.) This Week in PLoS

154.) We Laugh in the Face of Recession

155.) One Day They're Scientists, the Next They're Nobel Laureates

156.) Same Debate, Different Century

157.) At Last, Making Sense of Complex Traits

158.) Complete Genomics Makes Its Debut

159.) Web 2.0 Is Easy -- You'll See

160.) Pioneering Geneticist John Thoday Dies

161.) Honoring Weird Science

162.) Should Indels Get Special Treatment?

163.) This Week in Science

164.) A Life Cycle All Its Own

165.) Turns Out It Wasn't a Criminal or a Paternity Issue -- Just Plain Good Science

166.) Time to Take Matters into Your Own Hands

167.) The Countdown Continues

168.) For Those 'Poor, Messed Up Gels'

169.) This Week in Nature

170.) That Looks Like a Non-Standard SNP You've Got There

171.) Still Looking for That Silver Lining

172.) New and Improved R

173.) What Do They Do, Anyway?

174.) A GWAS for Gout

175.) A Genome Sequence for the Accidental Antibiotic

176.) The Heir Apparent

177.) All Hail the Victors

178.) If We Had a Hammer

179.) This Week in PLoS

180.) The Nobels Are Coming: Get in on the Action

181.) Or 280 Billion Haagen-Dazs Bars

182.) A Big Fight

183.) What About an A for Affordable?

184.) Using Genetics to Fight HIV

185.) En Route to the $1000 Genome

186.) They Can't Do It Alone

187.) The Most Quotable Man in Science

188.) Give Us the Money

189.) This Week in Science

190.) Childhood's Short Enough Already

191.) Pie in the Sky

192.) Slightly Different Than Santa's List

193.) This Week in Nature

194.) First Francis, Now Elias. NIH, We Hardly Recognize You

195.) Now That's Encouraging: Genetics as the Cautionary Example

196.) Ever Closer to Making that CSI Technology a Reality

197.) Thanks for the Feedback

198.) From Painting to Genomics

199.) Mind Control in Flies Sounds Like a Slippery Slope

200.) piRNAs: No Longer the Little Brother

201.) Because We're Nothing Without a Sense of Humor

202.) Expressing Sensitivity

203.) Try, Try, Try Again

204.) Not Playing Nicely

205.) This Week in PLoS

206.) DIY Bis-Tris Gels

207.) Alzheimer's Researcher Dies

208.) It's Comeuppance Time

209.) Anything to Make Playing With Data More Fun

210.) Getting in the Swing of Volunteering

211.) They're Not All Good

212.) He's Got the Money to Do Something About It

213.) What Makes a 'Wellderly' Person?

214.) Learning From the Best

215.) This Week in Science

216.) CNVs Can Stop Feeling Left Out

217.) Last Call for Submissions to Emerging Technology Conference

218.) The Real Battle Is for Second Place

219.) Now That's a Seriously Old Ant

220.) One Step Forward, Two Steps Back

221.) This Week in Nature

222.) Tailored to You

223.) Science in America

224.) Time to Keep a Closer Eye on Fifi

225.) Scientists Might Wish All Creation Advocates Would Give Up So Easily

226.) The Challenge of Shaping a Programmer

227.) Next-Gen Sequencing in the Clinic

228.) That Lead-Lined Coffin May Turn Out to Be a Life Saver

229.) We'd Really Like a Glimpse of the 'Unprecedented Accuracy'

230.) Do Try This at Home

231.) Leave That GWAS Alone

232.) This Week in PLoS

233.) Lucky Lasker Winners

234.) And We Used to Think Spitting Showed Bad Manners

235.) Fifty Days and Counting

236.) Perhaps It Could Tell You Whether You're Susceptible to Undue Stress

237.) That One Syllable Makes a Difference

238.) It's Never Too Late to Kiss and Make Up

239.) Following the Evolution of HIV

240.) An All-Star in the Spotlight

241.) We Didn't Go to All the Trouble of Publishing It Just So People Could Read It

242.) Getting to the Bottom of Cancer

243.) As a Group, You're Rational Overachievers

244.) This Week in Science

245.) If You Know that Frankenstein Was the Doctor and Not the Monster, This Is for You

246.) Privacy or Funding: You Can Have One But Not Both

247.) This Week in Nature

248.) Developmental Delays and DNA Deletions

249.) A List of What Not to Do

250.) Fake News Isn't Going Anywhere

251.) He'll Always Be the SARS Guy to Us

252.) Hey, You, Stop Hoarding that Data

253.) On the Bright Side, You've Got an Admirable Collection of Spit

254.) It's Official: We Really Do Need to Learn More About This Stuff

255.) Binding Sites, Moving Targets

256.) Democracy Brings Us Exciting Elections and Bargain-Basement Genetic Testing

257.) Matchmaker, Matchmaker Make Us a Match

258.) Will Do Research for Debt Relief

259.) One Place Where Less Is Definitely More

260.) In Parsing, Lessons of Life

261.) At Last, a Shrine of Your Own

262.) Caveat Emptor

263.) Searching for Innovation

264.) Mad Cows and the Case of the Biomarker

265.) GWAS on the Hunt in Osteoporosis

266.) But She Makes Up for It By Riding a Snowmobile

267.) Tracking the Woolly Mammoth

268.) They Make For Great Biomarkers, Too

269.) Can They Be Funny?

270.) This Week in Science

271.) Welcome to the World

272.) $400 Million? Drop in the Bucket

273.) Do You Review?

274.) This Week in Nature

275.) Brouhaha at the Broad

276.) Watch Out for the Lay People Hanging Around PubMed

277.) Scared of Innovation

278.) Let Them Blow Stuff Up

279.) All in One Place

280.) It Boils Down to Financial Incentive

281.) So Much For Taking Some Time Off

282.) Are You Happy? Find Out Here

283.) If You Thought Paternity Testing Hit Paydirt, Just Wait for the Commitment-Phobe Kit

284.) Spot-Checking Spotty Data

285.) But Comic Sans Has Such Whimsy

286.) At Least They Didn't Call it 'Spawn'

287.) Speak Up for Insuring Warfarin Testing

288.) Fingers Crossed for Small Businesses

289.) A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Targets

290.) Will the Bottom Drop Out for DTC Genomics?

291.) Here in the US, It's Politics Aplenty

292.) We'd Like to Thank the Academy

293.) Just Think of Them as Little Helpers

294.) So Much for Anonymity

295.) This Week in Science

296.) Unrecapping the Unconference

297.) We're Limited by Our Need to Wander Off Topic

298.) This Week in Nature

299.) Viruses and Macular Degeneration

300.) Scientist 'til the Day You Die

301.) We Will Find You (and Try Really Hard to Save You)

302.) No Mention of Raindrops on Roses or Whiskers on Kittens

303.) In Memoriam

304.) Peer Review Problems

305.) In Case All Your Programming Lately Has Been Staid

306.) Save the Citrus

307.) Between Funding and IRBs, It's a Wonder Anyone Researches Us at All

308.) Like Math Being the Universal Language

309.) Yes, They Are Talking to You

310.) See What You've Been Reading

311.) Fun With Chemistry

312.) Studying from a Kindle

313.) Required Reading for All

314.) This Is Even Better than Making Up 'Orange Roughy' to Get People to Eat Slimehead

315.) You'd Think That Could Be Pooled into a Decent Clinical Trial

316.) Losing Its Luster

317.) This Week in Science

318.) This Week in PLoS

319.) They Are Just in Hiding

320.) Wiki-fying a Journal Article

321.) This Week in Nature

322.) We Almost Never Qualify What We Say. Sometimes.

323.) Just Don't Let YouTube Suck You In

324.) More Similar Than Different

325.) BRCA1 Doesn't Act Alone

326.) The Coming of Open Science

327.) Genome-based Personalized Medicine

328.) How Rare Is One in 113 Billion?

329.) Not Wanted

330.) Science Trumps Politics -- at Least in Theory

331.) Personalized Medicine Climbs the Ranks

332.) You're As Old As You Feel. Really.

333.) Inventing the Future with Synthetic Biology

334.) To Review or Not to Review

335.) Modest Amusement Indeed

336.) This Would Be Really Helpful for Klutzes Like Us

337.) Credit Where Credit Is Due

338.) New Genes for Bipolar Disorder

339.) If It Seems Too Good to Be True…

340.) Bigfoot Fails His Test; Next Time He'll Study Harder

341.) Now There's Someone Who Appreciates the Great Books Program

342.) Relax, Bill. It's Larry's Day to Hear Complaints

343.) This Week in Science

344.) Tricks of DNA Repair

345.) Teaching Congress a Thing (or Ten)

346.) Because We're Worth It

347.) Genetically Jacked. Athletically Stacked.

348.) But It Frees Up Two More Weeks to Teach Them How to Tell Gneiss from Schist

349.) Not Quite as Popular as Fantasy Football, But Still Fun

350.) All in One Place

351.) This Week in Nature

352.) Would that Be Doping, or Just Perfect Genetics?

353.) Speak Now or Forever Hold Your Peace

354.) Open Arms for Open Access

355.) Restriction Digests Made Easy

356.) Yes, You Can Blame that on Your Mother

357.) How to Tell If You're Old (or Getting There)

358.) Society to Scientists: We'd Like a Little Time to Think About It

359.) Time to Tweak that Business Plan

360.) In Just One Dose

361.) We Predict a Google Genetic Map

362.) Thanks to Population Genetics, We Can Do Better than the Seven Daughters of Eve

363.) Really, I'd Love to Give You My Data -- But I Can't

364.) But This Uses Cool Toys

365.) You Can't Get Those Guys to Do Anything Together

366.) Ranking Journal Articles On Your Own

367.) Forever Young Means...You Can Publish More Papers

368.) A Gene for Blindness in Dogs

369.) Another Reason Not to Have to Go to the Doctor

370.) Not That Close to Neandertals

371.) Proteomic Standards of Every Flavor

372.) Do It For You

373.) This Week in Science

374.) A Chat With Esther Dyson

375.) We'll Take a Copy

376.) The Sicilian Gene Pool

377.) It's a Big Cloud

378.) This Week in Nature

379.) King Tut Gets a Paternity Test

380.) Working For You

381.) All in Pretty Colors

382.) They Are on Our Watch List, Too

383.) The Battle of the Ugliest Organisms

384.) People, Not Just Data

385.) HSF2 Aids Fertility in Mice

386.) Another Novel Application

387.) Waiting With Bated Breath

388.) Booger the Pitbull Terrier Times Five

389.) Does Scientific Policymaking Really Need Another Acronym?

390.) It'll Be the Smartest Playpen Around

391.) Getting On the Cloud

392.) You Don't Need to Be Einstein, Just Have an MBA

393.) The Sound of a Giant Approaching Would Scare Us, Too

394.) Using 'Omics to Track Cancer Biomarkers

395.) DNA Fingerprinting at Work

396.) Neither Are Google

397.) Next Step is Trademarking "Stream Computing"

398.) This Week in Science

399.) Big Pharma Needs Luck

400.) Proteins Don't Belong to Companies

401.) Everyone Needs a Hand with Genome Browsers

402.) Farewell to Francis, and Scientists Break Down Personalized Medicine

403.) In a Community This Small, That's Just Good Networking

404.) Consider It Judah Folkman's Last Gift

405.) This Week in Nature

406.) If He Follows Watson's Advice to Avoid Boring People, Venter Might Get Lonely

407.) Saving Time and Wasting Time

408.) If You Build It, They Will Worry

409.) It Appears They're in the Market for Something Tougher than a Time-Out

410.) O, Squidward

411.) Shiny, Electronic, and the Size of Your Thumbnail

412.) Now Everyone Wants to Do Drug Discovery

413.) GTO's Recommendation: Don't 'Yada, Yada' Through the Methods Section

414.) That Would Explain the Zebra Fish Boom in Home Aquariums

415.) There's a Proteome We Didn't Expect

416.) Irony at the NIH

417.) Rest in Peace ... But Not Forever

418.) At Least the Team in Charge of Writing the Fine Print Can Take a Break

419.) To Evolution: You're Just Not Fast Enough

420.) Any Volunteers?

421.) Consider All Those Disputed Pages an Advantage

422.) We Wonder if Someone Gets a Commission on That

423.) With Google and Facebook in Your Corner, That's a Good Start

424.) FDA Recommends Genotyping (But Not for Finding Your Soul Mate)

425.) The New Take on Aging: Your Body Is Actively Working Against You

426.) This Week in Science

427.) This Week in Nature

428.) Who's in Your Lineage?

429.) And He's Emphatic About It

430.) The Passing of a Visionary

431.) That Could've Bought Some Really Cool Pathogen Detection Technology

432.) At the Very Least, You Could Send a Thank-You E-card

433.) Modeling CNVs

434.) Basket-Weaving, Though, Is a Solid Career Path

435.) Not to Mention the Amazing Bay Views

436.) Another Wiki to Update

437.) We've Got a New Target Market: The 10-and-Under Crowd

438.) Welcome to the Spotlight, Steven

439.) Consistency May Be a Hobgoblin, But We Appreciate It Anyway

440.) Goodbye, Dolly?

441.) Anything to Take Less O-Chem

442.) 'The Chemistry's Gone' Is No Longer an Excuse to Break Up

443.) Genetic Testing and Big Tobacco?

444.) The Ripple Effect of Indels

445.) Save Time, Money, Mundane Pipetting

446.) If it Worked for Him…

447.) Do Science and Quotas Mix?

448.) All About George

449.) No One's Perfect. Really

450.) Diagnosis: Out of Tune

451.) It's What You Do With the Information

452.) Including Naptimes Between Sessions? Sounds Great

453.) A Journal of Their Own

454.) This Week in Science

455.) Next Best Thing to the Fountain of Youth

456.) This Week in Nature

457.) Thanks, Howard

458.) Magicians Call It Misdirection

459.) Gene Variation and Risk of Acquiring HIV

460.) Not Quite the Salmon of Doubt

461.) Don't Call Them a Publisher

462.) After Killing the Thesis Dragon, There's the Grand Poobah Stage to Look Forward To

463.) Just Rip the Page From the Dictionary

464.) What's Bigger, Operating Cost or Number of Authors?

465.) Who Knows Why People Do What They Do...

466.) Finding Uncertainty in Variation

467.) Taming Metabolic Disease

468.) Just Because You're Good at Something...

469.) The Best Part? It Doesn't Look Like a Ball of Fur

470.) More Money for Pizza and Beer

471.) It Helps to Have Nice Looking Hands

472.) What Makes Malaria Stick

473.) It's My Data, and I'll Cry If I Want To (Or Not)

474.) It Could Be the Highlight of Your Summer

475.) They Got What You Need

476.) It May Be a Case of Incentives

477.) Conflict? What Conflict?

478.) Tell Them What They Want to Hear

479.) A Big Day: The Economist Writes About Lateral Gene Transfer

480.) Big Pharma Tacks Hard

481.) Finding the Beat of Your Own Drummer

482.) Bring Us Your Scientifically Educated Masses

483.) Just a Little Hero-Worshipping

484.) The Earth Goes Around the Sun, and Stuff

485.) This Week in Science

486.) Despite the Patchy Writing, Darwin's Pretty Smart

487.) Who Needs Credit?

488.) Now There's No Excuse to Leave the Lab

489.) For All the Mad Scientists

490.) This Week in Nature

491.) How to Avoid Being Outsourced

492.) Raising the Standards

493.) That's All You Have to Do?

494.) Scum Can Save the World, Well, Pond Scum Anyway

495.) Life, Liberty, and...Personal Genomics?

496.) Tracking Viruses in the Comfort of Your Home

497.) Mixing Genomics and Proteomics to Fight Cancer

498.) Anton? At Least There's No Acronym

499.) Move Over, Open Access

500.) Wikis All Around

501.) "Just PubMed It" Could Catch On…

502.) It's Nicer Looking Than Any Grad Student Lounge We've Seen

503.) Eight Is Better Than Four

504.) Building a House Where the Ground Moves Isn't Easy

505.) Getting a Handle on Microbial Diversity

506.) Women Scientists Can Have It All

507.) Death to Insurance?

508.) Of Mice and Methylation

509.) Drug of Choice

510.) No Offense, But This Is the Best Question You've Got?

511.) Layoff Rumblings

512.) All Things Open Access

513.) If It Comes Down to Soldiers vs. Finches, Darwin Might Be in Trouble

514.) This Week in Science

515.) Review Unto Others as You Would Have Them Review Unto You

516.) That's Pretty Good for People Who Don't Believe in Evolution

517.) If It's Worth Doing, It's Worth Doing Right (FDA, That Means You)

518.) This Week in Nature

519.) Checking Out Heart Health in the Heartland

520.) Plus, You Get to Add 'Patent Examiner' to Your CV

521.) Thanks, Real Estate: Economy Stall Moves to Tech Field

522.) No, 'What's Bioinformatics?' Is Not One of the Questions

523.) A Long Way from Terrible

524.) This Puts Your PhD's Worth of Sequencing to Shame

525.) Even Rupert Murdoch Knows What PCR Is

526.) Molecular Biologist by Day, DNA Demystifier by Night

527.) That's Not to Say the Money Has Done Any Harm

528.) Finding Out What Makes P. Falciparum Tick

529.) How to Make the Most of HIV Resistance

530.) A Tip from GTO: No Decaf During Coffee Breaks

531.) What's Faster than Reading an Abstract?

532.) A Genome in Any Format

533.) In Case You Weren't Already Despairing

534.) Not Everyone Is Going to Freak Out

535.) Stanford Opens Its Doors to OA

536.) Your Next Dinner Conversation: Metabolomic Profile

537.) Go On, Admit Defeat

538.) Not-So-Secret Drug Targets

539.) 'Wasting Away Again With All This DNA'

540.) This Week in Science

541.) Recovering from BIO

542.) Turn, Turn, Turn (Back to Your Lab)

543.) Apparently, Belief in Evolution Makes You a Minority Figure

544.) As Long as It Supports Your Conclusions

545.) We Support Anything that Will Make Chocolate More Delicious

546.) This Week in Nature

547.) Busy as a Bee

548.) Confusion Still Reigns

549.) Just One More Thing to Worry About

550.) At Least They've Got Creative Responses

551.) Internet For Everyone

552.) Shrinking the Divide Through Innovation

553.) The LMB Gets a Facelift

554.) Trade One Over-Priced City for Another

555.) The Slow Transition

556.) Bringing Science Back

557.) GSK Frees Its Data

558.) Kind of Throws Experimental Accuracy Out the Window?

559.) We Just Wonder What Darwin's Blog Would Be About

560.) Boring the Reviewer to Death Isn't a Good Plan

561.) We Solemnly Swear

562.) Because 'Massive Centralized Office' Is the Model of Efficiency

563.) Personalized Medicine's New Promise: More M&A

564.) Kick Those Genes into Gear Through Healthy Living

565.) Advantages Go Beyond Frequent Flyer Miles and Free Coffee

566.) This Week in Science

567.) It Depends if You're a Glass Half-Full or Half-Empty Type

568.) Getting All Philosophical

569.) Science Near the Chesapeake

570.) Still a Reason to Party

571.) This Week in Nature

572.) That'll Just Wreak Havoc at Airport Security

573.) Case in Point

574.) Hey, California, Get Out of Our DNA

575.) Get Your Code On

576.) Gut Bugs in the Spotlight

577.) They Must Have Missed GTO's Application

578.) It Makes Sense that Personalized Medicine Would Look a Little Frenzied

579.) MRSA: Just the Tip of the Iceberg?

580.) Starbucks Is Gonna Love This

581.) That's One Dedicated Professor

582.) Talking Heads, Talking Genomics

583.) Remembering Gunther Stent

584.) A Laureate Speaks ... And No One's Offended. Shocking.

585.) Sexism and Sloppy Science

586.) Managing Microbial Research

587.) Here's a Bump in the Business Plan

588.) There's an Art to Constructive Criticism

589.) My Degree Is from MIT and the Bunker Hill Community College

590.) Your Modesty Becomes You ... But Doesn't Really Help

591.) The Good News: You Get More Data. The Bad News: You Get More Data

592.) This Week in Science

593.) Time to Polish Those Resumes in Foster City

594.) Pedal to the Metal, People

595.) That Diabetes Variant Is So Last Year

596.) Hey, Bacteria: Pipe Down, Will You?

597.) Pretty as a Picture

598.) This Week in Nature

599.) Don't Count on Saving Money Yet

600.) Or It's Just a New Way to Procrastinate

601.) Now That's a Prize

602.) Thanks, Ma. We Appreciate It

603.) We Can Rebuild You. We Have the Technology

604.) Probably the Least Cute Genome Ever

605.) Bare Bones Just Doesn't Cut It Anymore

606.) Who Doesn't Want More Laws?

607.) Computing With Proteins

608.) In the Vault

609.) There's Nothing Quite Like Industry Politics (Unless You're in Academia)

610.) Averages Out to an "Eh"

611.) You Can't Blame Your Mother For That Anymore

612.) Let the Processor Envy Begin

613.) If We Had $120 Million, We'd Build Another Facebook Too

614.) Seriously, Gullible Isn't in the Dictionary. We Swear.

615.) Finding a Good Match Is Half the Battle

616.) Another Reason to Pay Researchers Better Salaries

617.) Together, Agbio and Biofuels Could Be Batman and Robin

618.) The Gruber Genetics Prize is Announced

619.) Is it a Three-Strikes Thing?

620.) A Good Case for Personalized Medicine

621.) This Week in Science

622.) Synthetic Biology Hits the Big Time

623.) Green Your Lab

624.) A Teeny-Tiny Detector for Teeny-Tiny Organisms

625.) Like a Bad Penny, It Keeps Popping Up

626.) He Would've Been Happy to Get a Fraction of this Enthusiasm During His Life

627.) This Week in Nature

628.) The Rugged Terrain of Mouse Plasma

629.) In This Case, a Blockage Is a Good Thing

630.) A Word About OWW

631.) Indispensable, Yes. Appreciated? Maybe

632.) Now Here's a Problem the War on Cancer Didn't Predict

633.) 'I'm Not a Monster'

634.) C'mon, Coach, I Want to Be a Starter

635.) Good PR for Personal Genomics

636.) Evidently It's Nice to Have Education on the Side

637.) Sounds Like a Collaboration in the Making

638.) Life Without Science? Perish the Thought

639.) Fighting Cancer -- and Now Inflation Too

640.) Balancing Is Still Difficult for Some of Us

641.) Into the Void (subtitle: A Woman's Path in Science)

642.) The Master of One Will Be the Master of Many

643.) What's Friday Without a Little Humor?

644.) This Calls for a Scientific Switcharoo

645.) Correcting the Hype One Company at a Time

646.) Networking After 35? We're Over It, Too

647.) This Week in Science

648.) First Challenge: Converting FASTA Files to 140-Character Twitter Posts

649.) Must Have Been the Wrong Season for the Pyre

650.) Prestige is Overrated

651.) This Week in Nature

652.) For the Interview, We'll Need Your CV, Letters of Recommendation, and Guitar Demo

653.) Google in the Hospital

654.) There'll Be Geeks and Dorks Everywhere!

655.) And the Award Goes to...

656.) The 'Under the Umbrella' Award

657.) Law School or an MBA Program?

658.) Sharing Proteins Just Got Easier

659.) Closing the Divide

660.) It's Like Chess, But For Scientists

661.) Batting Eyelashes and All

662.) They're Out There, Just Buried in the Mounds of Data

663.) Proof of Concept for Personalized Medicine

664.) In November, You'll Be Voting With Your Genes

665.) Spending January in Hawaii Doesn't Seem So Bad

666.) Think of It as Being in Stealth Mode

667.) Always Practice Good Data Hygiene

668.) No Genetic Discrimination Allowed ... Well, Except for Some of You

669.) Just in Case You're Not Feeling the Love

670.) So What Was the Lab-Coated Army Doing Instead?

671.) It's Nice to Think of Ourselves as Moving Colonies

672.) Let the Data Loose

673.) This Week in Science

674.) Eli Lilly, You're Looking So Svelte Lately

675.) Welcome to the World, BSC4

676.) GINA Took 13 Years; How Long for Insurers to Sign On?

677.) Academic Year in Review

678.) On Sale Now: Ethics

679.) This Week in Nature

680.) GTO's Odds and Ends

681.) The World Would Be Just a Little Sadder Without Corn-Fed Beef

682.) We Suggest the Head-in-the-Sand Approach

683.) Ah, the Smell of Frying Bacon

684.) Controversy, Drama, and Retracted Papers

685.) There's Supposed to Be a Bug in the System

686.) Reviewing GWAS

687.) The Classroom as Frontline

688.) Now, Would You Actually Use It?

689.) Tracking HIV

690.) Changing the Definition of Extinct

691.) It's New, It's Powerful ... But Will It Be Dirt Cheap?

692.) Maxing Out On Buzzwords -- We Feel Your Pain

693.) Using Monkeys to Study Huntington's Disease

694.) Who Needs Job Security?

695.) Out of Luck

696.) This Week in Science

697.) Personalized Medicine in Actual Practice

698.) ICU Just Got Even More Intensive

699.) Global Problems Need A Lot of Help

700.) Biomarkers on TV? They've Officially Arrived

701.) Looks Like You Don't Get Points for Creativity

702.) Where Have All the Patients Gone?

703.) Threading Together Those Itty Bitty Reads

704.) This Week in Nature

705.) Yeast and Cancer: Similar But Different?

706.) Maybe It'll Let Them Pay Attention to Consumer Genomics

707.) The Sweet Smell of Posterboard

708.) A Paper Chip

709.) Put That Money Towards a Fancy MacBook Air Instead

710.) Hopefully They'll Ignore Watson's Comments

711.) Don't Spend It All ... On One Fridge.

712.) Outsmarting HIV With Sys Bio

713.) Thanks, But We'll Just Get Ours Off the Rack

714.) Pointy-Haired Boss, Take Note

715.) We Knew Protein Folding Was All a Game

716.) Part Bird, Part Mammal ... Wait, Isn't This the Start of a Joke?

717.) Start Out Simple and Work from There

718.) What a 'Previvor' Learned from Her Genome

719.) The Font of Wisdom ... Universities?

720.) Thank Goodness for Non-Traditional Models

721.) This Week in Science

722.) We Were Kinda Hoping At Least a Punch Was Thrown

723.) It's Good Practice For ... the Rest of Your Research Life

724.) This Week in Nature

725.) Another Dot-com Shakeout? We Hope Not...

726.) Extra Spending Money Always Goes for Something Useful, Right?

727.) How Much Would It Get at an Auction?

728.) The Insider View of Navigenics

729.) Don't Blame Us for the 'Intellectual Backwater' Comment

730.) Just When You Thought PCR Was Boring, Here Come Magnetic Nanoparticles

731.) Think Twice (Or Three Times) Before You Buy

732.) Google, Can You Help Us Out Here?

733.) Welcome to Your 15 Minutes

734.) Just When You Were Trying to Forget, Signs That the Presidential Race Is Still Going

735.) This Will Come as a Surprise to Absolutely No One

736.) We're All for New 'Omes, But a Diseasome? Really?

737.) That's Probably More Than You Wanted to Know About Your Liver

738.) Remembering Giuseppe Attardi

739.) Yet Another Reason to Take Those Calcium Supplements

740.) Lucky Break Versus Hard at Work

741.) Clearly, It Was Recorded at 4 A.M.

742.) Finding the Obscure Papers Just Got Easier

743.) It's Hard to Ignore the Results of Two Tests

744.) Looks Like Open Access Fans May Be Squaring Off

745.) Hey, FDA, If You're Not Busy with Other Things...

746.) Humans: The Grandest Challenge of All

747.) And We Used to Think Academic Freedom Was Commendable

748.) Jim, We Know You Just Can't Help It

749.) This Week in Science

750.) Up Next, Entire Science Classes Via Twitter

751.) Maybe It Would Be Better If They Threw in a Year's Supply of Turtle Wax

752.) Being the Winnowed is Rough Work

753.) The Tall, Passive-Aggressive Ivory Tower

754.) This Week in Nature

755.) Insert Barry Bonds Joke Here

756.) Arts & Culture Day at GTO

757.) Grad School Might Be More Fun in a Tropical Paradise, Though

758.) There Must Be People Who Would Support Teaching Alchemy

759.) Spend 30 Minutes on Your Intro. Everyone Loves That

760.) The Gene Patent Debate Continues

761.) Good Luck Convincing Them That Their DNA Data Is Secure

762.) It Also Works as an English-to-Science Guide

763.) So We Gather You're a Masochist

764.) Maybe Not All the Miracles, But Surely Some of Them?

765.) Take That, SciFoo

766.) If We Can't Get Designer, What About a Convincing Knockoff?

767.) Chalk One Up for Scientific Destiny

768.) Criminal Masterminds, Take Note

769.) More Plasmid for Less

770.) The Best DIY Project Yet

771.) My Genes Made Me Do It

772.) This Week in Science

773.) The Early Years Were Interesting, Too

774.) What, No Big Names Could Make It?

775.) Happy DNA Day

776.) We'll Have to Complain if This Interferes with Our Supply of Pixie Sticks

777.) Just Like that Ant and His Rubber Tree Plant, We've Got High Hopes

778.) If the US is Going To Fall Behind, Might As Well Go All Out

779.) This Week in Nature

780.) Lab Managing's a Hard Job

781.) Maybe Pharma Could Use a Bill Gates

782.) It Beats Sitting on a Plane for Six Hours

783.) What's in a Name?

784.) Too Soon to Tell

785.) Saying It's Hard to Put Your Finger On Would Be an Understatement

786.) At Least It Wasn't Jurassic Park

787.) Poor Mr. Punnett is Losing Out to Mr. Markov

788.) E. Coli: I Just Gotta Be Me

789.) Science 2.0: The Good, the Bad, and the Just-Too-Much

790.) We Have a Deep and Undying Love of Duct Tape

791.) Or at Least a Startup Boot Camp

792.) Surely Comparing Synthetic Bio to GMO Is Not the Way to Win Over the European Public

793.) All the More Reason to Move to California

794.) How Much Do You Want to Know About Your Neighbor?

795.) Keep Placing Bets on the Table and You're Bound to Win

796.) It's More Than Just a 'Movement'

797.) Francis vs. the Atheists: This Won't Be Pretty

798.) Perhaps You Were Looking for a New Ringtone

799.) On the Bright Side, You Have Plenty of Time for a Cup of Coffee. Or a Road Trip.

800.) Ghostwriting: Great for Biographies, Bad for Scientific Papers

801.) This Week in Science

802.) Those siRNAs Just Need a Thicker Skin

803.) Take Your Bases and Mix Thoroughly

804.) Darwin's Handwriting Would Make Our Mothers Cry

805.) A Genome or a Pair of Jeans?

806.) This Week in Nature

807.) In the Sea of Personal Genomics, Swim at Your Own Risk

808.) Cancer, Cell Cycles, and Challenges

809.) It's Probably Better Than Flipping a Coin

810.) Sydney Gets a Standing Ovation

811.) Have You Hugged Your Database Lately?

812.) It's a War on WARF

813.) Like Bert and Ernie

814.) Back in Your Good Graces

815.) Get on Over to Github

816.) Checks and Balances for Journals

817.) DNA Tests: It's Like the Wild West Out Here

818.) Death, Taxes, and Poor Scientists

819.) Oh, Ology. Now We Get it

820.) So Much for the Finer Points

821.) Not Saying No

822.) This Week in Science

823.) More Fun and Games

824.) And They Really Want to Know the Answer

825.) Making Data Community Property

826.) For Coffee or a Drink?

827.) Mitochondrial Pioneer Dies

828.) Fun and Games

829.) Cell Supply

830.) This Week in Nature

831.) Safety, Unlike Beauty, Is Not In the Eye of the Beholder

832.) Shall We Call It, Pulitzer Version 2.0?

833.) As Long As They Don't Bark in the Middle of the Night

834.) Thinking Outside the Petroleum Box

835.) And Smart, Too

836.) Are You On it?

837.) Get on Google's Cloud

838.) Plus, They'll Also Be a Record of Who's Doing the Grunt Work

839.) Most Importantly, Anne Has the "Likes Brussels Sprouts" Gene

840.) Hungry for Bioethics?

841.) The NSF Spreads Some Cheer

842.) Here, Try This

843.) Gate-Crashing is a Good Time

844.) Sad to See the Programs Go

845.) We Ate the Bagel Genome

846.) Blogging a Thesis

847.) You Can Look, But Not Mine

848.) What GWAS Can't Tell Us (Yet)

849.) And It's Probably More Fun!

850.) Making iPS Cells: A Common Lab Technique?

851.) What's That About Prior Planning?

852.) This Week in Science

853.) And, Just When You Thought You Knew What Cloud Computing Was

854.) Does Evolution Need to Evolve?

855.) It's Easier Said Than Done, Especially When Your Grant is Less Than Last Year

856.) A Modest Proposal for Synthetic Bio

857.) You Know, Beyond Using Twitter to Kill Time Between Experiments

858.) When You Shed DNA, Do You Shed Your Right to Privacy Too?

859.) This Week in Nature

860.) Science Comes to New York City

861.) At Least Something Good Came Out of Those Hedge Funds

862.) Predicting New Regulatory Requirements? There's a Game We Wouldn't Want to Play

863.) What's on the Inside

864.) If You Liked MIAME, You'll Love...

865.) Listen to the Talking Heads

866.) Seek and You Shall Receive Many Emails

867.) Mapping Chromatin in the Fruit Fly

868.) Maybe He Could Solve That Data Management Problem

869.) Free Your Mind

870.) Although, Aren't Managers Supposed to Make More Money?

871.) We Just Never Thought Facebook Was Coming to Work With Us

872.) GWAS: The Glory! The Hype! We've Got It All

873.) It's More a Crash-Course, On-the-Job Training Thing

874.) Sequence Alignment in Six Easy Steps

875.) Is There a Word for 'Promiscuous Binding' for RNAi?

876.) Looks Like We Can't Sweep That Under the Rug

877.) Because Everyone Likes a Family Tree

878.) This Week in Science

879.) And We Thought ASP Went Out With the Dot-coms

880.)