View allAll Photos Tagged openscience
The Operational Land Imager on Landsat 9 captured this image of Buccaneer Archipelago on June 11, 2025. The scene encapsulates the striking interactions between land and water in the area where King Sound opens to the Indian Ocean.
The powerful tidal currents stir up sediment in shallow areas, producing the beautiful turquoise swirls visible in this image. This power, however, can be hazardous to seafarers and divers as water rips through the archipelagoâs constricted passages. One infamous place of turbulence, known as âHellâs Gate,â lies in the passage between Gerald Peninsula and Muddle Islands.
Credit: NASA/Michala Garrison; U.S. Geological Survey
#NASAMarshall #TOPS #TransformtoOpenScience #OpenScience #ocean #landsat
As NASA works to make data and research more meaningful and accessible to diverse public and scientific audiences, the agencyâs Transform to Open Science (TOPS) program is supporting open science efforts and programs across a variety of scientific disciplines, including climate science and physical oceanography. By leveraging open science principles, NASA encourages and empowers scientists to address critical issues such as melting polar sea ice, rising sea levels, and the overall health of marine ecosystems.
The goal of open science is to make NASA research and data more collaborative, accessible, inclusive, and transparent for everyone from the scientist and student to the city manager and citizen. As part of the Open Source Science Initiative, the TOPS team is committed to providing space for everyone in the scientific community to learn about the variety of open science tools and data available, as well as the importance of open science itself.
Among the communities that have embraced open science is a NASA-funded consortium called Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean (ECCO). For more than 20 years, ECCO has been producing models of ocean variables such as sea surface height, sea surface temperature, global mean sea level, sea ice concentration, and ocean bottom pressure. For example, tidal currents often exhibit laminar flow characteristics, visible in the upper left and right corners of the image. This scene was collected by NASAâs Landsat 8 satellite on September 24, 2021.
Image Credit: NASA
#NASAMarshall #TOPS #TransformtoOpenScience #OpenScience #ocean #landsat
Not a great shot, through the train window, but better than nothing!
www.openscience.fr/The-plant-of-alumina-at-Gardanne-in-Pr...
See second version here. This is the first logo I made for Open Science in honor of the Open Source Initiative (opensource.org/). Contact me if you'd like the free Adobe Illustrator file. CC by-SA 3.0. Font by Tepid Monkey Fonts, monoglyceride
Key: cyan, surface web; red, deep web; magenta, dark web.
100% = 100 âĄ, 1 p = 1â±, âĄâ⥠1 p
REFERENCES
E.G.F. Regina 2024: Fastest computers 1940-2029.
J.H. Kirchner & al. 2023: New AI-written text classifier.
G. Brockman & al. 2023: GPT4 technical report.
A. Albert 2023: GPT3.5 DMO v2 prompt.
X. Mi & al. 2021: QPU time-crystalline eigenstate order.
A. Wack & al. 2021: CLOPS measurement.
F. Arute & al. 2019: Sycamore QPU quantum supremacy.
S. Zuboff 2019: The age of surveillance capitalism.
Z. Bauman & D. Lyon 2013: Liquid surveillance.
R.P. Dellavalle & al. 2003: Lost internet references.
S. Zuboff 1988: In the age of the smart machine.
TOR · VPN · BC · SE · IS · IoT · HW · candl · UBO · É Â· BD · SC · wa · TYDKYDK · C3301 · WRTC · GAIA-Xïžïž · OSINT · LLM · AG/S-I · t2i · SR · JB · VA · HPC · IEEE754 · TOP500 · Graph500 · Green500 · QPU
Montage Photoshop utilisant les images en Creative Commons :
Attribution Some rights reserved by El Bibliomata : www.flickr.com/photos/fdctsevilla/4513788503/sizes/z/in/s...
Attribution Some rights reserved by El Bibliomata : www.flickr.com/photos/fdctsevilla/4513849243/sizes/z/in/p...
Attribution Some rights reserved by chefranden : www.flickr.com/photos/chefranden/3182589327/sizes/z/in/ph...
Attribution Some rights reserved by El Bibliomata : www.flickr.com/photos/fdctsevilla/4052595366/sizes/z/
Attribution Some rights reserved by El Bibliomata : www.flickr.com/photos/fdctsevilla/4074152055/sizes/z/in/p...
A gene gun prototype made from wood and a bicycle pump by RĂŒdiger Trojok, on display in the 'Biohacking: Do It Yourself!' lab installation at Medical Museion. The gene gun was invented in 1983-1986, and is a simple device that is key to many synthetic biology experiments, delivering gold particles coated with DNA into plants or other organisms - but it cannot be used outside authorized labs. Photograph to be credited to Martin Malthe Borch.
A 3D printed molecule of methamphetamine, domed on a shelf at Open Science Federation headquarters.
This was one of several rewards on offer for supporting the Crowdsourcing Discovery crowdfunding campaign -- which we in OSF and I did clamorously :)
For a brilliant example of wholly Open Science see www.rockethub.com/projects/11106-crowdsourcing-discovery and www.perlsteinlab.com/tag/crowdsourcing-discovery and www.perlsteinlab.com/tag/crowd4discovery and click through at least as far as twitter.com/eperlste.
One of many public shares of the successful We the People petition for Open Access to taxpayer-funded research, from the first day of the petition, May 20, 2012 AKA "OA Monday." Open Science Federation was the primary hub of petition-related activity in Google+ and co-led the social media campaign, there and at @openscience on Twitter.
A logo I made for Open Science in honor of the Open Source Initiative (opensource.org/). CC BY-SA 3.0
Second design for Open Science. Contact me for the free Adobe Illustrator file. Font: Monoglyceride by Tepid Monkey Fonts. License: CC by SA 3.0
A Google+ Ripples visualization and a few of the public shares of the successful We the People petition for Open Access to taxpayer-funded research, started in May, 2012 and answered nine months later by The White House. As seen here, Open Science Federation was the primary hub of petition-related activity in Google+ and co-led the social media campaign, there and at @openscience on Twitter.
On June 20, 2013 The White House recognized Champions of Change in Open Science.
Jean-Claude Bradley, founder of Open Notebook Science presents a poster with Andrew Lang, Open Science advocate and practitioner, and his student, on Open Notebook Science. Nick Shockey, founding director, Right to Research Coalition takes it all in during a reception hosted by the Mozilla Science Lab in the Indian Treaty Room.
Photo by Brian Glanz, founder of the Open Science Federation and co-founder of Open Knowledge United States.
This is a memorial screencap of the moment 25,000 of us had signed the We the People petition to the White House for public access to publicly funded US research. Download its original size for a copy suitable for printing and framing, A4 or letter size in the US. Scientist and Open Access advocate David Liao, @lookatphysics on Twitter AKA "D. L. from Holmdel, NJ" on the petition, was the 25,000th signatory. The moment was captured, and first documented on Twitter @openscience and on Google+ by the Open Science Federation.
Second design for Open Science. Contact me for the free Adobe Illustrator file. Font: Monoglyceride by Tepid Monkey Fonts. License: CC by SA 3.0
I drew this sketch-note during a meeting about measuring research/publication impact. This sketch-note clearly describe my thought about research process and how we should look at research output beyond the far-known metrics we are forced to use today.
My point is we already have quality controls (QC) starting from grant selection to critical assessment from readers. But still, we lay ourselves to widely used metrics that have been slowly fade away in the academic perspective.
My second point is that indexing is far from measuring the research process. It only sets journal/conference standards not the whole research.
The third point is by trusting those metrics and those alone as the objective clearly underestimates our own scientific background and logic that we have built throughout years of school era.
We should measure the impact of a research or paper using "open principles" through out its workflow, instead of only looking at the final product:
(1) is it original on certain level, is the data and analysis scientifically valid,
(2) is it reproducible and people can re-do the analysis, is it in shareable online in "ready to use" formats, does it provide data - code - method online,
(3) does it have value to community? Have the author engaged and fully interact with the community?
I hope you get my three points. I will share the slides and eventually the full paper later on.
On January 27th, 2013, with this tweet we celebrated reaching 60,000 signatures on the We the People petition to The White House, for public access to public-funded research. This visualization displays tweets using the shortened link to the petition itself, wh.gov/6TH.
More than eight months after the petition had started and seven months after we had reached the 25,000-signature threshold triggering a White House response, as shown above there were still daily tweets using the petition's official shortlink on Twitter. As also seen above, there were not only 39 retweets of this update, but many other conversations on Twitter following the update, generally discussing that we had been waiting a long time. We would discover later it had been worth the wait.
Open Science Federation, @openscience on Twitter had previously noted the 40,000th signature, the 50,000th signature, and many other moments while waiting for the White House response. We always took the chance to cc the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, @whitehouseostp on Twitter and remind them that we were waiting. Finally, with just over 65,000 signatures on the petition we received not only a positive response, but an historic directive for Open Access and Open Data from The White House, on February 22, 2013.
On June 20, 2013 The White House recognized Champions of Change in Open Science. I attended for the Open Science Federation and Open Knowledge Foundation America. What a moment! it was for Open Science, having worked at it for 15 or so years.
This is the front of the program. For more from the event, see www.flickr.com/groups/white-house-open-science-champions-...
On June 20, 2013 The White House recognized Champions of Change in Open Science.
One of the Champions, Eric Kansa speaks with John Wilbanks of Sage Bionetworks during a reception hosted by the Mozilla Science Lab in the Indian Treaty Room. John presented a poster on "Portable Legal Consent â Let Patients Donate Data to Science."
Photo by Brian Glanz, founder of the Open Science Federation and co-founder of Open Knowledge United States.
Open code for open science?
Steve M. Easterbrook
Nature Geoscience 7, 779â781 (2014)
Published online 30 October 2014
Open source software is often seen as a path to reproducibility in computational science. In practice there are many obstacles, even when the code is freely available, but open source policies should at least lead to better quality code....
Another candidate for the Open Access Irony Awards?
FOSSASIA Summit 2017, Singapore, Science Centre, Open Source, Open Hardware, Free Software, Open Science, Citizen Science, Artificial Intelligence, Open AI, SUSI.AI
I have an h-index of 93 because of all the papers citing my papers and saying "don't do it this way". Âč
Epidemiologists believe it highly likely that a journal publishing this paper does not practice PR & must therefore be predatory. ÂČ
The de facto primary criterion for the inclusion of information in WP is TNV, i.e. whether reliable sources state it to be true, not whether individual editors think they can verify it themselves.Âł
Eââ<â<âââ«Eââ<â<ââ
NOTES
1. J. Snider 2009: Top physicists of all time & h-index, reply n.8.
2. U. Elm & al. 2020: COVID-19 & zubat consumption, p. 141.
3. U. Kotniski & al. 2011: WikiPedia Truth, Not Verifiability.
REFERENCES
N. Brendborg 2023: Ancora un po'.
D. Bressanini 2023: Fa bene o fa male?
M. Khan & K. Bergquist 2022: Global publishing industry in 2020, p. 20.
A.A. Elbakyan & A. Bozkurt 2021: Critical conversation.
T. Vigen 2015: Spurious correlations.
J. Bohannon & al. 2015: Chocolate as weight-loss accelerator.
T. Kreutzer 2014: Open content. A practical guide.
R.P. Munroe 2013: The rise of OA.
P. Broadwith 2012: End of the road for h-index rankings.
M. Boldrin & D.K. Levine 2008: Against intellectual monopoly.
A. Sokal 2008: Beyond the hoax.
J.P.A. Ioannidis 2005: Why most research findings are false.
R.P. Dellavalle & al. 2003: Lost internet references.
A. Sokal 1996: Transgressing the boundaries.
G. Steiner 1957: Bau und leben der Rhinogradentia.
L.A. Seneca 65: Epistvla moralis ad Lvcilivm VI, § IV.
MOA · ON · ODE · OE · OI · OSC · OPR · OS · OC · ODA · OG · OK · SA · i10 · HI · PLOS1 · NSFPA · H2020EU · CC · notability · SW · IPT · CoC · DHMO · CG · CT · MF · debunk · fair use · OAth · archive · eb777 · d.pub · core.ac · 404 · Lib · GAIA-X · w-a · avepdf · C1/2/3 · GPS · LJ · mp3 · htm-png-D-ERM-pdf-a/b · gif · txt · wi · p2p · pdf24 · epubâpdf · tiny/small-pdfchef · p-publishing · stigmergy · VK · SLib · PG1971 · yt1s · easyt.io · EAN13+5 · 1°30'0"â1.5°
On June 20, 2013 The White House recognized Champions of Change in Open Science.
Dan Gezelter, director of The OpenScience Project for open source scientific software, presents his poster during a reception hosted by the Mozilla Science Lab in the Indian Treaty Room. Ward Vandewege also presented a poster, on Transparent Informatics: A Foundation for Precision Medicine with Alexander Wait Zaranek and Jonathan Sheffi.
Photo by Brian Glanz, founder of the Open Science Federation and co-founder of Open Knowledge United States.
A symbol for open science. An icon, logo, or emblem to represent the Open Science idea and ideals, practice, and community or movement, collaboratively created for the public domain, to be used, reused, or remixed by anyone for any purpose, except to the exclusion of its own other uses. To the extent possible under law, the federated account 'openscience' has waived all copyright and related or neighbouring rights to this work. Published from international waters per the common heritage.
Available in JPG, PNG, SVG, EPS, and PDF:
Download in the JPG format and 12 sizes: www.flickr.com/photos/openscience/10813661054/sizes/n/ or via these links, per pixels squared: 75 x 75, 100 x 100, 150 x 150, 240 x 240, 320 x 320, 500 x 500, 640 x 640, 800 x 800, 1024 x 1024, 1600 x 1600, 2048 x 2048, 6000 x 6000.
SVG and XML source: commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Openscience.svg
Rendered as PNG via these links, per pixels squared: 200 x 200, 500 x 500, 1000 x 1000, 2000 x 2000
PDF: science.okfn.org/files/2013/11/openscience.pdf
Original files:
opensciencefederation.com/openscience.svg
opensciencefederation.com/openscience.pdf
opensciencefederation.com/openscience.eps
This image was created in, and first used publicly from London, on 25 October 2013, via @openscience on Twitter at twitter.com/openscience/status/393753709567430656.
On June 20, 2013 The White House recognized Champions of Change in Open Science.
Photo by Brian Glanz, founder of the Open Science Federation and co-founder of Open Knowledge United States.
On June 20, 2013 The White House recognized Champions of Change in Open Science.
Photo by Anjelika Deogirikar of The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
On June 20, 2013 The White House recognized Champions of Change in Open Science. I attended for the Open Science Federation and Open Knowledge Foundation America. What a moment! it was for Open Science, having worked at it for 15 or so years.
This is the back of the program. For more from the event, see www.flickr.com/groups/white-house-open-science-champions-...
Yet another paper for an Open Access Irony Award
Scott L Collins. 2013. Opening access to ESA journals. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 11: 3â3. dx.doi.org/10.1890/1540-9295-11.1.3
Guest Editorial
Opening access to ESA journals
Scott L Collins
Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM
via @larysar @caseybergman @openscience
We will add further description at a later date -- just publishing for the moment, thanks for your patience.
A cast of homemade, donated, and open source insturments on the lab bench in the 'Biohacking: Do It Yourself!' lab installation at Medical Museion. Photo to be credited to Martin Malthe Borch.
Paywall the movie is a documentary of scholarly publishing problem. You can watch or download the movie from its original website paywallthemovie.com, or search it on Youtube. Hereâs my small contribution to promote openscience.
On June 20, 2013 The White House recognized Champions of Change in Open Science.
Photo by Brian Glanz, founder of the Open Science Federation and co-founder of Open Knowledge United States.
@openscience tweets, makes, and photos dominated the default wall at Mozilla Festival. well done :) backs of @msurman and @epistemographer, foreground.
A gene gun prototype made by RĂŒdiger Trojok from an old soda stream bottle, on display in the 'Biohacking: Do It Yourself!' lab installation at Medical Museion. The gene gun was invented in 1983-1986, and is a simple device that is key to many synthetic biology experiments, delivering gold particles coated with DNA into plants or other organisms - but it cannot be used outside authorized labs. Photograph to be credited to Martin Malthe Borch.