View allAll Photos Tagged openscience
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, presented his poster 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.
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.
Members of the 'Biohacking: Do It Yourself!' project team from Medical Museion, Labitat, Center for Synthetic Biology, and Center for Interaction Design, and Line health care design consultancy, communally cut the masking tape ribbon at the exhibition opening. Photograph to be credited to Inbal Lieblich and Martin Malthe Borch. Originally uploaded to MaltheBorch's flickr stream.
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.
FOSSASIA Summit 2017, Singapore, Science Centre, Open Source, Open Hardware, Free Software, Open Science, Citizen Science, Artificial Intelligence, Open AI, SUSI.AI
This schematic is part of the 'Biohacking: Do It Yourself!' lab installation at Medical Museion, and explains in very simple terms the steps used in the kind of research used to produce new crops, biofuels, and medicines. Photograph to be credited to Martin Malthe Borch, graphics by Bente Stensen Christensen. Originally uploaded to MaltheBorch's flickr stream.
Early days in the construction of the 'Biohacking: Do It Yourself!' lab installation at Medical Museion. Discarded lab furniture from the University of Copenhagen is joined by cheap IKEA cupboards and lighting discovered in the museum attic. Photograph to be credited to Ane Pilgaard Sørensen.
Collage board outside the 'Biohacking: Do It Yourself!' lab installation at Medical Museion, giving a glimpse into the DIY biology movement and its connections to synthetic biology. Photograph to be credited to Martin Malthe Borch. Originally uploaded to MaltheBorch's flickr stream.
FOSSASIA Summit 2017, Singapore, Science Centre, Open Source, Open Hardware, Free Software, Open Science, Citizen Science, Artificial Intelligence, Open AI, SUSI.AI
Doktorhut ist nicht gleich Dr. Hut! Neben Bücherstapeln und einem gefüllten Regal steht der aufgeklappte Laptop; weiteres Werkzeug liegt schon bereit. Am Rande sitzt ein Riese - der Denker - mit einer Figur auf den Schultern: ein Zwerg, vielleicht ein(e) DoktorandIn? Im Vordergrund steht der Schriftzug "Qucosa", unser Hinweis auf die große Bedeutung von Open Science für die Verbreitung neuester Forschungsergebnisse; vgl. SLUBlog: Zwerge auf den Schultern von Riesen: Ein Doktorhut aus dem Makerspace.
Objekte, CC-BY: Parametric Wrench by MBCook; Rodin's The Thinker by lampmaker; RPG Book Shelf by donald_stouffer.
Foto: SLUB/ Ramona Ahlers-Bergner
Visitors to the opening of the 'Biohacking: Do It Yourself!' lab installation at Medical Museion are treated to Rüdiger Trojok's hackerstyle DNA extraction - using salt, washing up liquid, ice, and alcohol. This protocol is widely used in schools, science centers, hackerspaces, and makerfaires, as a demonstration of how easy it can be for people to understand and take part in biotech research. Photograph to be credited to Martin Malthe Borch. Originally uploaded to MaltheBorch's flickr stream.
FOSSASIA Summit 2017, Singapore, Science Centre, Open Source, Open Hardware, Free Software, Open Science, Citizen Science, Artificial Intelligence, Open AI, SUSI.AI
FOSSASIA Summit 2017, Singapore, Science Centre, Open Source, Open Hardware, Free Software, Open Science, Citizen Science, Artificial Intelligence, Open AI, SUSI.AI