tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10781944.post1410885505197213310..comments2024-03-28T00:36:36.460-07:00Comments on The Tree of Life: Some quick notes on #Synbio5: Synthetic Biology 5.0 at StanfordJonathan Eisenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07953790938128734305noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10781944.post-64070294364190587722011-06-20T16:55:56.308-07:002011-06-20T16:55:56.308-07:00Eric Ma created an archive of all the #SynBio5 twe...Eric Ma created <a href="http://twapperkeeper.com/hashtag/synbio5?sm=&sd=&sy=&shh=00&smm=00&em=&ed=&ey=&ehh=00&emm=00&o=&l=50000&from_user=&text=&lang=" rel="nofollow">an archive of all the #SynBio5 tweets at the conference</a>. It's inclusive and contains 1512 tweets from hundreds of conference participants. (Interestingly the tweet distribution obeys the 80/20 rule perfectly, with 20% of the tweeters accounting for 80% of the content.)<br /><br />Eric posted the following to <a href="https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en_US#!topic/diybio/-4uXFENXkoo" rel="nofollow">the diybio mailing list</a>: "I've also gotten <a href="http://summarizr.labs.eduserv.org.uk/?hashtag=synbio5" rel="nofollow">the analysis results for the archive using Summarizr</a>, and it's got some pretty interesting things. The "word cloud" was my favorite - based on it "pam" (Pamela Silver, I'm sure) got more mentions than "voigt" (my supervisor), "darpa" was pretty darn popular, and there was a lot of mentions about "yeast" as well. I think it says much about the trends in the conference ("pam" vs "voigt" aside, that is)."Mackenzie Cowellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00534998205968908731noreply@blogger.com