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    科学博物館

    レジャー 学術 科学 関連語 上野動物園 国立科学博物館 剥製
    • Margareta Pagano: There's an art to funding science after the cuts
      Sir John Rose will present his seventh and last Science Prize as chief executive of Rolls-Royce tomorrow night when he hosts one of the year's most interesting events at London's Science Museum. サージョンローズは、彼はロンドンの科学博物館で、今年の最も興味深いのいずれかのイベントがホストするRolls - Royce社明日の夜の最高経営責任者としての彼の7番目と最後の科学賞を発表します

    • Tech Weekly podcast: Personal privacy and public diplomacy
      Becky Hogge from the Open Rights Group joins Aleks Krotoski and Charles Arthur in a special Tech Weekly, recorded live at the Science Museum's Dana Centre.Our other guests? Austin Heap is a wunderkind hacker who used his own encryption software, Haystack, to open up the Iranian internet in the aftermath of the disputed elections in 2009. By breaking through the Iranian government's blockade, the software allowed people on the ground in Tehran to access communication tools they could use to describe unfolding events to the rest of the world.Meanwhile, personal surveillance has reached an all-time high: our web traffic is observed and recorded by governments and corporations. With every click we create personal digital identities that 'belong' to other people. Should we be worried about the private becoming public in this way, or should we reclaim ourselves using encryption software that hides who we are and where we go online? NO2ID's Christine Zaba will be on hand to lead you through the issues and the options.Don't forget to ...• Comment below• Mail us at tech@guardian.co.uk• Get our Twitter feed for programme updates• Join our Facebook group• See our pics on Flickr/Post your tech picsAleks KrotoskiCharles ArthurBecky HoggeChristina Zaba ベッキーHoggeオープン権利グループからの特別な技の一品では、科学博物館のダナCentre.Our他のゲストでのライブ録音Aleks Krotoskiとチャールズアーサー結合?オースティンヒープは、2009年に紛争の選挙の余波を受け、イランのインターネット接続を開くために自分の暗号化ソフト、Haystackは、使用される神童ハッカーです

    • The Guardian's Science Weekly podcast: Why human bodies are now creations and a memory making exhibition
      Is being slim, youthful and wrinkle-free now a moral responsibility? Psychotherapist Susie Orbach joins us in the studio to discuss how humans now see their bodies as creations. Warning: the discussion on labiaplasties may not be suitable for all listeners. Susie's book, Bodies, is out now. For more information about our first ever recording in front of an audience, check out the website of London's Science Museum. It'll take place at its Lates event on Wednesday 26 May and it's free to get in to watch us record this programme. Let us know on the blog if you want to come along We visit a sound installation exhibition that tries to makes you remember. The Pattern completion exhibition is on this week at Gimpel Fils in London. In the newsjam we discuss David Willetts' appointment as Britain's new science minister, men taking over the bodies of virtual women, why women are risking their lives by marrying younger men, and how a call from your mum is as good as a hug. The Observer's science editor Robin McKie, and Ian Sample, Guardian science correspondent are also in the studio. WARNING: contains explicit language.Feel free to post your thoughts below. Join our Facebook group. Listen back through our archive.Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science.Subscribe free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Alok JhaAndy DuckworthIan SampleRobin McKieSusie Orbach スリムさと、しわのない若々しい今道義的責任はありますか?心理スージーオーバックは、スタジオでどのように人間が今の作品として自分の体を参照して議論する私たちを結合します

    • Science Weekly podcast: The BBC's David Shukman and the dangers of patenting genes
      The BBC's science and environment correspondent David Shukman joins us in the studio to discuss the BP oil spill and the pitfalls of reporting on climate change. In David's new book, Reporting Live From the End of the World, he describes his adventures as a roving environment correspondent. A gaggle of geeks recently invaded the Guardian's London headquarters for a hack day. Their leader, Jeremy Keith, reveals the results of two days of brainstorming. As part of its Who Am I? exhibition, London's Science Museum has held an event to mark the tenth anniversary of the first draft sequence of the human genome. We spoke to Mike Stratton, director of the Wellcome Trust's Sanger Institute, and nobel prizewinning biologist John Sulston, who tells us human gene patents restrict access to treatments and inhibit research. We dissect the BMJ's cancer study on mobile phone masts using our story tracker. The Guardian's Nell Boase and Observer's science editor Robin McKie are in the studio. Listen to the annual Sense about Science lecture on conflicts of interest in drug trials. Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science. Email scienceweeklypodcast@gmail.com. Join our Facebook group. Listen back through our archive.Subscribe free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Alok JhaAndy DuckworthNell BoaseRobin McKie BBCの科学と環境特派員デビッドShukmanスタジオでのBPの石油流出事故と気候変動に関する報告の落とし穴を議論する私たちを結合します

    • The Guardian's Science Weekly podcast: It's all about altitude at World Cup 2010
      Steve Haake, head of sports engineering at Sheffield Hallam University, joins us to explain why altitude could make the difference between triumph and disaster at World Cup 2010 in South Africa. He also predicts that goalkeepers will be moaning about the design of the balls. Steve will be giving a talk at the Royal Institution on 8 June. We look at some of your responses to last week's live recording of this podcast at the Science Museum in London. Following a discussion at the Hay Festival on 10 years of the Human Genome Project, we reveal what Nobel laureates John Sulston and Martin Evans, and Michael Morgan, former CEO of the Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, had to say about Craig Venter's creation of the world's first synthetic genome. We visited the Royal Society's exhibition celebrating its 350th anniversary. Keith Moore, its librarian, tells us about Robert Boyle's list of scientific ambitions. View a gallery of the Royal Society exhibition here. In the newsjam we discuss the ban on mephedrone, trials to begin on a breast cancer vaccine, a resignation over GM foods, and why six men will be spending 520 days locked inside a spaceship in a Moscow car park. Guardian science correspondent Ian Sample and Observer science editor Robin McKie were on hand in the studio to throw around the World Cup ball. WARNING: contains strong language.Follow the podcast on our Science Weekly Twitter feed and receive updates on all breaking science news stories from Guardian Science. Email scienceweeklypodcast@gmail.com. Join our Facebook group. Listen back through our archive.Subscribe free via iTunes to ensure every episode gets delivered. (Here is the non-iTunes URL feed).Alok JhaAndy DuckworthIan SampleRobin McKieJohn Sulston スティーブハエーク、シェフィールドハラム大学スポーツ工学の長は、私たちはなぜ高度が南アフリカ共和国の2010年W杯での勝利と災害の違いを作ることを説明する結合します


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