Don't Panic Geocast

Episode 17 - "What's your summer manifesto?"


Listen Later

Summer is an ideal time to learn new things and explore new ideas. This week we discuss what we want to learn over the summer and how we are going to accomplish these goals. What’s your summer manifesto? Also we get showered by cosmic rays and lightning as part of #FunPaperFriday.

John’s Summer Manifesto

Learn Swift programming language for mobile computing development

  • Lynda.com
  • Books
  • Having a project is essential to learning a programming language.
  • Develop classroom materials to go with some demonstrations and videos I have collected

    • Using screen flow to capture computer screen with voice overs
    • Use Python notebooks to capture data analysis
    • Host materials on GitHub for free and open access
    • Setup more effective task automation to free mind space for work

      • Launch Center
      • Hazel
      • Pythonista
      • Submit one manuscript and have another draft ready with all data processing in reproducible notebooks

        • Editorial for writing on the mobile
        • LaTex for writing the final paper (try Lyx)
        • KaleidaGraph
        • Shannon’s Summer Manifesto

          • I also want to spend more time on Lynda.com
          • Learn learn!
          • Working on my first proposal

            • Setting up my research paperwork so I can start looking into grants
            • Getting the first chapter of my dissertation ready for submission

              • Hone my figure making skills
              • Learn to talk/write less!!
              • Actually review what I did right and wrong in my classes

                • Try to keep a doc of these things so I can revisit them.
                • Use more Evernote
                • Prep for Fall

                  • Teaching a new grad class - catastrophic sedimentation (if anyone has ideas, please send them to me!)
                  • FunPaperFriday

                    This week we read a paper about how cosmic rays could give us new insight into how lighting works. Lots of places have been experiencing storms recently with severe weather and flooding. Lighting can do lots of strange things like explode trees and make glass. It has incredible power in each strike.

                    Schellart, P., Trinh, T. N. G., Buitink, S., Corstanje, A., Enriquez, J. E., Falcke, H., et al. (2015). Probing Atmospheric Electric Fields in Thunderstorms through Radio Emission from Cosmic-Ray-Induced Air Showers. Physical Review Letters, 114(16), 165001–5. http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.165001

                    Contact us:

                    Show - www.dontpanicgeocast.com - @dontpanicgeo - [email protected]

                    John Leeman - www.johnrleeman.com - @geo_leeman

                    Shannon Dulin - @ShannonDulin

                    ...more
                    View all episodesView all episodes
                    Download on the App Store

                    Don't Panic GeocastBy John Leeman and Shannon Dulin

                    • 4.9
                    • 4.9
                    • 4.9
                    • 4.9
                    • 4.9

                    4.9

                    45 ratings


                    More shows like Don't Panic Geocast

                    View all
                    Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! by NPR

                    Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!

                    38,950 Listeners

                    Science Friday by Science Friday and WNYC Studios

                    Science Friday

                    6,467 Listeners

                    The Daily by The New York Times

                    The Daily

                    113,121 Listeners

                    Up First from NPR by NPR

                    Up First from NPR

                    56,944 Listeners

                    Short Wave by NPR

                    Short Wave

                    6,592 Listeners

                    Geology Bites by Oliver Strimpel

                    Geology Bites

                    150 Listeners