'morgen!
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
"Improvisation ist die Kunst, etwas Unbeabsichtigtes gut vorzubereiten." (Willy Millowitsch, 1909-1999, dt. Volksschauspieler und Theaterleiter) [via https://t.co/L4VYhltLO1]
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153541536795320320
Dear @Disney, You got it right the first time. Water crystals have hexagonal “six-fold” symmetry.
You still have a few months to fix your #Frozen2 Movie Poster, unless the sequel takes place in another universe, where water crystalizes to different laws of physics. pic.twitter.com/eb2oILhim0
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) July 22, 2019
Why is cake is perfect:
– Fills one with tingly anticipation
– Ideal for every meal. And snack. And relaxing on the throne. Or in bed. Or whilst invading France.
– Tastes like love is supposed to feel
– Isn't a bloody vegetable— Henry Tudor (@KngHnryVIII) July 22, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153566108517109760
Mel Brooks was so irritated by the overuse of ellipses in screenplays he was being sent, that he created a character in ‘History of the World: Part I’ that would say ‘dot, dot, dot’ out loud every time he paused.
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) July 23, 2019
I wonder what mental gymnastics authors have to go through to justify to themselves that this is okay. pic.twitter.com/kKkyjHCqmR
— Jon Tennant (@Protohedgehog) July 22, 2019
It takes three tweets: „There are numerous databases and networking platforms that offer scientific authors global visibility of their works. The authors promote their works actively attending international seminars and congresses in their field of expertise.“ (1/3)
— openbiblio.social/@bmittermaier (@BMittermaier) July 22, 2019
No, I'm not kidding. This is word by word the whole article, except for a kid's drawing about a scientist advertising the latest publication and some ethical disclaimers (honestly!)
— openbiblio.social/@bmittermaier (@BMittermaier) July 22, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153574784632012805
#TIL the expression "to pony up". https://t.co/PWdkUZO5qn #idiomaticexpressions #ponycontent 🙂
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
and #TIL the [american] noun "slew". https://t.co/63h28ms58T / https://t.co/5yg56IrfBE #LearningByReading #lesenBildet 🙂
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
bei der @ubgraz findet sich eine interessante grafik zur bebilderung des themas #predatorypublishing: https://t.co/gVQNeuGasU 🙂 pic.twitter.com/dOJu0pX6aa
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
interessante idee für eine bibliothekarische informationsveranstaltung, gefunden bei der @ubgraz "Publikationen besser sichtbar machen durch Academic Search Engine Optimization" https://t.co/ow6XThem5E › folien: https://t.co/BhFpjLcoK9. #SEO #academicSEO #sichtbarkeit
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
#TIL: the hashtag #citedblogpost. (via @BjoernGebert: https://t.co/LFSioaNOln and @TorstenHiltmann: https://t.co/OZ741HPotW.) will try to remember to use it in due course. 🙂 #academicblogging #scienceblogs #citations
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153607194685972481
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153608059463393280
pequod books (Berlin-Neukölln) pic.twitter.com/62TKdzeXcM
— karstens (@karstens) July 23, 2019
…. wäre auch mal eine idee für münster … https://t.co/j51uPWUGJT
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153608549475520512
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153608637518090246
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153608759907946496
Wie man sich als Dialektologe auf die Hitze vorbereitet. #Dialekt #linguistics #phdlife pic.twitter.com/i1uxo0fTpw
— TimoSchur (@SchurTimo) July 23, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153608893651705856
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153608981841100800
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153609187248791552
Liebes #Twitterlehrerzimmer, liebe TL, bei unseren gängigen Schullektüren 5-8 spielen Mädchen/Frauen i.d.R. allenfalls Nebenrollen. Wollt ihr mir helfen, eine Liste möglicher Lektüren zu erstellen, in denen sie die/eine der Hauptrolle(n) spielen? (Explizit KEIN Pferdeseufzkram!)
— Kahviraivo (@DieFrauHilde) July 23, 2019
We are thrilled to announce the launch of Methods Bites! Methods Bites is the new blog of the Social Science Data Lab (SSDL), an event series @MZESUniMannheim!
Check it out here: https://t.co/kKwLJVoqKy 1/10
— MZES Methods Bites (@mzes_ssdl) July 23, 2019
My friends @CNN get it… https://t.co/XqJ2MhcCVd
— Larry the Cat (@Number10cat) July 23, 2019
"Scrapbooking with Socrates" https://t.co/eTjgApYH90 🙂
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
Unicorn: why can’t you create me again?
God: no one is going to believe a horse has a horn it’s too ridiculous.
Unicorn: I guess you’re right.
[Narwhal swims by]
Unicorn: w-was that a whale with a horn?
God:
Unicorn:
God: technically that’s a tooth.
— NewDadNotes (@NewDadNotes) July 20, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153630653755351041
This is one of the most poignant signs I've ever read in my life, to be installed at the former Okjökull glacier in Borgarfjörður, Iceland by scientists and the Icelandic Hiking Society. Our children should not forgive us if we fail. https://t.co/sc6VtGDrq3 [via @danjamstewart] pic.twitter.com/W8yDu9AuHY
— Steve Silberman (@stevesilberman) July 23, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153660379240837121
Frei lizenzierte Inhalte dürfen prinzipiell weiterverwendet und häufig auch verändert werden. Wie aber sind Bearbeitungen kenntlich zu machen? Ein Artikel von @PaulKlimpel auf @iRightsinfo erklärt das genauer. https://t.co/n8KD4LUCtQ#OpenAccess #OpenScience @creativecommons pic.twitter.com/GJIuhTp0jx
— Fachinformationsdienst Romanistik (@FIDRomanistik) July 23, 2019
Word of the day: FLYPE (Scottish) – to roll your socks up in pairs. pic.twitter.com/ceNoJib2aB
— Quite Interesting (@qikipedia) July 23, 2019
My friend is at a conference. It offers a discounted 'low income' rate. In return for this rate delegates are invited to do 'chores' at the conference (like sell the books of the Profs, set up, pack down, provide roving mic etc). I'm aghast. What a grim, feudal, academic culture.
— Jo Grady (@DrJoGrady) July 22, 2019
‘Last-minute changes to the politician’s speech’ (from my book Baking with Kafka) pic.twitter.com/KrGtSxrUuq
— Tom Gauld (@tomgauld) July 23, 2019
It's palaeography day on the #PolonskyGerman blog! Ellen Wendel of @uniGoettingen talks us through three different scripts used in late medieval Germany, with examples from digitized manuscripts. https://t.co/ZtLLNztv30 pic.twitter.com/71UsShqaef
— Bodleian Digital Library Systems and Services (@BDLSS) July 23, 2019
*schreibt politischen Tweet*
*löscht den Entwurf*
Hier, süße Katzen. pic.twitter.com/Lt19ivinsb— Mike Zeitz (@mimimibe) July 23, 2019
vorhin beim gießen gedacht "hm, vielleicht kann diese flora-app mir sagen, was das nochmal für eine schöne lila blume in unserem garten ist". sie kann! @Flora_Incognita wusste, das das eine Pfirsichblättrige Glockenblume ist. 🙂 https://t.co/o50xNK16dr #pflanzenbestimmung #app pic.twitter.com/qLpEc674pP
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019
Ich halte das trotzdem eher für eine Ballonblume: https://t.co/1x6wTSZ3tP Auf jeden Fall eine Glockenblume!
— frankenschulz (@frankenschulz) July 23, 2019
When the library phone rings pic.twitter.com/VeD0X2f2TX
— Fake Library Statistics (@FakeLibStats) July 23, 2019
Catalogue & Index Call for Papers! https://t.co/mn7XxrbmCy
— CILIP Metadata & Discovery Group (@CilipMDG) July 23, 2019
Guten Morgen pic.twitter.com/N9cCS2eWdQ
— Igor Levit (@igorpianist) July 23, 2019
https://twitter.com/v_i_o_l_a/status/1153737016825319424
Anyone with a strong humanities background want to tell me how they feel about this article? As I *do not* have any humanities background, would love to hear peoples' thoughts!
"The humanities have a ‘reproducibility’ problem" – Talking Humanities : https://t.co/4hkRbxprhk
— Vicky Rampin (née Steeves) (@VickyRampin) July 23, 2019
Aus aktuellem Anlass. (Interview mit Elisabeth Niggemann gestern in der @SZ, S.16)
Ich persönlich finde ja, dass bibliotheksbezogener Journalismus im Jahr 2019 einen Hauch mehr Bemühung Richtung Relevanz und Gegenwärtigkeit zeigen könnte. Und vielleicht Mut zur Vorrecherche. pic.twitter.com/WmTjMFCNTM
— Ben (@bkaden) July 23, 2019
Die Moral solcher Texte kann man auch zusammenfassen:
(1) Bibliotheken ändern sich (Überraschung)
(2) Leute lesen weiterhin, Leute machen andere Dinge in der Bibliothen
(3) Bücher immer noch beliebt
(4) Surplus: Irgendeine Geschichte, wo Leute sich in der Bibliothek kennenlernten— karstens (@karstens) July 23, 2019
They Know We Know They Know: Does Sci-Hub Affect Library Subscriptions? https://t.co/CGKwqdd3YH
— ZBW MediaTalk (@ZBW_MediaTalk) July 23, 2019
I approve of this loading graphic. pic.twitter.com/itmoFEErnP
— Khalil (@sehnaoui) July 23, 2019
I've lived through our library's last six bewildering website redesigns. So one might say I've been training for New Twitter for years.
— Lousy Librarian (@LousyLibrarian) July 23, 2019
Bei der Pressemitteilung dachte ich erst "Seltsam, im Café den Amtsanzeiger der Stadt zu lesen, aber na gut", und dann fiel mir auf, dass in der Zeitung LÖCHER FÜR DIE AUGEN AUSGESCHNITTEN SIND, und das ist jetzt offiziell der creepiest Typ in Heidelberg https://t.co/kf5jq2Y0Ql pic.twitter.com/sTxkXPiC7s
— Mike Zeitz (@mimimibe) July 23, 2019
I got a bag at the bookstore that says IF YOU THINK READING IS BORING, YOU'RE DOING IT WRONG.
— Stephen King (@StephenKing) February 5, 2019
Flora Incognita kennt alle Wildpflanzen in Deutschland aber nicht alle Zierpflanzen. Die Fülle der Zierpflanzen ist praktisch unermesslich. Die Ballonblume (Platycodon grandiflorus) stammt aus Asien und sieht einer Glockenblume sehr ähnlich
— Flora Incognita (@Flora_Incognita) July 23, 2019
'nacht allerseits!
— viola voß (@v_i_o_l_a) July 23, 2019