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RE: Curating the Internet: Science and technology digest for March 2, 2020

in STEMGeeks5 years ago

Thanks for the reply! I'm the same way with journals in many areas. I have been learning a lot in the year or so that I've been writing this series, but I still have to work hard to understand things with many topics. I like the analogy of putting a puzzle together. That's exactly what it feels like sometimes.

Unnatural Selection, in the comments from one of these posts (which reminds me, I still need to find that and watch it...)Over the course of this series, I think I have included a fair number of articles on T-cells, but I don't recall many that covered B-cells. I have been trying to include CRISPR in more posts ever since @valued-customer mentioned the Netflix series,

I'm wrapping up for the night, but I'll try to remember to read the article you linked later. It does look interesting.

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I'm hoping the spirit of reaching out and learning will prevail in the days ahead.
Regards,
AGThank you for that gracious response. Especially in these hard times for Steemit, I'm reminded of the kind of opportunity the community offers for experimenting, for checking out new ideas. In two years I've learned so much, areas I 'don't belong'. Art, particle phyics, German, Spanish. The only place that's a little impenetrable (for me) is math, but then we have great bloggers (ex: @mathowl, @lauch3d) who open doors there also.


Have a wonderful day. I will try to emulate your generous spirit as I go forward in the community.Thank you for the generous tip from @penny4thoughts. It is encouraging...Although I'm generally brimming with enthusiasm, this just increases the threshold a bit :)

You're welcome! As they say, a rising tide lifts all ships. I appreciated your contributions to that discussion, and I hope that you'll also consider commenting on future posts in the series.

Thank you! I will. Always something interesting :)