Belgian seismologists pick up #covid19 lockdown as less noisy seismometer readings https://t.co/b7t7uuRYz3 On @nature pic.twitter.com/QCC2ZN6skW
— Maarten Lambrechts (@maartenzam) March 31, 2020
Belgian seismologists pick up #covid19 lockdown as less noisy seismometer readings https://t.co/b7t7uuRYz3 On @nature pic.twitter.com/QCC2ZN6skW
— Maarten Lambrechts (@maartenzam) March 31, 2020
“How to be Curious Instead of Contrarian About COVID-19: Eight Data Science Lessons From Coronavirus Perspective” https://t.co/zBXZvnpSvT
— Andrew Gelman (@StatModeling) March 31, 2020
I wrote about America's worst public health disaster and how our country has compromised clinicians and left the medical community highly #COVID19 vulnerable, along with our patients https://t.co/9uvTQ8YyMt @Medscape pic.twitter.com/Mm0HcqnT5x
— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) March 31, 2020
This U.S. District Court for D.C. decision is a huge win for data journalists:
— Julia Angwin (@JuliaAngwin) March 30, 2020
"Criminalizing terms-of-
service violations risks turning
each website into its own criminal jurisdiction and each webmaster
into his own legislature.”https://t.co/d4sN8U1JV4
How not to lose your mind in the covid-19 age: https://t.co/5uE8Us1Ghk
— Tim Harford (@TimHarford) March 30, 2020
Twitter 2010: “I hope my tweet goes viral! Please RT!”
— Chris Albon (@chrisalbon) March 28, 2020
Twitter 2020: “Please don’t RT, I don’t have the emotional energy to mute all the trolls.”
Kaggle's 5 remote-first tips for new WFH'ers. Thanks @MeganRisdal and @vimota for writing this up! https://t.co/cmbeIXkH2H
— Ben Hamner (@benhamner) March 27, 2020
Some graphics showing what the companies getting bailouts were up to the last decade -- https://t.co/Xdc6lbyMee
— Tim Wu (@superwuster) March 27, 2020
The banner headline for tomorrow's @nytimes
— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) March 27, 2020
about the plethora of unprecedented, exponential curves pic.twitter.com/AFI3W3ud51
Johns Hopkins is running a free two-week epidemiology course, so we can make some sense out of the messy data out there https://t.co/13TzwuGjd6
— Nathan Yau (@flowingdata) March 26, 2020
History map shows The Atlantic Wall during WWII. Source: https://t.co/xNnTyAfdUb pic.twitter.com/7z1FejnLKp
— Simon Kuestenmacher (@simongerman600) March 25, 2020
The current COVID-19 situation reminds me in many ways of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated the Gulf Coast in 2005. I've studied the latter disaster in my research, and I think we can learn a lot from it. Summary follows, full post is here: https://t.co/eaZ5UI4c0n
— Tatyana Deryugina (@TDeryugina) March 25, 2020