Browse Quote of the Day

Quotes of the Day 2005

An index of Quote of the Day during 2005.

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  1. 2005-12-23: Question Everything (flickr.com)
  2. 2005-12-22: Siëlle Gramser on the evolution of fermentation
  3. 2005-12-21: Scientist David King on communicating science (telegraph.co.uk)
  4. 2005-12-20: Editor Catherine Spanswick on North vs South funding of UK Science
  5. 2005-12-19: Martin Welch getting some satisfaction in Science (royalsoc.ac.uk)
  6. 2005-12-18: Goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel on Manchester United Football Club striker Wayne Rooney (news.bbc.co.uk)
  7. 2005-12-16: Bioinformatician Terri Attwood on the frustrations of protein annotation (nactem.ac.uk)
  8. 2005-12-15: Poet Dylan Thomas on what floats his boat (poetryarchive.org)
  9. 2005-12-14: Astronomer Martin Rees on literature vs science (telegraph.co.uk)
  10. 2005-12-13: Medical Informatician Alan Rector on knowledge (cs.man.ac.uk)
  11. 2005-12-12: Journalist Adrian Wooldridge on University research (economist.com)
  12. 2005-12-09: Comedian and mathematician Dave Gorman on weird science (bbc.co.uk)
  13. 2005-12-08: Footballer Emerson on scoring (economist.com)
  14. 2005-12-07: Musicians Guy Chambers and Robbie Williams on past and present
  15. 2005-12-06: Most cited authors in Computer Science August 2005 according to CiteSeer (citeseer.ist.psu.edu)
  16. 2005-12-05: Bioinformatician Rolf Apweiler on blogging (nature.com)
  17. 2005-12-03: Environmental campaigner Zac Goldsmith on green politics (guardian.co.uk)
  18. 2005-12-02: Wikipedian Jimmy Wales on the revolution (wikipedia.org)
  19. 2005-12-01: Scientist Robert May on questioning everything (royalsoc.ac.uk)
  20. 2005-11-30: Scientist Ad Lagendijk on fundamentalism (nature.com)
  21. 2005-11-29: Bioinformaticians Ian Korf, Mark Yandell and Joseph Bedell on rocket science (oreilly.com)
  22. 2005-11-28: Googlers Larry Page and Sergey Brin on running a web crawler (www7.scu.edu.au)
  23. 2005-11-26: Football legend George Best on beauty in football (guardian.co.uk)
  24. 2005-11-25: David Mandelbrot on being thrown out of the library (guardian.co.uk)
  25. 2005-11-24: Many Happy Returns for Microsoft? (downloadsquad.com)
  26. 2005-11-23: Computer Scientist Ian Horrocks on language wars on the semantic web (cs.man.ac.uk)
  27. 2005-11-22: Hacker and Painter Paul Graham on web applications (paulgraham.com)
  28. 2005-11-21: Biochemist Simon Lovell on myGrid (man.ac.uk)
  29. 2005-11-20: Musician Bob Geldof on e-mail (bbc.co.uk)
  30. 2005-11-19: Computer Scientists Junghoo Cho on Googlearchy (www2004.org)
  31. 2005-11-18: Biologist Jeremy Cherfas on the EasyJet-Set (jeremycherfas.net)
  32. 2005-11-17: Microsoftie Bill Gates on Scientific computation (microsoft.com)
  33. 2005-11-16: Musician Frank Black on growing up
  34. 2005-11-15: Healthcare and the National Health Service in Europe (nhs.uk)
  35. 2005-11-14: Software engineer Tim Bray on inventing Markup Languages (burningbird.net)
  36. 2005-11-12: Love United and Hate Chelsea or vice versa? (wsc.co.uk)
  37. 2005-11-11: Liverpool Football Club fans on Steven Gerrard
  38. 2005-11-10: Bioinformaticians Rod Page and Edward Holmes on the importance of humble bacteria
  39. 2005-11-09: Computer Scientist Ian Horrocks on language wars on the semantic web (cs.man.ac.uk)
  40. 2005-11-08: Software engineer Holger Knublauch et al on building semantic webs (w3.org)
  41. 2005-11-07: Journalist Colin Tudge on tree-hugging (newscientist.com)
  42. 2005-11-06: Musician and Beatle George Harrison on his weeping guitar
  43. 2005-11-05: Musician Liam Gallagher on sliding
  44. 2005-11-04: Journalist Adam Rutherford on the portrayal of scientists in popular movies (nature.com)
  45. 2005-11-03: Computer Scientist Patrick Winston on representations and problem solving
  46. 2005-11-02: Singing mice (plosbiology.org)
  47. 2005-11-01: Software engineer James Gosling on computational biology (today.java.net)
  48. 2005-10-31: Software engineer James Clark on boring boring XML
  49. 2005-10-28: Ignobel organiser Marc Abrahams on dull mathematics (guardian.co.uk)
  50. 2005-10-27: Software engineer Joel Spolsky on Web Two Point Oh (joelonsoftware.com)
  51. 2005-10-26: Software engineer Michael Kay on XML and XSLT
  52. 2005-10-25: Charlmagne on speaking more than one language
  53. 2005-10-24: Software engineer Bram Cohen on arrogance (wired.com)
  54. 2005-10-21: Humpty Dumpty on semantics
  55. 2005-10-20: Scientist Inder Verma on challenging authority (nature.com)
  56. 2005-10-19: Is gene hunting just stamp collecting? (economist.com)
  57. 2005-10-18: Artist Edward Tufte on slide-ware (wired.com)
  58. 2005-10-17: Big gene, small gene? (plosjournals.org)
  59. 2005-10-14: The battle of the sexes (royalsoc.ac.uk)
  60. 2005-10-13: In memoriam: John Robert Parker Ravenscroft, aka John Peel (bbc.co.uk)
  61. 2005-10-12: Googler Sergey Brin on machine vs human learning (cerebra.com)
  62. 2005-10-11: Bioinformatician Richard Durbin on loving science (sanger.ac.uk)
  63. 2005-10-10: Fame and importance (economist.com)
  64. 2005-10-07: Computer Scientist David Patterson offering careers advice for scientists (berkeley.edu)
  65. 2005-10-06: Scientist Yusuke Nakamura on genetic mapping (sanger.ac.uk)
  66. 2005-10-05: Learning from the ancient greeks (projecthalo.com)
  67. 2005-10-04: Biologist David Weatherall on personalised medicine (royalsoc.ac.uk)
  68. 2005-10-03: Biologist Panos Deloukas on disease genes (sanger.ac.uk)
  69. 2005-09-30: Journalist Steven Rushen on dead good students (guardian.co.uk)
  70. 2005-09-29: Journalist Alan Cane on abstraction and practical ideas (ft.com)
  71. 2005-09-28: The keys to understanding intelligence (mit.edu)
  72. 2005-09-27: Computer Scientist Hal Abelson on semantic web hype (umd.edu)
  73. 2005-09-26: Frank Halasz on linking and quering (soton.ac.uk)
  74. 2005-09-23: Mathematician Keith Devlin on The Joy of Sets
  75. 2005-09-22: Computer Scientist Carole Goble on abstraction (semanticgrid.org)
  76. 2005-09-21: Author and journalist John Gribbin on our place in the universe
  77. 2005-09-20: Apple Macintosh co-founder Steve Jobs on the bearable lightness of beginning (stanford.edu)
  78. 2005-09-19: Computer Scientist Ian Horrocks on applications of the semantic web (cs.manchester.ac.uk)
  79. 2005-09-16: Novelist Theodore Sturgeon on life (economist.com)
  80. 2005-09-15: Journalist Ben Goldacre on media and its uneasy relationship with science (badscience.net)
  81. 2005-09-14: Ilias Iakovidis on bioinformatics and medical informatics (ebi.ac.uk)
  82. 2005-09-13: Pharmacologist Phil Bourne on merging journal publications with databases (plosbiology.org)
  83. 2005-08-27: Selling your soul to Mall☆Wart (postsecret.blogspot.com)
  84. 2005-08-26: Dominique Armand and Gaëlle Shifrin on the big numbers behind particle physics (cnrs.fr)
  85. 2005-08-25: Googler Sergey Brin how big Googles index is getting (playboy.com)
  86. 2005-08-24: Public collections of genetic and other sequence data (ebi.ac.uk)
  87. 2005-08-23: 70 million web sites can't be wrong (netcraft.com)
  88. 2005-08-22: Mathematician Paul Erdős on numbers and beauty (simonsingh.com)
  89. 2005-08-21: Hacker and Painter Paul Graham on the nature of so-called Computer Science (paulgraham.com)
  90. 2005-08-19: George Haley and Jane Thomas on hirsute scientists of the past (improbable.com)
  91. 2005-08-18: Hemai Parthasarathy on open-access publishing in science (plosbiology.org)
  92. 2005-08-17: Scientist William Wilson on AIDS and genomics (sanger.ac.uk)
  93. 2005-08-16: Geophysicist Ron Oxburgh on climate change (guardian.co.uk)
  94. 2005-08-15: Biologist Steve Jones on funding, fashion and failure (telgraph.co.uk)
  95. 2005-08-12: Slowing down for mathematics at Google Inc. (blogspot.com)
  96. 2005-08-11: Wikipedian David Gerard on trivipedia (guardian.co.uk)
  97. 2005-08-10: Nobel laureate John Polanyi and science and truth (nobelprize.org)
  98. 2005-08-09: Blogger Rui Carmo on blogging (taoofmac.om)
  99. 2005-08-08: Hans Christian von Baeyer on the data deluge
  100. 2005-08-05: Podcasting from heaven? (telegraph.co.uk)
  101. 2005-08-04: Environmentalist George Monbiot on hypocrisy (monbiot.com)
  102. 2005-08-03: Computational linguist Yorick Wilks on artificial and natural languages (ieee.org)
  103. 2005-08-02: Computer Scientist Phil Wadler on the science of computing (ed.ac.uk)
  104. 2005-08-01: The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute on cracking genomic codes in cattle (sanger.ac.uk)
  105. 2005-07-29: Philosopher John Sowa word processing formats (jfsowa.com)
  106. 2005-07-28: Ronan Sleep on the grand challenges of breathing life into the Biological data mountain (ukcrc.org.uk)
  107. 2005-07-27: The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute on cracking disease codes (sanger.ac.uk)
  108. 2005-07-26: Przemyslaw Prusinkiewicz and Aristid Lindenmayer on the computational beauty of nature (algorithmicbotany.org)
  109. 2005-07-25: Industrialist Henry Ford on what people want versus what they need
  110. 2005-07-22: Biologist Charalambos Kyriacou on sexual reproduction in humans and fruit-flies (nature.com)
  111. 2005-07-21: Semantic Webhead Eric Miller hyping up intelligent data (w3.org)
  112. 2005-07-20: Jumping genes aka Transposons (economist.com)
  113. 2005-07-19: Semantic Webhead Jim Hendler on the origins of OWL / WOL (w3.org)
  114. 2005-07-18: Computer Scientist Alvaro Fernandes on reading (sciencemag.org)
  115. 2005-07-16: Computer Scientist Dan Connolly on mundane tasks (nature.com)
  116. 2005-07-15: Googler Alan Eustace on working at Google (blogspot.com)
  117. 2005-07-14: Broadcaster Johnny Ball on a world without numbers
  118. 2005-07-13: Semantic webhead Dan Brickley on data integration (rdfweb)
  119. 2005-07-12: Bioinformatician Neil Risch on reaching a consensus (plosjournals.org)
  120. 2005-07-11: Journalists Zeeya Merali and Jim Giles on biological databases (nature.com)
  121. 2005-07-09: Backstage at the British Broadcasting Corporation (bbc.co.uk)
  122. 2005-07-08: Musician and mathematician Tom Lehrer on brotherhood
  123. 2005-07-07: Bioinformatician Karsten Hokamp on pub / web crawling (tcd.ie)
  124. 2005-07-06: Bioinformatician Pierre Lindenbaum on friends in science (urbigene.com)
  125. 2005-07-05: Musicians Jesus Jones on information
  126. 2005-07-04: Journalist John Naughton on writing and engineering (open.ac.uk)
  127. 2005-07-02: Bioinformatician Sean Eddy on interdisciplinary science (plosjournals.org)
  128. 2005-07-01: Google spoofers on Microsoft (searchguild.com)
  129. 2005-06-30: Computer scientists Geert Jan Bex et al on XML schema in the real world (www2005.org)
  130. 2005-06-29: Medical informatician Jeremy Rogers on formal ontologies in medicine (cs.man.ac.uk)
  131. 2005-06-28: Journalist Dylan Jones on the man-machine interface (guardian.co.uk)
  132. 2005-06-23: Politician Tony Benn on the Glastonbury festival spirit (glastonburyfestivals.co.uk)
  133. 2005-06-22: Biologist Steve Jones on stem cells (bbc.co.uk)
  134. 2005-06-21: Big Bard Bill Shakespeare dreaming on a midsummer night (ibiblio.org)
  135. 2005-06-20: Googler Ramanathan Guha on semantic search (www2003.org)
  136. 2005-06-19: Bioinformatician Mark Wilkinson on his BioMOBY baby
  137. 2005-06-18: Neuroscientist Nancy Rothwell on funding (guardian.co.uk)
  138. 2005-06-17: Muscian and Sexy Swede Nina Persson on searching
  139. 2005-06-16: Mathematician Andrew Hodges on the Oxbridge mafia (synth.co.uk)
  140. 2005-06-15: Biochemist David Goodsell on natural exceptions (rcsb.org)
  141. 2005-06-14: Software engineer Michael Kay on choosing new technology (idealliance.org)
  142. 2005-06-13: Novelist David Lodge on conferences
  143. 2005-06-08: Fictitious politician Humphrey Appleby on British foreign policy (bbc.co.uk)
  144. 2005-06-07: Google Inc. compared to other multi-national corporate giants (independent.co.uk)
  145. 2005-06-06: Nobel laureates Francis Crick and James Watson on DNA (nature.com)
  146. 2005-06-05: Philosopher Mary Midgley on Richard Dawkins selfish genes (royalinstitutephilosophy.org)
  147. 2005-06-04: Mahatma Gandhi on winning, eventually (nobelprize.org)
  148. 2005-06-03: A picturesque relic called Oxbridge (economist.com)
  149. 2005-06-02: Supporting The Public Library of Science (plos.org)
  150. 2005-06-01: Biomedical scientist Colin Blakemore on the public understanding of science (guardian.co.uk)
  151. 2005-05-31: Dinesh D'Souza on Biology in the 21st Century
  152. 2005-05-27: Software engineer J. David Eisenberg on saying it with pictures and words (catcode.com)
  153. 2005-05-26: How big are plant genomes (plosbiology.org)
  154. 2005-05-25: Software engineer Tim Bray on argument and debate (tbray.org)
  155. 2005-05-24: Bioinformatician Ian Korf on classification (homepage.mac.com)
  156. 2005-05-23: Mathematician Peter Aczel on the limits of computation (cs.man.ac.uk)
  157. 2005-05-21: Gene ontologists Midori Harris, John Day-Richter and Helen Parkinson on sort of building the semantic web (sofg.org)
  158. 2005-05-20: Philosopher Harry Frankfurt on bullshit
  159. 2005-05-19: Journalist Michael Cross on electronic patient records (guardian.co.uk)
  160. 2005-05-18: The c-value paradox (plosbiology.org)
  161. 2005-05-17: Software engineer Tim Bray on boring boring Java (tbray.org)
  162. 2005-05-16: The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute on Amoebas (sanger.ac.uk)
  163. 2005-05-13: Musician and mathematician Tom Lehrer on singing along
  164. 2005-05-12: Bioinformatician Lincoln Stein on computational biology
  165. 2005-05-11: Broadcaster David Attenborough on surviving millennia (bbc.co.uk)
  166. 2005-05-10: Bioinformaticians Cynthia Gibas and Per Jambeck on proteomics
  167. 2005-05-09: Scientist Oliver Sacks on not enjoying school
  168. 2005-05-06: Scientist Henri Poincaré on fact gathering
  169. 2005-05-05: Sports scientist Clyde Williams on aging (guardian.co.uk)
  170. 2005-05-04: Journalist Polly Toynbee on academia (aut.org.uk)
  171. 2005-05-03: Nobel laureate Biochemist Paul Nurse on lucky science (nobelprize.org)
  172. 2005-05-02: Computer Scientist Philip Wadler on languages (ed.ac.uk)
  173. 2005-04-30: Googlebot controls the earth (ftrain.com)
  174. 2005-04-29: “Hippy-capitalist” and wine-loving Poet Felix Dennis on politics (bbc.co.uk)
  175. 2005-04-28: Big Bard Bill Shakespeare on natures secrets (ibiblio.org)
  176. 2005-04-27: The European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI) on the exceptional nature of biology (ebi.ac.uk)
  177. 2005-04-26: Big Bad Barry Smith on the half-full or half-empty glass question
  178. 2005-04-25: Computer Scientist Alvaro Fernandes on experimental and empirical science vs. computer “science”
  179. 2005-04-24: Miserable Mancunian Musician Steven Patrick Morrissey on the end of the world
  180. 2005-04-23: Musicians The Bee Gees on lighting the fire of imagination
  181. 2005-04-22: Musician Robert Smith on the days of the week
  182. 2005-04-21: Musician Robert Smith on Thursdays
  183. 2005-04-20: Musicians and Beatles John Lennon and Paul McCartney on buying fun
  184. 2005-04-19: Musicians Mick Jagger and Keith Richards on dreaming
  185. 2005-04-18: Musician and Happy Monday Shuan Ryder on life
  186. 2005-04-17: U2 drum machine Larry Mullen Junior on religion and politics in Ireland (time.com)
  187. 2005-04-16: Broadcaster David Attenborough on the excitement of bird watching (newscientist.com)
  188. 2005-04-15: Computer Scientist Phil Wadler on XML (ed.ac.uk)
  189. 2005-04-14: Scientist David Suzuki on climate change and wind power (newscientist.com)
  190. 2005-04-13: Scientist Dov Greenbaum on web services (oxfordjournals.org)
  191. 2005-04-12: Wikipedian Jimmy Wales on Encarta vs. wikipedia (jimmywales.com)
  192. 2005-04-11: The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute on the human genome
  193. 2005-04-09: Beautiful mathematics (economist.com)
  194. 2005-04-08: Campaigner Tim Ireland puts his faith in the British Broadcasting Corporation (bloggerheads.com)
  195. 2005-04-07: Astronomer Bernard Lovell on morality in research (guardian.co.uk)
  196. 2005-04-06: Sun supremo Bill Joy on Apple vs Linux (wired.com)
  197. 2005-04-05: Mathematician Keith Devlin on Lobster biotechnology (mathinstinct.com)
  198. 2005-04-04: Musician Stephen Morris on how does it feel to treat me like you do? (citylife.co.uk)
  199. 2005-04-03: Hacker and Painter Paul Graham on mathematics vs. science (paulgraham.com)
  200. 2005-04-02: Hacker and Painter Paul Graham on the pleasure and pain of writing (paulgraham.com)
  201. 2005-04-01: Bioinformatician Duncan Hull on being stuck in the middleware (cs.man.ac.uk)
  202. 2005-03-31: Chemist Piers Gaffney on Chemical glue (nature.com)
  203. 2005-03-30: Physicist and Nobel laureate Albert Einstein on natural and artificial intelligence
  204. 2005-03-29: Bioinformatician Mark Schreiber on BioJava (biojava.org)
  205. 2005-03-28: Physicist Robert Moog on magical engineering (newscientist.com)
  206. 2005-03-25: Logician Bertrand Russell on wisdom and life
  207. 2005-03-24: Biologist Laurence Hurst on sexual dimorphism
  208. 2005-03-23: Horticultural intercourse (plosbiology.org)
  209. 2005-03-22: Geneticist Martin Bobrow on sex chromosomes (sanger.ac.uk)
  210. 2005-03-21: The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute on sex (sanger.ac.uk)
  211. 2005-03-19: Biologist Hunt Willard on sex chromosomes (nature.com)
  212. 2005-03-18: Biochemist and Absinthe fairy Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen on Forbidden fruit (expasy.org)
  213. 2005-03-17: Fishy beauty: Danio rerio (plosbiology.org)
  214. 2005-03-16: Xeroxer Mark Jackson on snake oil (python.org)
  215. 2005-03-15: Software engineer Håkon Wium Lie ranting against Microsoft (theregister.co.uk)
  216. 2005-03-14: Snake oil and other frauds (wikipedia.org)
  217. 2005-03-11: Software engineer J. David Eisenberg on pot-bellied pigs (xml.com)
  218. 2005-03-10: Semantic webhead Tim Berners-Lee on creativity and invention (w3.org)
  219. 2005-03-09: Logician Renate Schmidt on human logic (cs.man.ac.uk)
  220. 2005-03-08: Microsoftie Andrew Herbert on the 2005 Roger Needham award (bcs.org)
  221. 2005-03-07: Software engineer Kevin Garwood on strategies for mashing-up and integrating data
  222. 2005-03-04: Computer Scientist Carole Goble and Medical informatician Chris Wroe on sweeping statements
  223. 2005-03-03: Novelist Bill Bryson on scientists understanding of the public (newscientist.com)
  224. 2005-03-02: Journalist Michael Malone stating the obvious about the Google generation (wired.com)
  225. 2005-03-01: Tree hugger Thomas Pakenham on the response to his books
  226. 2005-02-28: Biologist Howard Green on motivating creative science (nobelprize.org)
  227. 2005-02-25: Gonzo journalist Hunter Thompson on the pain of writing (wikiquote.org)
  228. 2005-02-24: Not Intel Inside® but Linux inside (apsoft.com)
  229. 2005-02-23: Physicist Kathy Sykes on creative science (open2.net)
  230. 2005-02-22: Why Bad Boys Always Get The Girl (plosbiology.org)
  231. 2005-02-21: Novelist Nick Hornby on good and bad football (nationalfootballmuseum.com)
  232. 2005-02-18: Software engineer Tim Bray on better search engines (tbray.org)
  233. 2005-02-17: Journalists David Weinberger and Doc Searls on old media making mistakes (worldofends.com)
  234. 2005-02-16: Neuroscientist Nancy Rothwell on faith in the brain (guardian.co.uk)
  235. 2005-02-15: Software engineer Eric Raymond on ugly code (linuxjournal.com)
  236. 2005-02-14: Anthropologist Helen Fisher on happiness and reproduction (economist.com)
  237. 2005-02-11: Devonshire Diva and musician Joss Stone on being wrong
  238. 2005-02-10: Hacker and Painter Paul Graham on logic (paulgraham.com)
  239. 2005-02-09: Scientist Kevin Byron on creativity in science and engineering (nesta.org.uk)
  240. 2005-02-08: Autism psychologist Simon Baron-Cohen on the never-ending competition for funding and money in science (guardian.co.uk)
  241. 2005-02-07: Software engineer Paul Fremantle on WS-hype (man.ac.uk)
  242. 2005-02-04: Musician Björk Guðmundsdóttir on logic and humanity
  243. 2005-02-03: Who cares about yet another genome (YAG)? (economist.com)
  244. 2005-02-02: Duplicating and backing-up genomes (plosbiology.org)
  245. 2005-02-01: Jakon Nielsen on the power of the social web (useit.com)
  246. 2005-01-31: Architect of Liverpools fourth grace Will Alsop hitting the North (urbis.org.uk)
  247. 2005-01-28: Nobel laureate John Forbes Nash on the insanity of logicians (newscientist.com)
  248. 2005-01-27: Journalist John Naughton on the webby wonderful wikipedia (guardian.co.uk)
  249. 2005-01-26: Computer Scientist Stuart Russell and Googler Peter Norvig on Artificial Intelligence (berkeley.edu)
  250. 2005-01-25: Ian Jacobs and Norman Walsh on URI / URL / URN (w3.org)
  251. 2005-01-24: Musical mathematician Tom Lehrer on his time at Los Alamos
  252. 2005-01-22: Nobel laureate Joseph Rotblat on working at Los Alamos National Laboratory (guardian.co.uk)
  253. 2005-01-21: Bioinformatician David States on the many definitions of gene (w3.org)
  254. 2005-01-20: Heart surgeon Magdi Yacoub on inspiring the next generation of scientists (royalsoc.ac.uk)
  255. 2005-01-19: Computer Scientist Fred Brooks on precision and correctness (manchester.ac.uk)
  256. 2005-01-18: Software engineer Joel Spolsky on boring boring XML (joelonsoftware.com)
  257. 2005-01-17: Computer Scientist Phil Wadler on Lisp vs XML (ed.ac.uk)
  258. 2005-01-14: Disc Jockey Mark Radcliffe on football and sculpture in Manchester (bbc.co.uk)
  259. 2005-01-13: Mathematician John Truss on Discrete Mathematics
  260. 2005-01-12: Biologist Joel Cohen on Mathematical Biology (plosbiology.org)
  261. 2005-01-11: Software engineer Joel Spolsky on academic computer scientists (joelonsoftware.com)
  262. 2005-01-10: Easy entrepreneur Stelios Haji-Ioannou on business in Europe vs America (economist.com)
  263. 2005-01-07: Software engineer Tim Bray on Web Services (tbray.org)
  264. 2005-01-06: Bioinformatician Vivienne Baillie Gerritsen on artistic biochemistry (expasy.org)
  265. 2005-01-05: Albert Einsteins attempts to unify Physics (economist.com)
  266. 2005-01-04: Biochemist David Goodsell on party enzymes (rcsb.org)