My 6372 Likes & Retweets

A curated list of liked, bookmarked, and retweeted posts from Twitter.


The deepest advances in science often come from trying to solve very specific problems. E.g.: Entropy law: getting more work out of heat engines Relativity: reconciling Newton's laws with Maxwell's equations Quantum mechanics: explaining the spectrum of hydrogen (1/2)

Notting Hill is one of my favorite neighborhoods in London because of its unique spatial layout Instead of large private backyards, the homes and apartments back up to large private communal gardens shared by the entire block https://t.co/7wA5KAvBSl

➡Gecko is an open source tool to help you find the most relevant papers to your research and give you a more complete sense of the research landscape. 🔗https://t.co/h5fR4eQZAT #Bioinformatics #neuroscience #RStats #AcademicTwitter #postdoc #OpenAccess #bibliometrics #SNA https://t.co/0Frdk61mXC

Master thread of product & brand photo styles to elevate your ad campaigns and websites: Bookmark this! https://t.co/Ef0bRmK4dR

Web3 mass adoption is done one DApp at a time. https://t.co/uOWBeadg5Q

1/ SCIENCE will soon also be “done” by AI🧪🔬 HOW? AI will find correlations (some spurious, some provocative) in old + new scientific publications from text + data sources––& generate hypotheses (some absurd, some provocative) Like DALL-E prompts––but in reverse…So…

BREAKING: White House issues new policy that will require, by 2026, all federally-funded research results to be freely available to public without delay, ending longstanding ability of journals to paywall results for up to 1 year. Coverage coming on @ScienceInsider. https://t.co/HijntoZFDN

Hot Take: The $350M investment in Adam Neuman's new company is the best VC bet of this decade A Thread: https://t.co/OrM9wQ9psJ

I collected a list of resources for my future doctoral students @UniFAU at the @CogCoVi lab - on 1st of October, my first 3 doctoral students will start their adventures: here is the collection of all those resources that are hopefully helpful and might also help others? 1/n https://t.co/pfMsbbBZo8

I do not have “magical” discipline and focusing ability — I struggle with distractions like everyone else. Often it is better to just remove the option to distract yourself instead of fighting he urges. When I decided to get serious about my AI work, I made a few changes: \

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Evolution is amazing; this chart shows how metabolism happens. It is also amazing that we managed to figure all this out in one lifetime. (And unsurprising that adjusting these mechanisms is hard) High quality image: https://t.co/zrv5oSihde The original: https://t.co/CjfYyPVqut https://t.co/rXMdhW7FjE

Found a Linkedin viral post generator and it's already my favorite part of the week lol https://t.co/4AOHlgZOsC https://t.co/Jz4zch4y1F

Imagine a Howard Hughes biopic starring Jim Carrey, or a James Dean drama with a young Leonardo DiCaprio playing the Hollywood icon. Here are 20 of the best movies never made. https://t.co/KAHV7hxV7n https://t.co/dAyTnJUTX2

too academic for industry, too industrial for academia, just in time to work in machine learning engineering

Whenever I teach academic writing I tell my students a couple of things I strongly believe are fundamental. First, to learn how to write, you need to read. Second, to learn how to write well you need to read folks who write well, whose prose is clear, and whose style you like.

This paper makes me disappointed in my fellow academics. Cute or funny paper titles are linked with lower citation counts in top journals, though they boost citations in lower-tier journals, perhaps by helping papers stand out more (the study was in the field of Communications) https://t.co/z1R9opbE3f

John Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie and Henry Ford. All 3 were beaten by 1 man in the productivity revolution. Frederick Winslow Taylor. Taylor's 4-step framework to 50x productivity:

We teach data journalism, but we're also always learning. Every week we document things we think could help others learn. Here are 10 short pieces that may help you improve your data journalism & visualisation:

The Ladders of Wealth Creation breaks an insanely complicated topic of building wealth into the component parts and skills to give you a roadmap of what to do first. Look at this graphic, then we’ll break down each step. https://t.co/IMzGq7J2Cw

5 Tips To Use Twitter With Intention (Instead Of Doomscrolling): https://t.co/OK2F3G9FFR

Alexander Graham Bell tried to sell his telephone patent for $100K. The telegraph company said this... And the rest is history. (1876) https://t.co/eeSu7CMMyJ

Deep Learning replaced linear models because it automated feature engineering by trying thousands of possible nonlinearities and learning which ones worked. Similarly, transformers are replacing task-specific NN architectures by learning how to combine the input signals. 1/

Being a Mom is just as important as any career

"Loving books is not why people are supposed to become English professors, and it hasn’t been for a long time." https://t.co/3fHUI05jxB

Greatest textbooks of all time (1/2): Feynman, "The Feynman Lectures on Physics" Pauling, "General Chemistry" Samuelson, "Economics" Russell, "A History of Western Philosophy" Knuth, "The Art of Computer Programming"

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"Voyage through Time" is my first artpiece using #stablediffusion and I am blown away with the possibilities... We're crossing a threshold where generative AI is no longer just about novel aesthetics, but evolving into an amazing tool to build powerful, human-centered narratives https://t.co/9suZeDyY8Q

Pengabdi Scopus Teror Jurnal Sepanjang Masa https://t.co/F7eLaRQSGj https://t.co/krZ7avO6OH

"Language is courage: the ability to conceive a thought, to speak it, and by doing so to make it true." -Salman Rushdie, 'The Satanic Verses'


This list is automatically updated weekly (latest: 7 Jul 2026).