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J.A. Beard
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Hi Jeremy. Interesting choice of PhD. I'm fascinated by all things biology, specifically genetics myself but completely uneducated in the field. I like reading about it though.


Life is inherently interesting, I think. :)
RE: Mehry
Actually, no. None of the stories I've ever written involves microbiology, except, arguably a background reference to a plague in one story.
RE: Viruses being abused
I try to not be "that guy", but sometimes my wife gets annoyed because I can't help but comment on some inaccuracy I see in a TV show about microbiology. :)
Most of what I've written has been urban fantasy/contemporary paranormal or fantasy. However, I did model the advancement system and some academic politics for a group of scholar mages in one of my books somewhat after the PhD system
I guess since I'm so knee-deep in the microbiology otherwise, I don't really feel like writing about it (other than in my scientific publications).

Also will be all but absent from Twitter and FB. :(

Good luck to you and your family, Jeremy. We'll miss you, so hurry back when you can.
I used my smartphone in the hospital to make a tethered wifi network for a Mac laptop and an iPad. In two days of reading stuff on the net, some shopping for electronic parts, etc, but no video, I used about 40MB. My smartphone is strictly an emergency phone kept switched off on my bike, so it is operated on prepay cards (card, singular, actually -- all my previous cellphones were still on the welcome money when they broke, or were lost, or given away...). To use it as a personal wifi hotspot, I bought a 500MB chunk of internet connectivity, good for a month, for €4, about US$5, and, as a I say, used only about 40MB of it. I used some more using the phone as a GPS on my bike, just to see how it works (badly -- that wretched little screen is invisible in sunlight) but when the month ran out there was still about 400MB of the allowance left. I think, if you don't watch streaming video, the usage level for text could be quite low.
I used my smartphone in the hospital to make a tethered wifi network for a Mac laptop and an iPad. In two days of reading stuff on the net, some shopping for electronic parts, etc, but no video, I used about 40MB. My smartphone is strictly an emergency phone kept switched off on my bike, so it is operated on prepay cards (card, singular, actually -- all my previous cellphones were still on the welcome money when they broke, or were lost, or given away...). To use it as a personal wifi hotspot, I bought a 500MB chunk of internet connectivity, good for a month, for €4, about US$5, and, as a I say, used only about 40MB of it. I used some more using the phone as a GPS on my bike, just to see how it works (badly -- that wretched little screen is invisible in sunlight) but when the month ran out there was still about 400MB of the allowance left. I think, if you don't watch streaming video, the usage level for text could be quite low.

I remember the Arpanet, which the military let some favoured businesses use for commercial comms. Back then high tech was a special sort of teletext keyboard and printer, and we kept a secretary on standby to paste up the strips of paper. Monitor? What monitor? As I was doing statistics when I was first inducted into the mysteries, I still remember, every time I look at a table, the special pain of trying to transmit a table comprehensibly on such a linear, zero-graphic "communication" device.

There's a guy in England called Mick who collects old computers and related stuff. I bet even he hasn't heard of this "telecopier".

1964 was a landmark year when the Xerox Corporation introduced (and patented) what many consider to be the first commercialized version of the modern fax machine, under the name (LDX) or Long Distance Xerography. This model was superseded two years later with a unit that would truly set the standard for fax machines for years to come. Up until this point facsimile machines were very expensive and hard to operate. In 1966, Xerox released the Magnafax Telecopier, a smaller, 46-pound facsimile machine. This unit was far easier to operate and could be connected to any standard telephone line. This machine was capable of transmitting a letter-sized document in about six minutes. The first sub-minute, digital fax machine was developed by Dacom, which built on digital data compression technology originally developed at Lockheed for satellite communication.

Jeremy, I hope you soon get things sorted. I'm with Patricia, transition is often hard to live, but the rewards can be magical.
Keep us posted, we miss your wisdom!

Good for you, Jeremy. We hope you'll still find time to writer and even the odd second for us...

Break out the Bubbly!


You must have the gypsy gene that my Mom passed down to my Sister. Somewhere it skipped me - though I do get the travel itch once in a GREAT while. Usually in the fall, when it's cool.
Mom and my sister had it bad - Mom was all over the US in a motorhome for 20 years. Sis goes to Renasseance fairs all over the East and Mid-West.



If I ever go contemporary, I'd be a minimalist.
I just got a treadmill which my landscaping guy put together for me today. It sits in what in anyone else's house would be a guest room. It's huge (the treadmill, not the room). When the thing was all put together, I realized that it's never leaving that room. It wouldn't fit out the door; would have to be dismantled again to move it. I think this will keep me from ever moving out of this house.

I'm with you on the character house. Gets my creative juices flowing. But I love space. I can fill a big home in no time flat...


My most interesting experiences this week have been collecting a record number of eggs, and getting rained out at the Farmer's Market two days in a row.
No - take that back - I sold 4 copies of Impressive Bravado on Kobo...unable to account for that bit of good fortune.

Got a haircut today. The stylist invited me to make the rounds of the bars with her on Tuesday when she "finally" turns 21. During our conversation I mentioned Liz Taylor. She said, "Who's Liz Taylor?" I felt so young when she wanted me to go drinking with her, and sooo old when she asked who Taylor is. It made sense, though. No reason she should know anything about Taylor.


Patricia, I think that's an offer you should not refuse. I mean, who gets invited to go on a pub crawl at our age?
I'm Jeremy Beard. Currently, I'm working on my PhD in microbiology (specifically virology).
Life-long reader in pretty much every genre (from literary to romance), though in the last couple of years I've been bit by the writing bug. Though I'm still unpublished at this time.
Besides my Good Reads account, I also have:
A blog:
http://www.riftwatcher.blogspot.com/
Twitter:
http://twitter.com/#!/jabeard_author
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?...
I look forward to talking with you all.