[Nhcoll-l] Delivery Status Notification (Failure)

David A. Bloom dabblepop at gmail.com
Thu Apr 30 16:44:33 EDT 2015


Great questions Jeff,

Thanks to all who are taking this light-hearted ride on NHCOLL, too.

Deb is Deb Paul.  iDigBio's organizer extraordinaire of training and
workshops.  If you want to learn something or want to teach something you
already know.  Deb is the person with whom your should be talking to get a
webinar set up.

Kevin is Kevin Love.  iDigBio's technology master.  Kevin comes fully
equiped with an encyclopaedic palate for and knowledge of beer and
brewing.  If ever you wanted to know where to go get yourself some top
flight suds.  Kevin is your man.

For those attending SPNHC - consider yourself lucky to find yourself at
same pub with both Deb and Kevin.  Throw Jessica into that mix and you'd be
about as close to SPNHC-Nirvana as one could expect.

And now, back your regularly scheduled programming.....  "Topping off
ethanol pipettes...."

On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 12:54 PM, Jeff Bradley <jebrad at u.washington.edu>
wrote:

>
> Kevin who?
>
> Deb who?
>
> I must admit, I am starting to re-think my decision to skip the SPNHC
> conference this year.
>
> ===========================================
> Jeffrey E. Bradley
> Mammalogy Collection Manager
> Burke Museum
> Box 353010
> University of Washington
> Seattle, WA 98195-3010
> phone: 206.685.7417  fax: 206.685.3039
> jebrad at u.washington.edu
> www.washington.edu/burkemuseum/mammalogy/
> ===========================================
>
>
> On Thu, 30 Apr 2015, David A. Bloom wrote:
>
>  Hey, look!  You may be young and spry and beautiful and flexible and
>> smart and stuff, but that is no reason to rub it in when a
>> has-been makes a mistake.  And you wonder why it'll be just  you and Deb
>> at the pool.  Sheesh!
>>
>> I'll just send it again to the "correct" address, instead of the one from
>> the Pleistocene.
>>
>> I'm quite sure you'll find a way to survive SPNHC.  Just go drinking with
>> Kevin.  He'll be tossing 'em down without much
>> hesitation, I'm sure.
>>
>> How's kids?
>>
>> On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 12:23 PM, Utrup, Jessica <
>> jessica.bazeley at yale.edu> wrote:
>>
>>       Alright, honestly, I just assumed that was your problem (since that
>> is almost always the problem people have). I
>>       just looked into it though, and I can’t push it through since you
>> never actually sent it to me. The ‘user unknown’
>>       is the email address you sent it to. The listserv is
>> nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu (not nhcoll-l at lists.yale.edu) There
>>       is always a possibility that that was the correct address eons
>> again, but I wasn’t even born then.
>>
>>
>>
>>       Is no one coming to SPNHC this year? I swear it’s just going to be
>> me and Deb drinking margaritas by the pool!
>>
>>
>>
>>       Jessica Utrup
>>
>>       Division of Invertebrate Paleontology
>>
>>       Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History
>>
>>       170 Whitney Avenue
>>
>>       New Haven, CT 06510 USA
>>
>>       Jessica.utrup at yale.edu
>>
>>       Main Campus: (203) 432-1722
>>
>>       West Campus: (203) 737-3067
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>       From: David A. Bloom [mailto:dabblepop at gmail.com]
>>       Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2015 3:11 PM
>>       To: Utrup, Jessica
>>       Subject: Re: Delivery Status Notification (Failure)
>>
>>
>>
>>       Hmmm.   Pretty sure this is the email I've always used to post on
>> NHCOLL.  It's where I get the messages, too.  Is
>>       it still listed as dabblela at hotmail?  If so, how do I change that?
>>
>> And, please do push it through.  I promise it's really from me and a real
>> webinar hosted by the real DataONE.
>>
>> No SPNHC for me - unless you got some cash laying around unused.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 12:05 PM, Utrup, Jessica <
>> jessica.bazeley at yale.edu> wrote:
>>
>>       I was trying to figure out what kind of spam this was when I
>> finally recognized your name.
>>
>>       Want to know what thou hast done? Thou hast sent an email to the
>> listserv from your google account (which is
>>       not the account thou had signed up for the listserv with).
>>
>>       I’ll pass it through anyway if you want, or you can resend it from
>> your ‘official’ email. Just let me know.
>>
>>       Coming to SPNHC?
>>
>>
>>
>>       Jessica Utrup
>>
>>       Division of Invertebrate Paleontology
>>
>>       Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History
>>
>>       170 Whitney Avenue
>>
>>       New Haven, CT 06510 USA
>>
>>       Jessica.utrup at yale.edu
>>
>>       Main Campus: (203) 432-1722
>>
>>       West Campus: (203) 737-3067
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>       From: David A. Bloom [mailto:dabblepop at gmail.com]
>>       Sent: Thursday, April 30, 2015 2:59 PM
>>       To: jessica.utrup at yale.edu
>>       Subject: Fwd: Delivery Status Notification (Failure)
>>
>>
>>
>>       Dearest Madam,
>>
>> What hath I done to deserve such treatment?  Oh take pity on my tortured
>> soul that I may post my missive for the
>> benefit and gain of thine community.
>>
>> d
>>
>>
>>
>> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
>> From: Mail Delivery Subsystem <mailer-daemon at googlemail.com>
>> Date: Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 11:49 AM
>> Subject: Delivery Status Notification (Failure)
>> To: dabblepop at gmail.com
>>
>>
>> Delivery to the following recipient failed permanently:
>>
>>      NHCOLL-L at lists.yale.edu
>>
>> Technical details of permanent failure:
>> Google tried to deliver your message, but it was rejected by the server
>> for the recipient domain lists.yale.edu by
>> quickgr.its.yale.edu. [130.132.50.13].
>>
>> The error that the other server returned was:
>> 550 5.1.1 <NHCOLL-L at lists.yale.edu>... User unknown
>>
>>
>> ----- Original message -----
>>
>> DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed;
>>         d=gmail.com; s=20120113;
>>         h=mime-version:from:date:message-id:subject:to:content-type;
>>         bh=lOPdnnjCFfBqEFMPrGj2rltoGWs/xgZCHX2qd3kCDsU=;
>>
>> b=xFRK9vAwi540hwKzumHp7yzn5FYj0a73/GdpRX4dMGfjbgKWC9LHcykFNO5TphsGBa
>>
>>  s32h+QLHIFfwtlqyIsm6ItbKX3KrbmCSWhrISXzTEHAyReKF9UtHFag0EmreBMu7FveH
>>
>>  CoynVuxTSzhHLob3Z8hcDoPpWBagosrfnYAof+pOTdd23xF0dmsyi91AjCCqQAcsf1X8
>>
>>  pv6y5LoFCic9MsOybfQIA/KOrdyB20+ZlNB/7oJeK9DA6IXs5bLMrZdDAhYbQB7iLjv3
>>
>>  p/Lb1hGjbK2fi40DZQZjbWmuToK8xgBfv3ItM6sq/jmvcMc065BnktAeH8YYQAuEmon+
>>          I63A==
>> X-Received: by 10.60.63.244 with SMTP id j20mr4721215oes.12.1430419752648;
>>  Thu, 30 Apr 2015 11:49:12 -0700 (PDT)
>> MIME-Version: 1.0
>> Received: by 10.76.34.230 with HTTP; Thu, 30 Apr 2015 11:48:52 -0700 (PDT)
>> From: "David A. Bloom" <dabblepop at gmail.com>
>> Date: Thu, 30 Apr 2015 11:48:52 -0700
>> Message-ID: <CABJvOP=
>> LEi_9Qee7BurKVwNy9p+y3WhmzRUiJUoOGjJs2RReaQ at mail.gmail.com>
>> Subject: DataONE Webinar - Provenance and DataONE: Facilitating
>> Reproducible Science
>> To: NHCOLL-L at lists.yale.edu
>> Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=001a11c252923c85c80514f58d7f
>>
>> Hello All,
>>
>> Please join us for the last DataONE webinar until the Fall season
>> "Provenance and DataONE: Facilitating Reproducible Science" is now open
>> for
>> registration.
>>
>>
>> *Tuesday May 12th9 am Pacific / 10 am Mountain / 11am Central / 12 noon
>> Eastern*
>>
>> Please go to https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__www.dataone.org_upcoming-2Dwebinar&d=AwIFaQ&c=-dg2m7zWuuDZ0MUcV7Sdqw&r=CLFZJ3fvGSmDp7xK1dNZfh6uGV_h-8NVlo3fXNoRNzI&m=7bWbgEkTXLcwKcGoB5UXQS6siGE3zriYKlqVg6iu2NU&s=_Yxj_fITRagU1RVAU6kjMVe5J9cKgS-cs6Cb8TIAABw&e=  for full details
>> (abstract below)
>>
>> *Provenance and DataONE: Facilitating Reproducible Science*
>>
>> Bertram Ludäscher, Chris Jones, Lauren Walker
>>
>> Provenance is a form of metadata that describes the lineage and processing
>> history of data and knowledge artifacts and plays an important role in
>> many
>> scientific applications and use cases. For example, an ecologist might
>> want
>> to combine different datasets for a study, but needs to know how the
>> candidate datasets were derived. A climate scientist might need to
>> document
>> the processing history of climate model outputs to facilitate
>> reproducibility. A natural history collection manager might want to run
>> automated data curation tools on specimen collection data, but has to
>> understand the proposed “repairs” before executing them. In all these and
>> many other cases like these, provenance information plays a crucial role.
>> In this webinar, we will first give an overview of the different types of
>> provenance information and how they can be used, e.g., to facilitate
>> reproducible science.
>> We will show how a DataONE user can search and navigate provenance
>> information using the new UI currently under development in DataONE. After
>> this user-oriented view on provenance, we finally take a look “behind the
>> scenes” of the DataONE provenance technologies and present plans for
>> future
>> developments.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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