
Wednesday, 3/21
Doors at 7:30, show at 8
Rickshaw Stop, 155 Fell Street @Van Ness
$8
All ages
Facebook Event Page
Feeling anxious, overwhelmed, and inattentive? Living in fear of a squid invasion? Considering wealth redistribution by cutlass and cannon? Then this is the Nerd Nite for you! So come on down, grab a beer, nod your head to the beats, and listen to these three awesome presentations. Be there and be square!
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“The mindful brain: If the Buddha was a neuroscientist” by Philippe Goldin, Ph. D.
There is an evolving contemplative neuroscience that is delineating how we transform ourselves from anxious, overwhelmed, and inattentive creatures to beings that can develop laser-beam attention, refined emotion regulation skills, and a genuine motivation to care for others. And it is all happening in the brain, body, and society. This talk will provide a glimpse into the cutting-edge field of contemplative science and how new neuroimaging research is being applied at Google, in mental health clinics, and beyond!
Philippe Goldin, Ph.D. spent 6 years in India and Nepal studying various languages, Buddhist philosophy and debate at Namgyal Monastery and the Dialectic Monastic Institute, and serving as an interpreter for various Tibetan Buddhist lamas. He then returned to the U.S. to complete a Ph.D. in Psychology at Rutgers University where he trained as a clinical psychologist and neuroscientist. He is currently a research scientist and directs the Clinically Applied Affective Neuroscience group in the Department of Psychology at Stanford University (http://caan.stanford.edu/index.html).
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“Making Squid Babies: Investigations of an Invertebrate Invasion” by Danna Staaf
Humboldt squid sporadically show up en masse in California, prompting media outlets to freak out about a squid invasion. Is it all hype, or is there cause for alarm? Will Humboldt squid move into California for good, devour all our fish, then cover our beaches with their rotting carcasses? Danna will offer answers and insight from her experience as a mad scientist–years spent mixing squid eggs and sperm in petri dishes to create baby squid for experimentation.
Danna Staaf is a marine biologist, a science writer, a novelist, an artist, and an educator. She helped found the outreach program Squids4Kids, illustrated The Game of Science, and blogs for Science 2.0 and KQED QUEST. She got a BA in Creative Studies from UC Santa Barbara and a PhD in Baby Squid from Stanford, and lives in San Jose with her husband and two cats.
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“Noblemen Gone Wrong: Piracy and the Democratic Society” by Brittany Stonesifer
Swashbucklers and buccaneers have been remembered by Hollywood for their vicious skirmishes on the briny deep and for legends of jewel-laden shipwrecks, but pirates have been lesser known for their role in influencing contemporary politics. From the (relative) egalitarianism and racial diversity of Golden Era privateers to the creation of a blueprint for modern anti-terrorism law, the world of pillaging sea rovers and scurvy corsairs has been a hotbed for developments and failures in the democratic experiment. This talk will give pirates their proper spotlight as celebrities of political change in the tumultuous wave of globalization.
Captain Morgan Bonney (aka Brittany Stonesifer) is a law student in San Francisco, focusing in international human rights and Constitutional law. Hailing from the Aloha State, Brittany has spent years adding to her already sizable nerdery by making herself an amateur pirate specialist. She also makes a mean crème brulee.
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Plus: DJ Alpha Bravo selects vinyl cuts to illuminate our presenters’ themes. Alpha Bravo is VP of left-field pop label, Radio Khartoum, and was one of the forces behind legendary SF pop-club nights, Anisette and Schokolade.
King tides foretelling global warming’s global flooding! Grown-up Lego enthusiasts and the bricks they love! The history of sex science and teledildonics! All these lectures and the pleasures of drink, music, and nerd fellowship await you at this month’s Nerd Nite SF. Be there and be square!
Wednesday, 2/15
Doors at 7:30, show at 8
Rickshaw Stop, 155 Fell Street @Van Ness
$8
All ages
FB Event Page
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“Strange Waters: King Tides + Sea Level Rise, Rollin’ up to a Coast Near You” by Taylor Nairn
Let’s set aside for a moment whether one “believes” in dinosaurs, yetis, 2Pac still recording music – or climate change. The photographs speak for themselves. The California King Tide Initiative will showcase pics from you – yes, you provided the evidence! – of seasonal king tides (which are higher-than-normal high tides) to demonstrate what rising sea levels could look like along our coast. From Sutro Baths to Jack London Square, the Embarcadero to Sausalito, Taylor Nairn will discuss the community-based initiative to visualize the impact of rising waters, and win hearts and minds in the process.
Taylor Nairn works for the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary. She calls her project partners The Sea Level Rise Sisters, which was cute only once.
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“LEGO® and Grown-Ups: Instructions Not Included” by Brendan Mauro
Remember raking through piles of bricks, searching for the precisely sized piece of injection-molded plastic to finish your masterpiece? The telltale rattle of a new set wrapped and under the Christmas tree? The click and snap and smooth perfection of two bits fitting together? For the subculture of grown-up Lego enthusiasts, these pleasures aren’t just nostalgia. Brendan Mauro presents an insider’s view on the quirks, talents, and habits of the adult Lego community, what it’s like being the guy in the Lego store who’s outlived the recommended ages on all the boxes, and what makes the brick – still considered a children’s toy by most – so compelling as a hobby and artistic medium.
Brendan is lead artist at an independent game developer in San Francisco. He started playing with Lego bricks when he was five and never really stopped.
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“The Politics, History, and Future of Physiological Sex Science” by Ned Mayhem
This talk will argue that rigorous and candid science about sex is important for individual freedom and social justice, and that it the current system of academic science is failing in this distressingly controversial field. The most important experiments are the least likely to be funded or published in the current system. The tools necessary to do these experiments are becoming increasingly accessible and robust, so it is now possible for an independent scientific community to do cutting edge research. To give context to this perspective, I will give a brief and selective overview of the history of sex science in the modern system of academic science. I will then present the PSIgasm devices, created by myself and my partner Maggie Mayhem to measure physiological sexual response quickly and robustly at home.
Ned Mayhem is a queer scientist and pornographer who splits his time between quantum physics research and on-camera sex acts. Ned created the software that runs Meet The Mayhems (http://MeetTheMayhems.com/), a couples porn site featuring Ned and his partner Maggie Mayhem. He is now working to make this software available to other performers and sex workers interested in any kind of online media or product sales. Ned and Maggie also run the PSIgasm Project, an open source independent science project which creates devices to measure arousal and orgasm in the body directly.
Plus: DJ Alpha Bravo selects vinyl cuts to illuminate our presenters’ themes. Alpha Bravo is VP of left-field pop label, Radio Khartoum, and was one of the forces behind legendary SF pop-club nights, Anisette and Schokolade.
Wednesday, 1/18
Doors at 7:30, show at 8
Rickshaw Stop, 155 Fell Street @Van Ness
$8
All ages
Mad science turns its attention to ice cream making! A 19th-century suburb of SF made out of streetcars! Artificial development of antibodies – which will maybe help me get over this @*($% cold! But, wait, there’s more! We’re also celebrating the first issue of Nerd Nite: the Magazine! So come on down for some drinks, beats, lectures, and a free copy of our first issue. Be there and be square!
NERD NITE: THE MAGAZINE
Holy heck, we have a magazine, peoples. It features the best of the best from Nerd Nites around the world, coupled with gorgeous photos and infographics. The first issue covers: the history and future of the late Kim Jong-il’s favorite attire, the jumpsuit; an in-depth look at the romance novel industry; a cephalopod sex advice column written by Nerd Nite SF alum, Rich Ross, and more! We’re giving away FREE copies at this month’s Nerd Nite.
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“Closer to the Cow: Robyn’s Adventures in Ice Cream” by Robyn Sue Fisher and Cory Bloom
After graduating from Stanford Business School in 2007, Robyn Sue Fisher attended ice cream school (which is even more fun than it sounds) at Penn State University, where she met cows that told her they were really, really disappointed with how their milk was being churned into icy, way-too-sugary ice cream that was loaded with preservatives. She decided to perfect the ice cream freezing process using liquid nitrogen, so she spent a few years in her super top-secret underground workshop building “Kelvin,” her patented ice cream making machine. In late 2009, she began wheeling Kelvin around the streets of San Francisco atop a Radio Flyer wagon, powered with a homemade battery pack, equipped with off-road wagon wheels, and armed with Twitter and a dewar of LN2. She’s now the proud owner of the first San Francisco made-to-order scoop shop, which is in nearby Hayes Valley.
Robyn will talk about her invention process, entrepreneurial passions, and New Year’s Resolution to make new, old fashioned ice cream for each and every resident of San Francisco. She will be joined by “The Kelvin Doctor,” Cory Bloome, the engineer responsible for bringing the next generation of Kelvins to life.
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“Carville-by-the-Sea: San Francisco’s Streetcar Suburb” by Woody LaBounty and David Gallagher
“Carville-by-the-Sea,” one of the quirkiest and least-remembered communities in San Francisco’s history, flowered as an 1890s beach retreat on the sand dunes south of Golden Gate Park. Prominent bohemians, judges, lady bicyclists, and sand-bath-prescribing physicians transformed old transit cars into cottages and clubhouses, mansions and churches. See what creative carpenters of a century ago could make with obsolete horsecars, cable cars, and trolley cars. Famous capitalists, writers, painters, and journalists visited Carville to work, play, and enjoy what was touted as the “oddest village in the world.”
Woody LaBounty and David Gallagher are the founders of the Western Neighborhoods Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the history of western San Francisco (www.outsidelands.org). Rather than get history degrees, the two have relied on wearing old-timey hats to appear credible.
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“Antibody Engineering (or at least something close)” by Sai Duriseti
Do you get sick? Yes? Well, me, too. Now that we’ve cleared that up, let’s talk about those little guys that help you fight off disease. That’s right, I’m talking about antibodies; they rock. They rock so hard that, in fact, there is a whole scientific field dedicated to the artificial development of antibodies to fight disease. We call this field: antibody engineering. Men have spent fortunes, leveraged their homes, and sold their spouses in order to bankroll efforts to find an antibody-based magic bullet for diseases. As I’ll explain to you, however, this task is much harder than it seems. We ingenious humans, however, have found some PAR codes (shame on you if you know what those are) for this seemingly insurmountable task. We’ll talk about antibodies and the current status of this awesome field.
Sai is a PhD student at UCSF. He is a gentleman, a scholar, and a troublemaker.
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Plus: DJ Alpha Bravo selects vinyl cuts to illuminate our presenters’ themes. Alpha Bravo is VP of left-field pop label, Radio Khartoum, and was one of the forces behind legendary SF pop-club nights, Anisette and Schokolade.

Wednesday, 12/21
Doors at 7:30, show at 8
Rickshaw Stop, 155 Fell Street @ Van Ness
$8
All ages
Facebook Event Page
Hey there, boys and girls! Uh, actually, as you will learn in Erica’s talk about the biology behind your junk, the phrase “boys and girls” is a lot more complex than you think. We’ll also hear from an expert on the future of medicine, and another surprise speaker! I think your brain will atrophy over Winter Break if you don’t exercise it, so you should come on down to meet, mingle, drink, and learn with your fellow nerds. Be there and be square!
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“Genes, gonads, and genitals: the miracle of human sex differentiation” by Erica Li
Rosie is a popular, pretty 17 year old young lady who wants to become a whale biologist. She has always been healthy, is active at sports, and is a graceful ballet dancer. Then she comes to the doctor with her Mom because she still doesn’t have her period! Rosie is starting to feel very different from her friends, which is causing her quite a bit of distress. When the doctor examines Rosie and does some tests, she discovers that Rosie is a healthy young lady in every way except she has no uterus and her blood testosterone level is very high. Karyotype came back and reveals that her sex chromosomes are XY. How can this be? What should the doctor tell Rosie?
This talk will go over some basics of the very complex and fascinating topic of human sex differentiation.
Erica Li is a senior medical student from UC Davis, currently doing a one-year research fellowship on faith-based organizations’ potential role in preventing teen relationship abuse. She is currently interviewing all over the country for a residency position in pediatrics. A classical pianist, she is into music by composers ranging from Franz Schubert to Stephen Sondheim, and she thinks digital planetariums are the coolest things in the world.
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“Adam’s Apple – Imagining our grandchildren’s healthcare” by Adam Bristol, PhD
Todays’ news headlines about the state of healthcare are pretty depressing. With aging baby boomers, we have rising “superbugs”, diabetes, and Alzheimer’s disease, all within an inefficient healthcare system that gets more expensive every year. What will our poor grandchildren ever do? Well, it’s been ten years since the sequencing of the human genome and medicine is starting to look a whole lot better. Buckle up and join biotech investor Adam Bristol for a ride into a future of medicine. Tell your grandkids you heard about personalized medicine, predictive bioinformatics and medtech’s great rebirth way back in 2011.
Adam Bristol did his PhD at Yale and post-doc at Stanford Med School in Neurobiology. He recently co-founded Aquilo Capital, a life sciences investment fund so his job really boils down to daydreaming about great ideas in medicine.
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And a third speaker to be announced!
Plus: DJ Alpha Bravo selects vinyl cuts to illuminate our presenters’ themes. Alpha Bravo is VP of left-field pop label, Radio Khartoum, and was one of the forces behind legendary SF pop-club nights, Anisette and Schokolade.
Wednesday, 11/16
Doors at 7:30pm, show at 8pm
Rickshaw Stop
155 Fell St. @ Van Ness
San Francisco, CA
Cover: $8
Facebook Event
Come to the Rickshaw Stop for more nerdy lectures and beers! This month, we have lots for you to learn and laugh about. We’re featuring speakers on: electric vehicles! And one solution to the chicken/egg dilemma of EV infrastructure. Skeeball! The history, the sport, the beer-drinking. Concentrated solar power! No, not frying poor little ants with a magnifying glass, this is a potentially powerful renewable energy solution. And we have a guest MC – the entertaining Jennifer Tharp. So join us for some learning with beer, nerd-mingling, and DJ Alpha Bravo’s tunes. Be there and be square for only $8!
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“Electric Vehicle Infrastructure: The Cure for Range Anxiety” by Obrie Hostetter
Do you ever have anxiety about not quite getting “there”? Stressed over the embarrassment of falling short? Worried about the size of your battery? Premature capacity discharge? If so, talk to your Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Director about range anxiety. There is help in the form of EV charging stations. Side effects may include a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, economic stimulus, energy security, and an increase in smugness.
Obrie Hostetter has an MBA in Sustainability Management and is the Northern California EV Infrastructure Director for 350Green, LLC (http://350green.com/). That means juggling the demands of municipalities, businesses, and consumers to make EVs viable. She also spent two years sailing around the world because why the hell not, that’s why.
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“Skeeball 101 – Roll Like a Champion” by Joey the Cat & Kristian Hansen
We’ve all seen the movie montages where the hero trains under a grueling regimen, suffers setbacks, but eventually triumphs to becomes a champion, like in Rocky or the Karate Kid. For Joey the Cat, it was 10,000 hours of practice, persistence, and Pabst Blue Ribbon to become Brewskie-Ball National Champion. In this talk, you’ll learn how skeeball was originally a “strongman’s” game, about its rise as a modern competitive bar sport, to how to become a champion, and more! All from one of the legends of the game.
Joey the Cat (joeythecat.com) is a competitive Skeeball player in the San Francisco Brewskee-Ball league and an avid collector of classic Skeeball machines. He’s been interviewed by NPR, The New York Times, the Bold Italic, and more.
Kristian (http://kristian.tumblr.com), aka Black Devil, is an urban explorer, technologist, and designer based in San Francisco and is currently working on a dissertation surrounding the Global History of Skeeball. He has been featured on Gawker and The Business Insider.
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“Concentrated Solar Power: Renewable Energy for the 21st Century or a Complicated Way to Boil Water?” by Joe Cordaro
Joe Cordaro needs a PhD in chemistry, 3 years of post-doc, and Sandia National Labs to boil water. OK, it’s not just boiling water – it’s a fancy way of boiling water and it could be the energy source of the future. In this talk, Joe will explain how engineers and scientists are inventing new ways to concentrate solar power to boil water like it’s never been boiled before, and possibly changing the renewable energy landscape.
Joe Cordaro is one of the few people who can spell “Albuquerque” correctly without spellcheck, since he was born there. He’s a synthetic chemist who spends half his working time at Sandia National Labs researching new materials for concentrated solar energy, the other half he’d have to kill you if he told you about it. Outside of chemistry, Joe enjoys reading about economics and politics so he can get upset over the current funding levels science receives in our country.
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Plus: DJ Alpha Bravo selects vinyl cuts to illuminate our presenters’ themes. Alpha Bravo is VP of left-field pop label, Radio Khartoum, and was one of the forces behind legendary SF pop-club nights, Anisette and Schokolade. You can follow his live-tweeted set list at @djalphabravo
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sf.nerdnite.com
Wednesday, 10/19
Doors at 7:30, show at 8
Rickshaw Stop, 155 Fell Street @Van Ness
$8
All ages
Facebook event
Nerd Nite SF guarantees to give you the creeps during this, the creepiest month of the year, as our speakers expound on the creeping, self-enhancing diversity enabled by open source and data, what’s creeping into the brains of cat ladies, and how the terrible–and terribly good–B-horror movie creeps up and down the subject of science. (And if the word “creep” doesn’t look weird to you by now, we don’t know what will.) Join Bart, Lucy, and our special co-host, zombie brain expert Bradley Voytek, creep up to the Rickshaw’s bar, mingle with your fellow nerds, and allow the slow creep of knowledge and Alpha Bravo’s music to invade your brain. Be there and be creepy, um, square!
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“Sharing Is Caring: How Open Source and Open Data Are Changing the World” by Curtis Chambers
Open-source software has profoundly changed the world and the way we interact with it. Systems from the largest Fortune 500 companies to the leanest startups owe their code foundations to open software like Linux and Apache. And while companies once believed that proprietary software was the only way to succeed, they now know that collaboration breeds innovation. Curtis Chambers will show how freely accessible software liberates companies from constantly reinventing the digital wheel, and how open source and open data are spreading beyond Silicon Valley to other realms. Release the data and put the world to work!
Curtis is the engineering manager at www.uber.com, where he spends his days building the future of transportation using open source and open data (specifically node.js and MongoDB). Prior to that, he angered the corporate world at www.expensify.com, and for the two decades prior to that he was a huge computer nerd.
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“Creepy KOFY Science from the B-Movie Black Lagoon” by Scott Weitze
Giant bats and rubber masks! Plot holes and low production values! Resurrected monsters and red dye #5! Every Saturday night Creepy KOFY Movie Time brings San Francisco the best of the worst horror movies from the last 50 years. But is drinking jaguar blood really a good idea? Could zombies exist? Aren’t we all just a little bit werewolf? And what’s the biology behind centuries of vampire legends? Creepy KOFY TV Scientist Scott Weitze will talk about what B-horror movies get wrong (and sometimes right) about science.
Scott appears as the science expert on Creepy KOFY Movie Time, effectively contradicting any credibility for his work on sustainable biotechnology instrumentation and teaching genetics at SFSU. He also serves as a cautionary tale on the dangers of drinking bourbon right before a segment.
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“Leashed to Your Pussy: Toxoplasma gondii and Mind Control” by Patrick House
Toxoplasma gondii, a tiny single-celled parasite, uses the cat as its ultimate host and spends its life needing to get from one pussy to the next. Sans legs of its own, it infects small rodent brains and makes them attracted to their feline predators–a veritable intermediate host taxi service. Alarmingly for Indeterminists, Toxoplasma is also lying dormant in the brains of over two billion humans. What it does in the brains of mice and men is still largely unknown, but there are clues that it might be changing human behaviors, too. Join us as we travel from ancient Egypt, to orphanages in 1950’s France, to the amygdalae of middle-aged Russian mistresses and unravel the story of one of the most successful and terrifying challenges to free will humanity has ever faced.
Patrick is getting a Ph.D. in neuroscience at Stanford, studying Toxoplasma gondii infection and the brain. But he has already peaked, having won The New Yorker‘s Cartoon Caption Contest a few years ago. Since then he has had trouble living up to the expectation of being witty, which he is not.
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Plus: DJ Alpha Bravo selects vinyl cuts to illuminate our presenters’ themes. Alpha Bravo is VP of left-field pop label, Radio Khartoum, and was one of the forces behind legendary SF pop-club nights, Anisette and Schokolade.