7, now 8 comments on what is a superb lecture. Wow. I have learned so much from this. She had put alot of effort in this talk, and her appreciation to her audience is genuine. What a great age we live in to have this at our finger tips.
of all the professional lectures in my life, this is the best of them all. thanks to this brilliant lecturer, the uploader and youtube(allows replays on the difficult segments).
High school students get this kind of lecture and me at 3rd year in uni i have to content myself with disorganised thoughts of my 3rd category teachers.
Great talk. Just one correction. At 1:20:05: The cost for one base in 1990 was 10 dollars, so a whole genome cost over 30 billion dollars (not 10 million dollars). Today we are at 3,000 dollars for a whole genome, as can be seen on the slide.
Plz explain why sometimes a calico cat is male. 60 yrs ago, professors made the same untrue claim as u have. I even hauled the cat 500 miles back to my old school, JIC (just in case) my old professor said show me.
I think the most common cause (but still very rare) is when a male cat has two X chromosomes (XXY). Such cats are sterile - do you happen to know if yours was?
@@rogerparker3422 thx 4 ur reply. No tests were conducted. Actually I have witnessed two male calicos. One was a barn cat Tom when I was a kid, & my Dad said he was a rare cat. The second calico Tom which I took back to the Vet Quad @ ISU, belonged to my neighbor. Cat died while I was out of country. Likely ur on correct genetic path. I'm waiting 4 a quantum jump in genetics which will answer all our old conundrums. GL n ur studies.
7, now 8 comments on what is a superb lecture. Wow. I have learned so much from this. She had put alot of effort in this talk, and her appreciation to her audience is genuine. What a great age we live in to have this at our finger tips.
of all the professional lectures in my life, this is the best of them all. thanks to this brilliant lecturer, the uploader and youtube(allows replays on the difficult segments).
Best one for me is my dog
God bless you and thank you. I really enjoyed your lecture and how you explained it.
High school students get this kind of lecture and me at 3rd year in uni i have to content myself with disorganised thoughts of my 3rd category teachers.
Great talk. Just one correction. At 1:20:05: The cost for one base in 1990 was 10 dollars, so a whole genome cost over 30 billion dollars (not 10 million dollars). Today we are at 3,000 dollars for a whole genome, as can be seen on the slide.
beautyful
Plz explain why sometimes a calico cat is male. 60 yrs ago, professors made the same untrue claim as u have. I even hauled the cat 500 miles back to my old school, JIC (just in case) my old professor said show me.
I think the most common cause (but still very rare) is when a male cat has two X chromosomes (XXY). Such cats are sterile - do you happen to know if yours was?
@@rogerparker3422 thx 4 ur reply.
No tests were conducted. Actually I have witnessed two male calicos. One was a barn cat Tom when I was a kid, & my Dad said he was a rare cat. The second calico Tom which I took back to the Vet Quad @ ISU, belonged to my neighbor. Cat died while I was out of country. Likely ur on correct genetic path. I'm waiting 4 a quantum jump in genetics which will answer all our old conundrums. GL n ur studies.