Scholar

John L. Provis

H-index: 110
Engineering 61%
Materials science 30%
bearlypolitics.co.uk
So, the plan is to cut English, the arts, and sociology - the degrees that actually study culture - while on another part of your platform claiming to “defend” British culture.

It’s performance nationalism with a reading age of seven.
Badenoch: Curb students taking 'rip-off' degrees such as English
The performing arts, sociology and anthropology are among the subjects the Conservatives would like to cut

Reposted by: John L. Provis

mcsweeneys.net
"I support things like civil rights, access to education, and medical research. You could never imagine me sitting in the front row at the inauguration of a far-right ruler who promised to destroy those things."
Hi, I’m an Early 2010s Tech CEO
I wear the same T-shirt every day, and I have a relatably unkempt haircut. I remind you of the smart kids from high school, so I give you hope that...
buff.ly
johnprovis.bsky.social
Gee Australia must be glad to have spent so much money (and burnt so many other relationships) in support of AUKUS, when our "closest friends" do this...

Reposted by: John L. Provis

bladeofthes.bsky.social
The Ghost of Suppressed Protests Past.
johnprovis.bsky.social
I'd also be very surprised if it were impossible - at least in a technical sense. Whether unwillingness to act makes it impossible in practice may be another question entirely, though...
johnprovis.bsky.social
I'd fully support this concept.
Actually I've tried in the past to get a journal to do exactly this - but apparently "the setup of the journal's website system" wouldn't let it happen. I will leave the #academicsky community to ponder whether this is due to a lack of capability, or a lack of will..
johnprovis.bsky.social
Other than the tedious tone of "USA good, Europe bad", this article misses the key point: we mainly don't have "robotaxis" here because we don't want hundreds of them bumbling around the place like the idiotic car equivalent of a Roomba..

www.economist.com/europe/2025/...
Robotaxis will be the Sputnik Moment for a declining Europe
A slow-motion car crash on Europe’s roads
www.economist.com

Reposted by: John L. Provis

mcsweeneys.net
"In this bedroom are fourteen light switches. Ten of them do nothing. One turns on the television. One sounds an alarm in the home of your grouchy next-door neighbor who hates Americans and will let his French bulldog poop on your doorstep. Can you choose the right one in time?"
Escape Room Challenge: Your European Airbnb
Welcome to this tiny fifth-floor Airbnb, your home for the next four days in a major European city. Can you escape without incurring additional fee...
buff.ly
johnprovis.bsky.social
Very well put!

The same is true for an engineering degree, with the added consequences that the roof of the restaurant may also fall down on your head while you're in it.
komaniecki.bsky.social
Trying to figure out a way to impress upon my students that using AI to skip course work in order to get a music degree is like ordering food at a restaurant and immediately throwing it out the window in order to get to pay the check

Reposted by: John L. Provis

komaniecki.bsky.social
Trying to figure out a way to impress upon my students that using AI to skip course work in order to get a music degree is like ordering food at a restaurant and immediately throwing it out the window in order to get to pay the check

Reposted by: John L. Provis

paulbernal.bsky.social
As we seem to be talking ECHR again, here’s my Venn Diagram from more than a decade ago.
johnprovis.bsky.social
I believe this is what chemical engineers describe as "chemists discovering that chemical engineering is a properly difficult thing to do"...

(we often say that chemistry is making the first gram of something; chemical engineering is making the next hundred tonnes)

Reposted by: John L. Provis

errantscience.com
Sadly our idea of charging people £7.99 for a blue tick to put on their experimental results didn’t pan out
johnprovis.bsky.social
I'm not exactly sure how many people are making decisions on purchasing a new XRF spectrometer based on seeing ads in Youtube videos... but at least their algorithm has figured out that it seems a better match for my interests than either perfume or funeral plans?

Reposted by: John L. Provis

edconway.bsky.social
What’s the most underrated material in the modern world?
How about CONCRETE?
Often dismissed as boring, ugly & inert.
Concrete is actually surprising, dynamic & incredibly complex.
Here is an old (V LONG) thread recycled from the other place, with a few reasons why concrete MATTERS so much 🪨
🧵
1/41

Reposted by: John L. Provis

angelaliu.bsky.social
Can't stress this enough: a random story you write on a lark may end up being the one that gets you the most recognition while the one you really love may get few reads and/or your worst reviews. Don't overthink it. Publishing is a gamble. You'll win some; you'll lose some.

Reposted by: John L. Provis

lauraleighwrite.bsky.social
How you know the journal editors are academics: suddenly, it's December, and all responses stop. No acceptances. No rejections. Just silence as we all grade. #Writingcommunity #Academicsky

Reposted by: John L. Provis

auditorynerves.bsky.social
He's making a list,
He's checking it twice;
He's going to tell you in 20-something points how he wouldn't have written that article in the way that you did,
Or cited that particular literature,
Or prepared all those figures that way;
Reviewer 2 has submitted his report to the dashboard.
🧪🎅

Reposted by: John L. Provis

whysharksmatter.bsky.social
Speaking on behalf of anyone who ever wrote anything ever:

If you are a person I’ve never had any communication with before about any topic,

and you notice a small typo in my work that does not affect your understanding of the piece,

bringing that to my attention is not helpful.

Just don’t.

Reposted by: John L. Provis

privateeyenews.bsky.social
A reader writes…

“The last time I made a submission to Private Eye was in 1968, when I was 15 years old. I received this wonderful response which I still treasure:” 

JOHN CLIVE

Reposted by: John L. Provis

johnprovis.bsky.social
The title of this paper just keeps getting better and better as it goes along...

(what is a "heating struggle", and why on earth would one want to add "nano-soda-cans" to cements?)
Investigation the mechanical, durability, heating Investigation the mechanical, durability, heating struggle, thermal gravimetric examination, and microstructure of geopolymer ceramic concrete incorporating nano-silica and nano-Soda-Cans
johnprovis.bsky.social
There are various milestones in a scientific career🧪:
PhD✔️
Permanent job✔️
PhD student graduates✔️ several
Paper published✔️ several
Paper in Science/Nature... not yet
Paper featured in the media✔️a few
But the pinnacle of it all: Paper featured on the news screen on the bus ✔️
(translation in alt-text)
Approximate translation of the news screen (in German) - PSI researchers search for sustainable cement recipes using AI
(photo credit - it's not mine, someone sent it to a colleague who sent it to me)
johnprovis.bsky.social
Take my money, Mel Brooks.... I must see this movie!
officialmelbrooks.bsky.social
I told you we’d be back

References

Fields & subjects

Updated 1m