Sally Cole Johnson
Sally Cole Johnson
2017
Freelance journalist with more
than 15 years’ professional
writing/editing experience.
It’s difficult to be a journalist these days and find a good excuse to not have your own website, so here I am. For those of you who don’t already know me, I write about a wide range of topics — mostly physics, earth and planetary science, optics, photonics, electronics, semiconductors, IoT, and IT.
Being a freelance journalist means that I make a living by playing with words — something I’ve always loved. How lucky!
And I get to talk to brilliant people all the time so I can write about their amazing leading-edge science and technology breakthroughs. Again, how lucky!
My blog, here on the site, focuses on my four-legged hellions and photos I snap of them and the White Mountains of NH, and also contains random musings about whatever’s on my mind...in case anyone really wants to know.
Please feel free to contact me if you need any article “ghost writing,” editing, or website help.
Welcome!
Copyright 2009-2017.
Please respect that all content on this website is copyrighted.
No part of this website or blog content, including images, may be republished or appear elsewhere in any form without my consent.
That means you too, Wiki and Google.
‘Pieces’
Exploring Gambles Reveals Foundational
Difficulty Behind Economic Theory
Social Engineering: You Got Nailed!
Artist and Scientist Team to Explore Stunning Whisky Art
Unexpected New Mechanism Reveals How Molecules Become Trapped
Policy: Why Are Open Efforts Essential?
Orion Spacecraft’s Avionics Designed for Reliability in Deep Space
Hybrid Cloud: Who’s in Control When Public & Private Clouds Collide?
OpenStack Quantum Gives Cloud Providers New Level of Network Agility
Myth Vs. Reality: Some Clarity About Overlay Networks
Optogenetics: An Illuminating Journey Into the Brain
How Does Advanced Malware Use the Network Against You?
A Primer on Northbound APIs: Their Role in a Software-Defined Network
Fluorescence Holographic Microscopy Speeds 3-D Imaging
Harvard Engineers Pioneer Plasmonic QC Laser Nanoantennas
Wanted: Thermal Management Materials for 3-D ICs