Columns for "Компьютерры"
List of columns in the online "Компьютерре", "Компьютерре-Онлайн", as well as in the print "Компьютерре" and some other sources as a navigation tool
Columns in the online publication “Komp’yuterri”: “The Period and the Ellipsis.” The biological section of the final column for “Komp’yuterri.” The political section of the final column for “Komp’yuterri.” The unwritten column. On violence: a simple ethical problem and an analysis of three examples from contemporary Ukrainian life 138. On the nature of the masculine and the feminine, or from conjugation to oogamy 137. A discussion of the transition from hermaphroditism to duality as an example of a non-classical development of a natural hypothesis 136. We live long. On the Ukrainian protest, “Molotov cocktails,” and the oxytocin wave 135. The victory of resilience over optimality, or Why hermaphrodites lose to males and females 134. Is it true that the queen of evolutionary problems is the Red (a.k.a. Black) Queen? Don’t rush to answer—don’t forget about hermaphrodites! 133. Are eight indirect hypotheses describing the advantages of sexual reproduction sufficient to explain the origin of sex? 132. The Queen of Evolutionary Biology Problems: Jenkins’ Nightmare Returns 131. The mystery of sex. Cui prodest: gene, individual, group? 130. The origin of sex, dimorphism, and hemiclonal inheritance. Formulation of the problem 129. Ukraine—a giant Vradiyivka. Selected excerpts from correspondence with Russian and pro-Russian friends 128. A brief summary of the epigenetic theory of evolution, or ETE for the Busy 127. How Do Adaptive Traits Arise in the Course of Evolution, or Which Theory of Evolution Is Supported by Modern Genetic Data? 126. Once Again on the Nature of the Ethnos, as Well as on the Diversity of Supersystems 125. Does an ethnic group possess an independent existence? Reflections on Disagreement with Lev Gumilev 124. How Can We Bring Our Innate Tendency Toward Xenophobia Under Rational Control? 123. Three Conclusions That Can Be Drawn After Discussingthe causes of differences between people based on their skin color 122. And more on skin color: why we are white and why we tan 121. On skin color: the experience of discussing one human adaptation with the justification of far-reaching conclusions about the specifics of the action of environmental factors 120. Abnormal frogs and environmental health: the search for new approaches at the border of Europe and Asia 119. Philosophical libido: what we know, what we will never know, and in which cases we are forced to make do with accepting presumptions 118. The Inevitable Fate of the Forest-Steppe, or The Hidden Springs of History 117. Six Traditional Ecological Niches and Six Social Worlds of Traditional Human Cultures 116. Culturally Adapted Opportunists, or On the Diversity of Ecological Niches of Homo sapiens Linnaeus, 1758 115. How will biology and other worldview-significant sciences be studied in such a school of the future, one worth dreaming of? 114. What can be inferred by measuring fluctuating asymmetry? 113. From the chaos of observations to dynamic typology: a discussion using the example of green frog population systems 112. The Noosphere: rational forecast, scientific visionaryism, or a common mantra of science charlatans? 111. A zoologist’s credo, or What can we learn from our own animal nature? 110. A specific regulatory mechanism or selection? Discussion of a hypothesis regarding the mechanisms of reproduction in interspecific green frog hybrids 109. Social utopia: how should an unbiased society, free from ideologies, view the diversity of manifestations of human sexuality 108. On the humanities and natural sciences approaches to an explosive topic: a discussion of the causes of homosexual behavior 107. The gateway to sensations: what the relationship between our archaic sense of smell and our evolutionarily advanced mind reveals 106. Why we allow ourselves to be deceived, or Sad reflections on therationality of political life 105. Wallace’s Paradox, or Why We Have Such a Large Brain 104. Unreliable Instincts, or Why There Are Bad Mothers Among Humans 103. Multifaceted Conflict: Individuals, Genes, and Memes; Individuals and Groups; Immediate goals and long-term perspectives… 102. The Evolution of Evolution: From Genetic Inheritance to Intra-Technical Replication of T-Memes 101. Toad Venom, a Failed Experience in Business, and Doubts About the Innovative Prospects of University Science 100. The Hundredth Column: An attempt to convey the spirit, look back, and understand what I am doing and why 99. First, second, and third replicators according to Susan Blackmore, the origin of life and the general scheme of phase transitions in evolution 98. Gesner’s Error or Protection from the Sea Devil: how the mechanism of science functions 97. How We Are Deceived: An Analysis of a Selection of Anti-Vaccination Arguments from the “Primary Source” 96. On (In)effective management, conflicts of interest at various levels of the hierarchy, and the Invisible Hand 95. The debate between the informed and the misinformed: how to find the optimal solution? Columns in “KompyuterreOnline” 94. Work for an Activist 93. Average, Incomprehensible Doses 92. Shaky Ground 91. Dialogue with Reality 90. Dies irae 89. Reality vs. actuality 88. Ontological adaptationism 87. Forward, to an epigenetic future! 86. The internal is more important than the external 85. The Mountain Road 84. Evolution: Biological and Social 83. The Pendulum 82. The Invisible Hand and the National Question 81. The Bet on Immortality 80. Kondrashin’s Last Concert 79. Uniqueness and Creativity 78. True Values 77. The Indulgence Effect 76. Mechanisms of Choice 75. Values and Risks 74. “I made him up in my head!” 73. “I feel a sense of inevitability…” 72. Multilevel frogs 71. The selfish gene and/or the selfish individual? 70. Clash of the Titans 69. The roots of personality 68. What drives our behavior? 67. Reflex and I 66.growth points in the system of decorative education 65. Orientation by an internal map 64. A holistic model of being 63. Competition or control? 62. “The Instinct for Species Preservation”? 61. The Beast-Pegasus 60. Three-Dimensional Listening 59. Support from the Invisible Leg 58. On the Dislike of Soccer 58. On the Breadth of the Horizon 56. The Patient’s Strategy 55. Frogs. Early Maturers and Late Maturers 54. The Miracle of Self-Reflection 53. The Miracles of Self-Assurance 52. Guests from the past 51. Pillars of altruism 50. Altruism and Simpson’s paradox 49. “Environmental challenges” for college and high school students 48. The wonders of sexual reproduction 47. When Does Selection Become Ineffective? 46. The Paradox of Accelerated Evolution 45. The Difficulties of Career Guidance 44. Three Syntheses in Evolutionary Biology 43. Surrogates for Nature Conservation 42. A Phosphorus-Free Diet? 41. Abandoning Expansion? 40. Markov and Human Evolution 39. A Chain of Antelope Tracks 38. The Causes of Our (im)perfection 37. Problems of interpretation 36. Protopopov and instincts 35. Who passes through the filter? 34. Freedom has become ossified 33. The brain as an adaptation 32. Do humans haveperiodic reactions? 31. Gosse’s Argument 30. Aliens Are Among Us! 29. Panspermia—Dead End or Hope? 28. Pre-existence 27. Prebiological selection 26. Hoyle’s argument 25. Paley’s argument 24. The poverty of solipsism 23. The evolutionists’ conspiracy 22. Wandering eyes across the sky 21. Orientation and disorientation20. Coffee and the Consciousness of the Noosphere 19. Coffee and the Third Nature 18. Planetary coffee 17. Coffee and chthonic forces 16. What is reflected in a cup of coffee? 15. The energy of morning coffee 14. Strategies we are not aware of 13. The reward for beauty 12. Why women be beautiful? 11. Double standards 10. Fingerprints and brainprints 9. The immortality of populations 8. On distorted love for nature 7. On gender differences 6. What does a viper think? 5. A Grand Challenge for Education 4. Why Are There Men and Women? 3. “Ecology” and Liars 2. Textbooks. Right in the Day After Tomorrow 1. The Second River Other Popular Science Articles by D. Shabanov. August Session: Retirement Age Published in the newspaper “Troitsky Variant”) D. Shabanov. Creationism as a Form of Intellectual Doublethink Published in the newspaper “Troitsky Variant”) D. Shabanov. Clusters, Treasures, and the Chimera of Objectivity (Written for the print edition of “Kompyuterra,” but not published there) D. Shabanov. Nature and freedom: on female and male human strategies (Written for the newspaper “Zerkalo Nedeli,” but not published there) D. Shabanov. So How Many Articles Does a Person Have? (Written for the online publication “Private Correspondent,” not published there) D. Shabanov. The Two Natures of Man. Rape Culture and Biology (Published in the online publication “Private Correspondent”) D. Shabanov. The History of the Eye. Man as a Victim of Evolutionary History Published in the online publication “Private Correspondent”) D. Shabanov. How Much Blood Does a Tree Cost? Published in the onlinepublication “Private Correspondent”) D. Shabanov. A View of Human Nature from the Depths of Denisova Cave (Published in the online publication “Private Correspondent”) D. Shabanov. Open Letter to A. V. Yablokov Regarding a Book on Genetically Modified Products (Published in the SOES newsletter around 2002) D. Shabanov. The Principle of Anthropicity and the Paradox of Expediency (Abstract for the candidate’s minimum in philosophy, written approximately in 1993) Columns and notes in the print edition of “Komp’yuterra” (2004–2009) D. Shabanov. Three Dialogues // Komp’yuterra, Moscow, 2009 D. Shabanov. The Gift of Isora, or The Game of Beads // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 40 (804). — P. 26 D. Shabanov. The Two Natures of Man: Why Do We Laugh? // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2009 D. Shabanov. Swine Flu, or The Acceleration of Time // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 24 (788). — pp. 22–27 D. Shabanov. How a Virus Works // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 24 (788). — p. 21 D. Shabanov. A Story About Gullibility, Skepticism, and Three Associate Professors // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 21 (785). D. Shabanov. Freedom or Democracy? // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 18 (782). — p. 37 D. Shabanov. Selection of existing units or selection of possible actions? // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 15 (779). — p. 33 D. Shabanov. The Letter “PC” // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 7 (771). — P. 27 D. Shabanov. On Illusions, Manias, and Dialogue // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 6 (770) D. Shabanov. Goliath-Cyborg // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 6 (770) D. Shabanov. The Resurrection of the RNA World // Computerra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 5 (769) D. Shabanov. Altruists Die, but Their Cause Lives On // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2009. – No. 4 (768) D. Shabanov. The Caring Thief // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 47–48 (763–764) D. Shabanov. An Organ from His Own Garden // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 45 (761) D. Shabanov. And “Ends” into the Earth? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 44 (760) D. Shabanov. A Clone from the Freezer // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 43 (759) D. Shabanov. The Two Natures of Man: How Not to Turn into a Boss? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 42 (758) D. Shabanov. Is it possible to achieve ethical perfection? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 40 (756) D. Shabanov. The Nobel Prize Loves the Trinity // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 39 (755) D. Shabanov. Reflections of Our Consciousness // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 37 (753) D. Shabanov. The Most Important Evolutionary Leap // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 36 (752) D. Shabanov. Biological Entourage // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 36 (752) D. Shabanov. The Taste of Calcium // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 34 (750) D. Shabanov. Why Does Snow Fall? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 33 (749) D. Shabanov. The Two Natures of Man: Where Do the Roots of Happiness Grow? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 32 (748) D. Shabanov. Are you still taking your pills? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 31 (747) D. Shabanov. Us and other animals // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 27–28 (743–744) D. Shabanov. Spain Has Taken the First Step // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 27–28 (743–744) D. Shabanov. From the World to the Gene // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 24 (740) D. Shabanov. On a Passionate Love for Animals // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 20 (736). — p. 12 D. Shabanov. I Don’t Understand… // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 19 (735). — p. 42 D. Shabanov. Microfilm (World POPClock Projection Resource…) // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 18 (734). D. Shabanov. Is This a Tyrannical Bird? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 18 (734). — p. 19 D. Shabanov. Black and White // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 15 (731). — p. 20 D. Shabanov. Greetings from the Neanderthals // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 13 (729). — p. 14 D. Shabanov. Microfiche (Do You Remember Where the Road Leads…) // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 12 (728). D. Shabanov. Five Among Us // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 12 (776). – p. 26. D. Shabanov. On the “Reader” of the Genotype // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 11 (727). — p. 44 D. Shabanov. Craig Venter Issues a Challenge // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 11 (727). — p. 14 D. Shabanov. The Skull of the Immortal // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 11 (727). — p. 10 D. Shabanov. The Crocodile’s Heart // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 10 (726). — pp. 36–37 D. Shabanov. Where Are the Medicines Hidden? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 10 (726). — p. 14 D. Shabanov. One Step Away from a Clone // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 6 (722). — pp. 36–37 D. Shabanov. Between the Donkey Ya-Ya and the Piglet P’yatachok // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 5 (721). — pp. 42–43 D. Shabanov. Hello! Good night! // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 5 (721). — p. 15 D. Shabanov. Is Mom Cute? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 3 (719). D. Shabanov. Was There a Hacker? // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 1–2 (717–718). — p. 15 D. Shabanov. Horse-drawn transport — the bright future of humanity? // KT, Moscow, 2008.–No. 1–2 (717–718). — Pp. 38–39 D. Shabanov. Where Crayfish Spend the Winter // Computerra, Moscow, 2008. – No. 1–2 (717–718). — P. 13 D. Shabanov. The Past and the Future. There Will Be No Revolutions. Nor Will There Be Boredom // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 47 (715). D. Shabanov. Both Cancer and Scorpio // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 45 (713). D. Shabanov. Supermice: Where’s the Catch? // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 44 (712). D. Shabanov. Insert to the note “A Healthy Print Medium” // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 43 (711). D. Shabanov. No Sex, but No Handcuffs Either // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 41 (709). D. Shabanov. The Great Benefits of Great Science. Medicine // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 38 (706). D. Shabanov. A Bit Greenish // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 36 (704). D. Shabanov. Dinosaurs and the Modern World // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 35 (703). D. Shabanov. Earth: Life After Death // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 35 (703). D. Shabanov. Wolbachia: Strangers Within the Genome // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 34 (702). D. Shabanov. Will the Enchantment Never Fade? // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 32 (700). D. Shabanov. The Stars Portend Trouble // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 32 (700). D. Shabanov. The Life of Comets // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 31 (699). D. Shabanov. A Lollipop as a Time Machine // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 30 (698). — p. 12 D. Shabanov. On the Study of Chemistry and Not Only That… // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 30 (698). — pp. 42–43 D. Shabanov. Will Neanderthals Hunt Mammoths Again? // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 29 (697) D. Shabanov. Is Our Song Over? // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 25–26 (693–694) D. Shabanov. Seeing the Past // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 24 (692) D. Shabanov. Cooling Interest in Global Warming? // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 22 (690) D. Shabanov. On Comparing Worldviews // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 21 (689). — p. 30 D. Shabanov. Study Topology! // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 21 (689). — p. 13 D. Shabanov. A Meeting with the Forest King // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 20 (688). – p. 30. D. Shabanov. Small, but… // Computerra, Moscow, 2007. – No. 19 (687) D. Shabanov. A Baggy Interest // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 200– No. 9 (629) D. Shabanov. “This is the place on Earth most like Eden…” // KT, Moscow, 2006. – No. 6 (626) D. Shabanov. The Echo of Your Voice… // Computerra, Moscow, 2006. – No. 5 (625) D. Shabanov. How Many Degrees of Freedom Are There in Freedom of Conscience? // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 45 (617) D. Shabanov, G. Andreyev. Non-random analogies // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 44 (616) D. Shabanov. Space Walks // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 44 (616) D. Shabanov. Happy to Be Deceived // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 43 (615) D. Shabanov. Clerical Mimicry // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 43 (615) D. Shabanov. In vino valetudo // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 43 (615) D. Shabanov. On Noble Plenitude // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 41 (613) D. Shabanov. One of Us Did It // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 41 (613) D. Shabanov. Ode to a Parasite // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 39 (611) D. Shabanov. To Sleep—and Dream? // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 37 (609). — pp. 56–57 D. Shabanov. The Spear as a Step Toward Nuclear Deterrence // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 37 (609). — pp. 17–18 D. Shabanov. Distinguished Relatives // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 35 (607) D. Shabanov. Halfway to the Superhuman // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 34 (606) D. Shabanov. He Who Multiplies Knowledge Multiplies Sorrow // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 33 (605). — p. 19 D. Shabanov. Green Informants // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 31 (603) D. Shabanov. The Era of Change // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 31 (603) D. Shabanov. Chicken Brains // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 30 (602) D. Shabanov. Untitled (List of Cloned Species) // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 29 (601) D. Shabanov. A Step Toward a Resurrected Neanderthal? // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 27–28 (599–600) D. Shabanov. To the Seventh Generation // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 24 (596) D. Shabanov. Don’t You Feel Sorry for the Comet? // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 23 (595) D. Shabanov. A New Monkey Trial // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 21 (593) D. Shabanov. Untitled (According to a UN report…) // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 21 (593) D. Shabanov. A Rather Crowded Planet // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 20 (592) D. Shabanov. Virtual Reality à la Cuckoo // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 19 (591) D. Shabanov. Descendants of a Gelding // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 16 (588) D. Shabanov. About Our Smaller Brothers // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 15 (587) D. Shabanov. A Beard Is the Key to Health // Computerra’yutera, Moscow, 2005. – No. 13 (585) D. Shabanov. Incorrect Genetics // Komp’yutera, Moscow, 2005. – No. 13 (585) D. Shabanov. Don’t Go to Africa for a Walk, Kids! // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 12 (584) D. Shabanov. Why Do You Need Such a Big Liver? // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 12 (584) D. Shabanov. Traces of the “Black Death” // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 11 (583). – pp. 14–15 D. Shabanov. Slow Immortality // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 10 (582) D. Shabanov. Ten Thousand Generations of Ancestors // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 9 (581) D. Shabanov. How Can Others Understand You? // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 8 (580) D. Shabanov. On the Love of Simple Explanations // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 8 (580) D. Shabanov. Ciliates, Butterflies, Whales, and Barcodes // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 7 (579) D. Shabanov. It’s Hard to Be a God // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 6 (578). – pp. 18–19 D. Shabanov. Kindred Spirits // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 6 (578). – pp. 14–15 D. Shabanov. How to Study a Miracle? // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 5 (577). – pp. 18–19 D. Shabanov. A New Reason for Fear // Computerra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 5 (577). – pp. 15–16 D. Shabanov. The Long Life of Roundworms // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 5 (577). – p. 13 D. Shabanov. On Snout Length // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 4 (576). – pp. 14–15 D. Shabanov. Monsieur, you’re throwing the whole neighborhood off its rhythm! // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 3 (575) D. Shabanov. Overcoming the Energy Crisis: Another Failure! // KT, Moscow, 2005. – No. 1–2 (573–574). – p. 15 D. Shabanov. The Symphonic Microbe // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2005. – No. 1–2 (573–574). – pp. 14–15 D. Shabanov. The Information War Against Bacteria // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 48 (572) D. Shabanov. The Origin of Man: Where Does the Beginning of That End Begin, With Which the Beginning Ends? // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 47 (571). – pp. 56–57 D. Shabanov. Evolution in Action, or Don’t Bite the Hand That Feeds You // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 47 (571). – pp. 17–18 D. Shabanov. We Owe Them // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 47 (571). – pp. 16–17 D. Shabanov. The Difficult Problems of Gender // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 46 (570). – pp. 17–19 D. Shabanov. War with the Frog // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 46 (570). – pp. 19–20 D. Shabanov. A Rational Diet of Caterpillars // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 45 (569). – pp. 17–18 D. Shabanov. The Exiled Cossack // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 44 (568). – p. 20 D. Shabanov. Untitled (Research…) // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 43 (567). – p. 4 D. Shabanov. In Search of a Switchman // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 43 (567). – Pp. 20–21 D. Shabanov. Other People // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 42 (566). – P. 20 D. Shabanov. Untitled (To Understand…) // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 41 (565). – p. 24 D. Shabanov. Mimivirus: A New Addition to Our Zoo // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 41 (565). – pp. 20–21 D. Shabanov. A Warm Road to Kyoto // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 40 (564). – pp. 48–51 D. Shabanov. And the Dragons Crushed // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 40 (564). – p. 16 D. Shabanov. Genetic Express // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 39 (563). – pp. 13–14 D. Shabanov. Untitled (In the line of non-alcoholic beer…) // Komp’yuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 38 (562). – p. 12 D. Shabanov. Untitled (One of the medical…) // Komp’yuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 38 (562). – p. 12 D. Shabanov. Shall we practice on dogs? // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 38 (562). – p. 17 G. Andreyev, D. Shabanov. Anti-Blue Force // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 38 (562) D. Shabanov. Does Your Cat Like to Hunt Birds? // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 36 (560). – pp. 16–17 D. Shabanov. Crocodile Blood // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 35 (559). – pp. 15–16 D. Shabanov. Straight-line movement—a bug? // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 35 (559). – pp. 13–14 S. Borysov, D. Shabanov. With the help of a pole and a kind word… // KT, Moscow, 2004. – No. 34 (558). – pp. 16–17 D. Shabanov. Oh, you crooked face! // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 34 (558). – p. 18 D. Shabanov. Aliens Watch Cable TV // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 33 (557) D. Shabanov. Mozart at the Molecular Level // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 31–32 (555–556). – p. 14 D. Shabanov. We Are Tired of Loneliness // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 29–30 (553–554). – pp. 15–16 D. Shabanov. Early-maturing children // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 29–30 (553–554). – P. 14 D. Shabanov. Genetic “Cuckoos” // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 29–30 (553–554). – pp. 12–14 D. Shabanov. “Frankenstein’s Food” and the Right to the Truth // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 26–27 (550–551). – pp. 18–19 D. Shabanov. The Weakest Link // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 26–27 (550–551). – p. 16 D. Shabanov. Films for Adults // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 26–27 (550–551). – pp. 14–16 D. Shabanov. The Song of the Left Foot // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 26–27 (550–551). – pp. 11–12 D. Shabanov. 3D Genom: How Does It Work? // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 26–27 (550–551). – p. 11 D. Shabanov. A ground squirrel with an IR port // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 25 (549). – p. 14 D. Shabanov. Vernanimalkula – the first among us // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 24 (548). – pp. 14–16 D. Shabanov. Our Ancestors Suffered for Us // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 23 (547). – p. 17 D. Impolitov, D. Shabanov. Soap Instead of Condoms // Computerra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 22 (546). – pp. 17–18 D. Shabanov. A Father Is Not Just Genes // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 21 (545). – pp. 15–16 D. Shabanov. And You Will Be a Baobab for a Thousand Years… // Kompyuterra, Moscow, 2004. – No. 18–19 (542–543). – pp. 13–14