Scouring for information everywhere is great but what would be REALLY useful if it actually do real research, and it does not have to be wet lab research. E.g. "Find in the Protein Data Bank all carbonic anhydrase isoform II structures and report all chi1 torsional angles of Phe130" . Easy to do manually for one structure but a non-trivial task for thousands of structures.
Not participating in genetic studies, i.e. being paranoid (about privacy, etc.) perhaps is a sign of a certain metal condition and therefore might well be genetically predisposed, and hereditary as well.
What I am a bit sad is that Landscape defeated Portrait. It's probably because PC screens are horizontal. Before the arrival of Powerpoint, transparencies were usually done in Portrait. I think that in Portrait mode can present information more efficiently, especially in scientific presentations (making it a bit similar to mini-poster), but maybe I am wrong.
The main question is this: how reproducible is this image, if someone else tries to apply similar image generation principles? Unless similar images can be shown to appear for someone else, this remains nothing but a curio with no value.