Nearly 10,000 scientists gathered in Vienna at the end of April for the annual meeting of the European Geosciences Union and I was fortunate enough to represent the Public Laboratory. The PLOTS presentation entitled “Complete data lifecycles and citizen science integration via the Public Laboratory” generated quite a bit of interest from geomorphologists to seismologists. Some scientists asked about how they could gather their own aerial imagery, but the vast majority of interest was in the open source nature of our data sharing. Our data flow is distinct from traditional data sharing structures common to higher education, industry, government, and many non-profits: we want people to have our data.
Here is a link to the 45 MB poster: https://www.dropbox.com/s/4pjpf4imi5id8ez/PLOTS_EGU_2012z.pdf
Two other research notes resulted from conversations I had there with scientists:
http://publiclaboratory.org/notes/adam-griffith/4-26-2012/microsoft-research-image-composite-editor
http://publiclaboratory.org/notes/adam-griffith/4-30-2012/general-spectrometer-thoughts
The Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines at Western Carolina University paid for the conference registration fee. Thank you.
5 Comments
Nice, Adam! great to see our community's name up there in a formal science conference!
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I gave away at least 20 business cards, so the word is getting out in the academic communities, if slowly.
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How did this photo turn upside down ON ITS OWN???
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?? did it? what photo?
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yes, it's just on the iPhone that the photo displays upside down. Strange.
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