Support Public Lab Today! For the last twelve years, Public Lab has hosted SpectralWorkbench.or...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
45 | warren |
July 30, 2015 15:13
| over 8 years ago
Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! A great place to start is the "plots-dev" mailing list for software developers: http://publiclab.org/wiki/developers Local developmentSome folks have been setting up their own copy of Spectral Workbench. This can be a bit tricky for those new to Ruby on Rails, but is a really helpful first step if you're interested in contributing to the code. YvesAD went through the whole process, written up here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench/issues/206 but he also posted a step-by-step install guide here: https://gist.github.com/YvesAD/5520784 |
Revert | |
44 | warren |
July 30, 2015 15:12
| over 8 years ago
Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! A great place to start is the "plots-dev" mailing list for software developers: http://publiclab.org/wiki/developers Local developmentSome folks have been setting up their own copy of Spectral Workbench. This can be a bit tricky for those new to Ruby on Rails, but is a really helpful first step if you're interested in contributing to the code. YvesAD went through the whole process, written up here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench/issues/206 but he also posted a step-by-step install guide here: https://gist.github.com/YvesAD/5520784 |
Revert | |
43 | Aleksandra |
June 14, 2015 19:41
| almost 9 years ago
Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! A great place to start is the "plots-dev" mailing list for software developers: http://publiclab.org/wiki/developers Local developmentSome folks have been setting up their own copy of Spectral Workbench. This can be a bit tricky for those new to Ruby on Rails, but is a really helpful first step if you're interested in contributing to the code. YvesAD went through the whole process, written up here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench/issues/206 but he also posted a step-by-step install guide here: https://gist.github.com/YvesAD/5520784 |
Revert | |
42 | Aleksandra |
June 14, 2015 19:35
| almost 9 years ago
Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! A great place to start is the "plots-dev" mailing list for software developers: http://publiclab.org/wiki/developers Local developmentSome folks have been setting up their own copy of Spectral Workbench. This can be a bit tricky for those new to Ruby on Rails, but is a really helpful first step if you're interested in contributing to the code. YvesAD went through the whole process, written up here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench/issues/206 but he also posted a step-by-step install guide here: https://gist.github.com/YvesAD/5520784 |
Revert | |
41 | Aleksandra |
June 01, 2015 00:51
| almost 9 years ago
Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! A great place to start is the "plots-dev" mailing list for software developers: http://publiclab.org/wiki/developers Local developmentSome folks have been setting up their own copy of Spectral Workbench. This can be a bit tricky for those new to Ruby on Rails, but is a really helpful first step if you're interested in contributing to the code. YvesAD went through the whole process, written up here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench/issues/206 but he also posted a step-by-step install guide here: https://gist.github.com/YvesAD/5520784 |
Revert | |
40 | warren |
May 05, 2014 12:49
| almost 10 years ago
Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! A great place to start is the "plots-dev" mailing list for software developers: http://publiclab.org/wiki/developers Local developmentSome folks have been setting up their own copy of Spectral Workbench. This can be a bit tricky for those new to Ruby on Rails, but is a really helpful first step if you're interested in contributing to the code. YvesAD went through the whole process, written up here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench/issues/206 but he also posted a step-by-step install guide here: https://gist.github.com/YvesAD/5520784 |
Revert | |
39 | warren |
May 05, 2014 12:46
| almost 10 years ago
Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact web@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. Local developmentSome folks have been setting up their own copy of Spectral Workbench. This can be a bit tricky for those new to Ruby on Rails, but is a really helpful first step if you're interested in contributing to the code. YvesAD went through the whole process, written up here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench/issues/206 but he also posted a step-by-step install guide here: https://gist.github.com/YvesAD/5520784 |
Revert | |
38 | warren |
June 26, 2013 14:25
| almost 11 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact web@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. Local developmentSome folks have been setting up their own copy of Spectral Workbench. This can be a bit tricky for those new to Ruby on Rails, but is a really helpful first step if you're interested in contributing to the code. YvesAD went through the whole process, written up here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench/issues/206 but he also posted a step-by-step install guide here: https://gist.github.com/YvesAD/5520784 |
Revert | |
37 | warren |
December 16, 2012 16:58
| over 11 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for our open source spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench works for users of Chrome and Opera. You no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org What is Spectral Workbench?SpectralWorkbench.org is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact web@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. |
Revert | |
36 | warren |
October 05, 2012 20:27
| over 11 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench is now available for users of Chrome 21 (all platforms) and Opera. If you are able to use this beta release, you no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org/capture What is Spectral Workbench?The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact web@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. |
Revert | |
35 | warren |
September 06, 2012 19:34
| over 11 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench is now available for users of Chrome 21 (all platforms) and Opera. If you are able to use this beta release, you no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org/capture What is Spectral Workbench?The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact web@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. |
Revert | |
34 | warren |
September 06, 2012 19:30
| over 11 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer LinksUpdate: The "web client" version of Spectral Workbench is now available for users of Chrome 21 (all platforms) and Opera. If you are able to use this beta release, you no longer need to download Spectral Workbench and can simply use the browser-based version. Try it at https://spectralworkbench.org/capture What is Spectral Workbench?The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra and do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentThe codebase is available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the capture interface is mostly jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Canvas, and the HTML5 getUserMedia() API. The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact web@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. |
Revert | |
33 | warren |
August 10, 2012 15:20
| over 11 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer Links
SpectralWorkbench is in alpha, though with some configuration it should run on Linux, Mac, or Windows. It is free and open source (GPLv3) and requires the open-source Processing environment. Click the "zip" download to get a copy. To learn how to use the software, see: Spectral Workbench usage » (and the Spectral Workbench Help page) It uploads spectra to the open source spectral database at: https://spectralworkbench.org The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra, to compare readings in graphed formats, and to do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentBoth the server codebase and the client are available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the client is built in Processing The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact jeff@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. TutorialsVideo tutorials on how to use the software are coming soon. |
Revert | |
32 | warren |
August 10, 2012 15:14
| over 11 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer Links
SpectralWorkbench is in alpha, though with some configuration it should run on Linux, Mac, or Windows. It is free and open source (GPLv3) and requires the open-source Processing environment. Click the "zip" download to get a copy. To learn how to use the software, see: Spectral Workbench usage » (and the Spectral Workbench Help page) It uploads spectra to the open source spectral database at: https://spectralworkbench.org The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra, to compare readings in graphed formats, and to do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentBoth the server codebase and the client are available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the client is built in Processing The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact jeff@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. TutorialsVideo tutorials on how to use the software are coming soon. |
Revert | |
31 | warren |
August 10, 2012 15:08
| over 11 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer Links
SpectralWorkbench is in alpha, though with some configuration it should run on Linux, Mac, or Windows. It is free and open source (GPLv3) and requires the open-source Processing environment. Click the "zip" download to get a copy. To learn how to use the software, see: Spectral Workbench usage » (and the Spectral Workbench Help page) It uploads spectra to the open source spectral database at: https://spectralworkbench.org The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra, to compare readings in graphed formats, and to do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentBoth the server codebase and the client are available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the client is built in Processing The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact jeff@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. TutorialsVideo tutorials on how to use the software are coming soon. |
Revert | |
30 | warren |
March 13, 2012 19:18
| about 12 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer LinksSpectralWorkbench is in alpha, though with some configuration it should run on Linux, Mac, or Windows. It is free and open source (GPLv3) and requires the open-source Processing environment. Click the "zip" download to get a copy. To learn how to use the software, see: Spectral Workbench usage » (and the Spectral Workbench Help page) It uploads spectra to the open source spectral database at: https://spectralworkbench.org The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra, to compare readings in graphed formats, and to do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentBoth the server codebase and the client are available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the client is built in Processing The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact jeff@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. TutorialsVideo tutorials on how to use the software are coming soon. |
Revert | |
29 | warren |
March 05, 2012 18:27
| about 12 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer, and can be found here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench It is in alpha, though with some configuration it should run on Linux, Mac, or Windows. It is free and open source (GPLv3) and requires the open-source Processing environment. Click the "zip" download to get a copy. To learn how to use the software, see: Spectral Workbench usage » (and the Spectral Workbench Help page) It uploads spectra to the open source spectral database at: https://spectralworkbench.org The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra, to compare readings in graphed formats, and to do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentBoth the server codebase and the client are available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the client is built in Processing The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact jeff@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. TutorialsVideo tutorials on how to use the software are coming soon. |
Revert | |
28 | warren |
February 03, 2012 18:21
| about 12 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer, and can be found here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench It is in alpha, though with some configuration it should run on Linux, Mac, or Windows. It is free and open source (GPLv3) and requires the open-source Processing environment. Click the "zip" download to get a copy. To learn how to use the software, see: It uploads spectra to the open source spectral database at: https://spectralworkbench.org The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra, to compare readings in graphed formats, and to do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentBoth the server codebase and the client are available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the client is built in Processing The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact jeff@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. TutorialsVideo tutorials on how to use the software are coming soon. |
Revert | |
27 | warren |
February 03, 2012 18:17
| about 12 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer, and can be found here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench It is in alpha, though with some configuration it should run on Linux, Mac, or Windows. It is free and open source (GPLv3) and requires the open-source Processing environment. Click the "zip" download to get a copy. To learn how to use the software, see: It uploads spectra to the open source spectral database at: https://spectralworkbench.org (may be renamed) The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra, to compare readings in graphed formats, and to do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentBoth the server codebase and the client are available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the client is built in Processing The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact jeff@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. TutorialsVideo tutorials on how to use the software are coming soon. |
Revert | |
26 | warren |
February 02, 2012 23:46
| about 12 years ago
PLOTS Spectral Workbench is the client software for the video spectrometer, and can be found here: https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench It is in alpha, though with some configuration it should run on Linux, Mac, or Windows. It is free and open source (GPLv3) and requires the open-source Processing environment. Click the "zip" download to get a copy. To learn how to use the software, see: It uploads spectra to the open source spectral database at: http://spectrometer.publiclaboratory.org (may be renamed) The website is a place to archive, share, and interpret spectral data. By uploading spectra to the website, you agree to release the data under a Creative Commons Zero license (the equivalent of a Public Domain dedication), which allows for unrestricted use by anybody. Currently, anyone may comment on any spectrum -- the idea is that users will help one another collect better data, will collaborate on interpreting data, and will build a large shared resource of well-documented spectral data. As the website progresses, we hope to add features such as the ability to average sets of spectra, to compare readings in graphed formats, and to do pattern-recognition matching of similar spectra. DevelopmentBoth the server codebase and the client are available at https://github.com/jywarren/spectral-workbench. The server is written in Ruby on Rails, and the client is built in Processing The software is in need of a great deal more work, so if you are interested, please get involved! Contact jeff@publiclaboratory.org or just ping the mailing list. TutorialsVideo tutorials on how to use the software are coming soon. |
Revert |