Novel Times, Novel Measures

The virtual home of Lawrence S. Grodeska

European Vacation and Lots of Change

The last two months have been a complete whirlwind. In that time, I’ve wrapped up my  3+ years of work at SF Environment (with the exception of the Regional Recycling Database project), spent two weeks exploring Holland and Italy, and started a brand new position at Change.org. More on the latter later, but for now, I want to share some pics of my European Vacation.

The original impetus for the trip was to attend the wedding of my girlfriend’s Dutch cousin, which provided the perfect opportunity for some solid international travel. So, to start, we spent a gloriously cozy week with her family in Amsterdam, riding bikes, taking in art and architecture, cruising in canal boats, and drinking Heineken. Here are some of the Holland highlights:

Holland is beautiful, green, wet, and grey, so, after the overcast, we decided to hit up the Mediterranean for some much needed sun. Enter Italy, specifically Rome and the Amalfi Coast south of Naples. Incredible food, remarkable history and barely controlled chaos provided a surprisingly relaxing yet most romantic retreat for our second week out. Check out some of the memorable moments:

As I mentioned, the adventure continues at Change.org. I’ll be capturing some of my initial thoughts after my first week on the job, so stay tuned!

Filed under: The Globe

Google’s Got the Geo-Location Goods, Part I: Basics and Brand New Tools

[This post originally appeared on the OpenSF blog.]

A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of attending a two-day training entitled “Mapping Environmental Scenarios & Solutions with Google Technology” hosted by the Google Earth Outreach team. “Pleasure” might be something of an understatement — not only was the training very well executed by the capable and knowledgeable Earth Outreach crew, but the sheer volume of free tools and web services that they dropped on us was mindboggling. In the hopes of sharing the wealth, especially for those of us in the public sector who need all the free resources we can marshall, I’m writing this post to tell you about what I learned, in two parts. In this first post, I’ll cover the basics of the Google Maps & Earth services, as well as introduce you to some brand new tools: Fusion Tables, for managing and visualizing data, and Open Data Kit (ODK), for collecting and aggregating data. In Part II, I’ll show all the power users out there whay they can do with the Maps and Earth APIs, and finish up with some amazing odds and ends tucked away on the Google shelves.

Maps & Earth 

At this point, in April of 2011, I’m assuming most of you reading this are very aware of Google Maps and Google Earth. I won’t spend much time explaining them other than to say that both have revolutionized the geospatial world, in both two and three dimensions.

I, for one, would hard-pressed to imagine life without Google Maps. Yes, there are other mapping services available, but Google Maps has always seemed to me the cleanest and tightest. Or, to borrow a phrase from Andy Samberg and Chris Parnell of SNL, Google Maps is the best, true that, Double True! But what really makes Maps stand out from the crowd is the ease with which new maps can be created and shared. At SF Environment, we use an increasing number of Google Maps to share information with a geo-location component, such as thisthis, and this.

LATE BREAKING UPDATE: Google has just launched Map Maker that lets users directly edit places in Google Maps, from buildings to businesses.

The general internet public is probably less familiar with Google Earth. With Earth, Google has created their own 3-D model of the globe, complete with rendered satellite imagery and even line models of parcels and buildings. The result is a truly immersive and very powerful tool for storytelling. I still remember being awed by Rebecca Moore’s 2006 “Logging Flyover” of the Santa Cruz Mountains that single-handedly changed public opinion about a dispute over logging rights at the time. Creating custom tours or “fly-overs” with text, links, embedded video and even audio narration does take some time but is remarkably simple. Check out a few great examples here and here.

Fusion Tables & ODK

One of the most exciting tools we covered at the training was Google’s new Fusion Tables which just may herald the dawn of web-based GIS. Born in Google Labs as an experiment in cloud data management, Fusion Tables is an attempt to combine data management and collaboration to enable “merging multiple data sources, discussion of the data, querying, visualization, and Web publishing.” Pretty cool stuff, and sorely needed.

At first glance, Fusion Tables looks like a beta version of Google Spreadsheets. The service is very new and still a little rough around the edges, but I don’t doubt that it will soon shine as do more mature Google offerings. Data can be entered directly or imported via a text file, but that’s where the similarity with Spreadsheets ends. Once your data is in, simply hit a button and you’ve got a map. Publishing to Maps is super easy, as is collaboration — all you or you collaborators need is a google account and you are good to go. If you have multiple data sources that reference the same entities, you can easily “fuse” those sources through creating “joins” without knowing how to write out SQL queries. Have a question for your collaborators about some of that fused data? Fusion Tables has built-in discussion tools.

Clearly Google is getting into the GIS game. If Fusion Tables wasn’t enough of an indicator, Google has even begun to post Fusion Tables of public data sets upon which you can build your own mapping project. My favorite? State and County boundary tablesobtained from the U.S. Census Bureau and imported by the Fusion Tables team. Sweet! Google is offering an incredible service with Fusion Tables, and it looks like people are already adopting, as evidenced by some State of California data sets being stored as Fusion Tables.

What if  the data you want to visualize needs to be first be collected? Open Data Kitpromises to integrate these geo-location tools directly into the fieldwork so often necessary to generate data. Open Data Kit is actually a project of the University of Washington’s Change Group that is supported by Google and hosted on Google Code. This set of free and open source tools allows developers to build data collection forms for Android mobile devices. You can take the term “developer” lightly here — in one of the breakout sessions during the Earth Outreach training, we built a data collection form in a matter of minutes. Once published, users can download the ODK Collect app, call up your form, and start logging data that is immediately aggregated on a server with ODK Aggregate, ready for extraction.

Pulling all of these tools together, one possible work flow for data collection and presentation could look like this:

collect with ODK Collect >> aggregate with ODK Aggregate >> extract to Fusion Tables >> publish to Google Maps/Earth

We ran a simple exercise cataloging and mapping plants using Android phones and, while there were a few bumps, it was clear that this is an amazing way to empower your team with a full set of geo-location tools, from data collection all the way through to visualization. After the workshop, my mind was reeling with the possibilities for deploying this suite of tools. Now, if I could only find the time…

Which brings us to the end of Part I of this Google love fest. Check back soon for a deeper dive into the possibilities of Google APIs, along with a few other exciting odds and ends.

Filed under: At Work, Technology, The Globe

Home from Ecuador, with Photos


 

a Marine Iguana’s perspective, originally uploaded by noveltimes.

It’s taken me a lot longer than I had hoped to post this, but I’m back from Ecuador and have plenty of thoughts and photos to share. Saskia and I returned on New Year’s Eve, but we were both sick with a stomach bug, and then I caught a nasty head cold that knocked me out for most of the next week. Well, I’m happy to report that I now have a clean bill of health and, more importantly, the trip to Ecuador, with the exception of the return home, was incredible. I’m planning on posting a run down of my trip, but in the meantime, here are some photos to whet your whistle. Enjoy!

Filed under: Ecuador, The Globe

Ecuador, Here I Come

It’s been three years since I’ve stepped foot outside the territory of these United States. A combination of work, music and general life distractions has kept my feet firmly planted here, but that doesn’t mean I haven’t been thinking about traveling abroad once again. In fact, earlier this year I had been starting to think about a trip to Greece and Turkey. And then, after a short but sweet visit by my old friend Beana over the summer, I decided that I needed to visit her while she was still living in Hong Kong. I’m still hoping to make both of those trips in the near future, but, as it turns out, a new adventure has presented itself…

Come mid-December, I will be on a plane bound for Quito, Ecuador, to meet my girlfriend and two other friends who will be finishing up a delegation into Ecuador’s Oriente region and a few of the indigenous tribes therein. From there, we’ll head to the Galapagos for a boat tour of the islands Darwin visited over 150 years ago, in the process fomenting his ideas about evolution through natural selection. It looks like we might be doing this tour:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Our itinerary is still up in the air, but suffice to say there will be birds, cloud forests, long, winding bus rides, and a lot of fumbling around en Espanol. It’s been a while since I’ve been to Latin America, and I’m really looking forward to going back. Ecuador seems like an incredible country, brimming with beauty and life. Of course, Ecuadorians have had plenty of struggles against the forces of globalization over the past few decades, so it will be interesting to see that side, too. All told, I’m really excited and very ready for some time off from work with some good friends experiencing another culture and ecology. You know what this means — be prepared for the travel blogging that will ensue!

Filed under: Ecuador, Latin America, The Globe

Ready for the Return

The time for return has arrived.  Tomorrow I board a plane for the final leg of my ‘Round-the-World extravaganza — Tokyo to the San Francisco Bay.  Japan has been wonderful beyond my imagination.  The beauty and history of Kyoto constrasted with the hyper-modernity of Tokyo have offered vast insight into a completely unique culture.  From toys to temples, baths to bamboo, not to mention sushi, shrines, Christmas and New Year’s Eve, Japan has stolen my heart and enflamed my mind.  Since I’ve been here, though, thoughts of resuming up my “normal” routine have begun to bubble to the surface, and, oddly, I haven’t tried to suppress them.  In fact, it was just a few days ago when I realized that I was ready to return to my life in California and the United States.  I must say, I miss that life.  This trip has been incredible, from start to finish, but my life back home is pretty darn incredible, too.  I have a lot to look forward to in 2008 and this trip has only reaffirmed that.  What’s more, I’ve begun to tire of being constantly on the move, of always eating out, of never really understanding what is being said to me, and never know how to say anything back.  Yes, I’m ready for home.   I have so much more to say and share about Japan, but it will have to wait until I am back at keys of my trusty Powerbook.  With what little time I have here, I’ve been focussing on photos, and concentrating on capturing all that I can, in my mind’s eye.  I figure I’ll have plenty of time to post back in Oakland. 

Happy New Year to you all!  I’ll see you in a few. 

Filed under: The Globe

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