Exprodat published a free eBook: Why use GIS in petroleum?, an excellent state-of-play as well as good industry marketing to augment their impressive blog. Does their Figure 1 not have a certain air of déjà vu, however, compared to Figure 1 of my article in CADalyst written 25 years ago?
My web presence
1986 |
select poetry | buy poetry | my year in kuwait || shutterfly | flickr! | slideshare | youtube || pers. & prof. portfolios | pers. & prof. channels
Sunday, 6 May 2012
Saturday, 31 March 2012
iPad maps
Here is a small selection of mapping tools available on the iPad. Some are from the Appstore, others simply from the web. These are screen shots that I took for those (thanks my readers for how-to tips).
Sunday, 25 March 2012
Roundup of web projects
Is it spring in the air or LinkedIn's new (to me) facility to post projects? Here is a round-up of various projects in the past five years as recently posted on my LinkedIn page:
Sunday, 11 March 2012
East Anglia Fenlands wrap-up
It may be time to run an overview, two years on this personal project on East Anglia, the last step of which was reviewed by socium.co.uk:
Saturday, 11 February 2012
More maps R us
Continuing the ongoing (re)discovery of cool maps for the rest of us, here are two I found on Facebook from my friends Christophe Staff in Belgium and Aidos Malybayev in Kazakhstan.
Sunday, 29 January 2012
Multi-modal maps R us, part II
Last week I reported Google Maps' released of multimodal transportation mapping in the greater London UK area (GLA). I mused that this rendition was more visually appealing that Transport for London's website. The 'granddaddy' for train and tube in London extended beyond GLA to be used from larger surrounding centres - I myself used it regularly from Cambridge an hour train to the north.
Friday, 20 January 2012
Multi-modal maps R us
Google multi-modal maps are so significant to greater London Area commuters that I cannot pass it up. Ed Parsons posted it on his blog and I immediately tried it: it's just the ticket (pun intended) living near Cambridge about an hour north of London and travelling around London only by public transit.
Friday, 13 January 2012
“Au revoir” RMOTC dataset, part VII
Friday, 6 January 2012
Gridding and contouring (RMOTC dataset, part VI)
Free geosciences 3D data show GIS helping model reservoir depletion, and displaying it on the desktop and on-line. Then came pipeline routing and now to close the loop is gridding and contouring. Again, this is no replacement for geosciences packages, but rather a tool for triage:
- first stack as many data as needed (like basin hydrodynamics or land permitting) for play-fairway analyses
- then focus on targets with geoscience apps on specifics (like seismic and petrophysics) for prospects
Thursday, 29 December 2011
On-line spatial data validation, part II
[2013 update: Socium is now 1SpatialCloud]
Three weeks ago I introduced Socium's Online Validation Service (OVS). I showed the Ordnance Survey vector data QC, on the UK Parishes used as a geographic unit for the Medieval Fenlands project. Two weeks ago Socium kindly created a new rule, to post unexpected variations in adjacent feature attributes. In an essentially agricultural era, economic wealth of the Domesday period was quantified by Darby via the number of plough teams per parish. That is the attribute the rule was written for (it's hard-wired right now and Socium plans to add metadata pick lists in the future).
Three weeks ago I introduced Socium's Online Validation Service (OVS). I showed the Ordnance Survey vector data QC, on the UK Parishes used as a geographic unit for the Medieval Fenlands project. Two weeks ago Socium kindly created a new rule, to post unexpected variations in adjacent feature attributes. In an essentially agricultural era, economic wealth of the Domesday period was quantified by Darby via the number of plough teams per parish. That is the attribute the rule was written for (it's hard-wired right now and Socium plans to add metadata pick lists in the future).
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)