Presented almost five years ago to Kuwait Petroleum Company with local Esri distributor OpenWare, using NOAA oil spill model results in Esri GIS and recorded in YouTube. [The presentation has been updated to reflect additions in Part II.]
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Monday, 5 October 2015
Thursday, 24 September 2015
Tuesday, 15 September 2015
Avoid overcrowded maps by upscaling tens of thousands of data points - how-to
Here is how to create your own Beehive Map that up-scales megadata into fast web maps:
Tuesday, 7 July 2015
Black Monday? (repost LinkedIn Pulse needing login)
OilPro posted yesterday on the Monday oil price route and suggested that oil may settle nearer $40 a barrel. Euan Mearns earlier wrote on the trials & tribulationsof oil price predictions, his sophisticated study concluding that #itscomplicated. And Paul Hodges chimed in the same on OilVoice.
Sunday, 28 June 2015
A day in the life of a petroleum professional - Part III - shorthand
[2018 Update - presented at AAPG Visiting Geoscientist Program in Budapest in 2015 and Szeged in 2018 with open data for 2014 and 2018.
2016 Update - PUGonline Geospatial Workflow catalog summarised this as: Development & Planning > Mapping Well Data
2015 Update - A higher level article is published by PPDM Foundations in its Q4 2015 issue]
This is Part III of a "A day in the life of..." posts, to introduce basic petroleum data management for professionals who generate prospects. This is a yet even simpler workflow that helps rapid project start-ups for prospectors rather than data managers.
2016 Update - PUGonline Geospatial Workflow catalog summarised this as: Development & Planning > Mapping Well Data
2015 Update - A higher level article is published by PPDM Foundations in its Q4 2015 issue]
This is Part III of a "A day in the life of..." posts, to introduce basic petroleum data management for professionals who generate prospects. This is a yet even simpler workflow that helps rapid project start-ups for prospectors rather than data managers.
Thursday, 28 May 2015
DaaS BooT (Data as an Asset, Part II)
[Note: this is a re-post from LinkedIn Pulse that requires a user login]
After Das Boot - German U-boat disruptive technology of WWII - it stands here for Data-as-a-Service, Business Opportunity of Things - rather than Internet of Things (IoT); it underscores that without business outcome, we might as well stay home: that is the tenor of GEO Business 2015, in its third year, as it draws together Surveying, BIM, GIS and business.
After Das Boot - German U-boat disruptive technology of WWII - it stands here for Data-as-a-Service, Business Opportunity of Things - rather than Internet of Things (IoT); it underscores that without business outcome, we might as well stay home: that is the tenor of GEO Business 2015, in its third year, as it draws together Surveying, BIM, GIS and business.
Wednesday, 20 May 2015
A tale of two cities, or Bauhaus for maps
I attended two shows back-to-back in London yesterday. Esri(UK) Annual Conference was daytime at the QE2 Centre in Westminster a stone's throw from the Parliament. London Geomob was that evening in Shoreditch, the swanky London digital hub where Ordnance Survey just opened the Geovation Hub.
If the 20 min tube ride in between might have been through a wormhole, such was the contrast, both meetups strove to do the same thing, substituting maps for arts as the Bauhaus movement: "founded with the idea of creating a 'total' work of art in which all arts, including architecture, would eventually be brought together".
Sunday, 10 May 2015
Wikimedia European History Map over almost 2500 years
[Update: Posted a "how-to" on the companion map blog for longer pieces, enjoy...]
Stumbled across this really cool Wikimedia Atlas of European maps. Downloaded the images that seem to come from one Atlas, or are similarly styled and in Lambert Conformable Conical projection. I rubber sheeted them in Esri ArcMap and composited each map sheet in YouTube - if you squint you'll see the four red dots I used as projection reference.
Stumbled across this really cool Wikimedia Atlas of European maps. Downloaded the images that seem to come from one Atlas, or are similarly styled and in Lambert Conformable Conical projection. I rubber sheeted them in Esri ArcMap and composited each map sheet in YouTube - if you squint you'll see the four red dots I used as projection reference.
Monday, 20 April 2015
Tuesday, 14 April 2015
Releasing data really works, Part VII
And now for something completely different - the original posts until Part VI are listed below - I ran across a nice map of Steve Feldman's: He also tried out free data and software to map UK flood maps, an up-scaled version not for professional re-use.
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