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07 Sep 23:54

All About Beer Styles

Flights of different colours of beer

Pilsners, pale ales, stouts, saisons and lambics. There are hundreds of historical beer styles, not to mention the way modern breweries are evolving those and creating new ones all the time. Navigating beer styles can be tough without a guide.

If you've ever been curious about the difference between a stout and a porter, or have never been quite sure what imperial means, there's help at hand. All these and more can be found in the Beer Styles reference, a new permanent addition to the Tasting Library.

25 Aug 17:14

Canada’s tax agency is ‘out for blood’: not from global-income cheats, but from its leaking auditors

by admin

Auditors past and present, frustrated by lack of action in the Vancouver real estate arena, describe a departmental culture that sees law enforcement and principles lose out to the pursuit of easy audits against ‘the little guys’.

25 Aug 17:14

This Startup Wants To Bridge The Gap Between Chat And Email

by Emma Lee

Have instant messaging tools killed email in China? Not quite yet.

According to Jo Liu, co-founder of productivity app Rush, the heyday of email is far from over, it just requires a facelift.

“Email or instant messaging, this shouldn’t be a single-answer option,” she says. The problem is how to let the two work together.”

There have been a few email clients that handle instant messaging, texting, and group chat. Rush, an app that connects email with messaging communities, is one of them.

The tool has all the trimmings of a typical mail app: support for all major email providers (Gmail, iCloud, Microsoft Exchange and other IMAP accounts), quick search among all mail with keywords or email addresses, automatic addition of email contacts, customized settings for mail, and badge notifications.

But Rush isn’t just an email client. “What we are doing is to let [users]  mail and chat, the two most popular forms of text communication, to play their own parts for the maximum results”, said Jo.

SS-RushIn addition to mail management, Rush allows users to switch from mail to an iMessage-like chat format to start a conversation. Users can reply with either an email or a chat message according to what they consider appropriate for the situation.

When a user chooses to adopt the chat model, the dialogue will be processed by IM protocol if the receiver is also a Rush client, shortening the processing time from email. The receiver will get a normal looking email if he or she hasn’t download the app.

Similar to WeChat, the hugely popular Chinese social networking app, Rush users can send voice messages as ‘chats’. However, in Rush, users can pause, rewind, and fast-forward voice messages, making it easier to replay them for note-taking. The app also lets users reply directly to a specific message and reference the original email to avoid confusion.

For people on multiple tasks, Rush offers a calendar feature, which helps keep all members in a group to stay on the same page. Rio, an intelligent assistant, pings you when other members change their schedule, keeping users updated with events for more efficient teamwork.

Security is a top priority in the internet age. “Aside from password protection, Rush also uses the standard SSL security protocol to ensure data safety amid transmission”, Jo said.

Founded in February 2015 by Xu Zhe, founder of online service Doit.IM, Rush launched in May this year with its eyes on China and the international market. The startup team now has more than 50 employees working from three offices across Tokyo, Beijing, and Hangzhou.

25 Aug 17:14

Item from Ian: Why do condo towers look the same?

by pricetags

From Toronto Metro:

Metro TO

Hans Ibelings first visited Toronto in the 1990s, before a condo boom sent the city’s skyline hurtling upward.

When he returned in 2012, the Dutch art historian found a denser, more dynamic city, but one whose architectural landscape was dominated by “a complete sameness” of glass condos.

“Coming from Europe, it’s unbelievable that there’s so little interest in the quality of design,” he said.

Along with local design firm PARTISANS, Ibelings has authored Rise and Sprawl: The Condominiumization of Toronto, a new book that takes Toronto’s “repetitive” and “bland” condo architecture to task. …

“As long as condos sell there is no incentive to change anything, and as long as there is nothing else on the market, people will buy what’s available,” he writes in the book.

 

Condo colours

 


25 Aug 17:14

Google to rollout Wi-Fi Assistant feature to all Nexus devices in Canada

by Ian Hardy

Google Project Fi users in the U.S. have been enjoying Google’s Wi-Fi Assistant for a number of months now, and soon Canadian Nexus users will be able to do so as well.

According to a post on the Nexus support pages, the company plans to rollout Wi-Fi Assistant to all Nexus users in Canada, the U.S., Mexico, U.K. and several Nordic countries in the next few weeks. The nifty tool allows users to connect to an unprotected Wi-Fi network securely with the help of a VPN managed by Google.

08.24_Nexus_WifiAssist_G

Wi-Fi Assistant works with Nexus devices running Android 5.1 or higher. To access it,  tap Settings > Google > Networking > “Wi-Fi Assistant” On/Off switch.

Source Google
25 Aug 17:14

Gross is the new like? Grotesque microcelebrity and carnivalesque commerce

by crystalabidin

grostesque

Pretty things are pretty to look at. They bring you comfort, inspire aspiration, or perhaps stimulate vicarious consumption. But have you ever stumbled upon something gross on the internet and yet could not look away?

Me too. (It’s no wonder Dr. Pimple Popper has over 700 million views on YouTube.)

“Picture perfect” Influencers have been thriving on social media ever since they burst into the scene in the early-to-mid 2000s. Having first begun on blogs such as LiveJournal, OpenDiary, and blogger, these self-made internet celebrities have since transited to monetising the presentation of their everyday lives on various social media including Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Twitch, and Snapchat. Perhaps most representative in the popular imagination are “Instagram Influencers” most known for their conscientious poses in pristine locations, luxury-esque conspicuous consumption and savvy internet relatability in tow.

But this economy of the perfect, pristine, and picturesque is growing saturated and fast becoming boring.

Enter “grotesque microcelebrities”.


In a 7-minute video that has garnered over 20,000 likes, Japanese competitive eater Kinoshita Yuka devours 100 McDonald’s burgers in one sitting, accompanied by enthusiastic commentary in a chirpy voice.

In a Facebook clip (since taken down) that has been viewed over 28 million times, South Korean YouTuber Showry rubs raw octopus and fish all over her body, while clad in a mermaid costume and sitting in an empty fridge.

On his Facebook page with over 31,000 followers, self-employed artiste Steven Lim unabashedly videologues his quest to find the perfect “9.5 pointer” girlfriend with the minimum of a D-cup bra size.

Unlike their counterparts who dwell on the attention of affect, envy, and beauty, grotesque microcelebrities are trading in a new currency of grotesque allure, visceral camp, and carnivalesque commerce where shock value is highly viable. They master the nauseating allure of grotesque exhibitionism on representational media to engross, entice, and somehow enrapture viewers.

But how should we make sense of this? 


Are grotesque microcelebrity just another fad?

Culturally, grotesque microcelebrity is akin to microcelebrity. Coined and popularised by media scholar Theresa Senft, microcelebrity is a burgeoning online trend, wherein people attempt to gain popularity by employing digital media technologies, such as videos, blogs, and social media.

To make sense of grotesque microcelebrity, I borrow from cultural studies scholar Graeme Turner who approaches celebrity as a “cultural shift” towards the “momentary”, “visual”, and “sensational”; a “gift” of “extraordinary” individuals; and a commodification of identity.

Drawing inspiration from this framework, grotesque microcelebrity emerge as:

A symptom of our move from representational media to presentational media, where users have the increasing ability to negotiate and control their public personae online with “tools with which to become famous” such as social media;

A quality of everyday ordinariness situated at the intersection of the attention economy and the “demotic turn”, where “lived experience of ʻthe ordinaryʼ” appear to be authentic and dedicated representations of everyday life “as lived” despite actually being calculated productions of entertainment in the guise of democratic access; and

A product of “a wedding of consumer culture with democratic aspirations” through mechanisms such as product endorsements and sponsorships.

Yet, conceptually, grotesque microcelebrity are unique from microcelebrity. Significant works have studied microcelebrity as actors who are responsive and conversational, aspirational, aesthetically pleasing, and relatable. Emergent forms of Vine and Snapchat microcelebrity that have been popularized in the last two years have also largely relied on positive emotions such as humour, parody, and wit.

However, grotesque microcelebrity rely on negative emotions and solicits visceral reactions of revulsion, repulsion, and distancing to captivate followers. They objectify the self on display with little dialogue, being anti-aspirational, performing a hyper-aesthetic that counters normative beauty, and inducing shock. 


How do grotesque microcelebrities look like?

Let’s turn to Japanese competitive eater, or “mukbang” Kinoshita Yuka as a case study.

Yuka has headlined global news for her viral binge eating videos. She stands out in the climate of Japanese microcelebrity culture where family Influencers document the upbringing of their adorable children, Cosplayers display their DIY creativity and dedication, and attractive lifestyle vloggers share fashion and makeup tips.

At the start of each video, Yuka lays out the copious amounts of food of which she is about to partake in a flatlay. If she makes the meal from scratch, Yuka holds up ingredients to the camera while recording the cooking process – boiling, simmering, frying, stirring – highlighting heavy foods such as meat and carbohydrates enveloped in oil bubbles and steam. The sheer amount of raw ingredients she uses is often shock inducing as viewers get a clearer grasp of the amount of calories she is actually consuming.

If she purchases readymade food from eateries, Yuka preserves the original food packaging for her opening flatlay, laying one food item at a time on her table in a sped-up, fast-forwarded video sequence. With household famous brand logos such as McDonalds and Pizza Hut on display, viewers are able to identify with the everydayness of the foods Yuka binge eats. This awareness solicits a sense of relatability in viewers, inviting them to compare their ordinary capacity of consumption with that of Yuka’s grotesque intake, as they stare and squirm over stretching the limits of the human body.

Yuka draws viewers in with her chirpy commentary addressed to viewers in first person, while she holds the gaze of the camera/viewers and polishes the foods in one sitting with no hint of discomfort. This is made all the more spectacular as Yuka is skinny, small-built, and fair-skinned, appears to be in her twenties, and gives the impression of frailty through her usual wardrobe of layered tops and cardigans to protect her from the cold – in short, the antithesis of the tropic binge eater whom one imagines to be male, brawny, and hardy.


What makes grotesque microcelebrity tick?

Comments on YouTube, Facebook, and Reddit where Yuka’s videos often attain virality reveal viewers expressing shock (“I can’t even”), curiosity (“Gotta wonder how much she poops”), and disgust (“This makes me wanna puke”) at her superhuman feats.

Clearly, grotesque microcelebrity are a hit among viewers. But how? Allow the digital anthropologist in me to offer a mini-framework of “grotesque allure”, “visceral camp”, and “carnivalesque commerce”:

Grotesque allure is the strategic use of transgressive and nauseating images and imagery, pushing viewers to adopt a voyeuristic “clinical gaze” that is judgemental, moralizing, and distancing;

Visceral camp is the aesthetic of playful, anti-serious visual displays and theatrics that are exaggerated and outlandish, carefully curated to convey atypical taste and overwhelming to the point of ridicule and primitive gawking;

Carnivalesque commerce is the state of frenzied opportunity in the attention economy, wherein an event suspends the hierarchy of hegemonic microcelebrity, and redistributes attention such that normatively marginal actors may wrestle opportunities to partake in the market.

Despite the apparent discomfort, it is difficult to look away as grotesque microcelebrity grabs viewers in a fixation that is alluring, visceral, and carnivalesque.


Dr Crystal Abidin is an anthropologist and an ethnographer. Reach her at wishcrys.com and @wishcrys. A version of this paper will be presented at the AoIR 2016 in Berlin this October. 

Featured image screengrabbed here on 25 August 2016, 0045hrs, GMT +8.

25 Aug 17:13

Twitter Favorites: [antichrista] Do you have a small person in your life who needs to learn a lesson about group chat? https://t.co/QtDw4ITSxh

Christa Mrgan @antichrista
Do you have a small person in your life who needs to learn a lesson about group chat? pic.twitter.com/QtDw4ITSxh
25 Aug 17:13

Twitter Favorites: [_brianhamilton] @brentsimmons Sorry, I don't pay for cocktails, the built-in cocktails work just fine for me and there are so many free cocktails available

Brian Hamilton @_brianhamilton
@brentsimmons Sorry, I don't pay for cocktails, the built-in cocktails work just fine for me and there are so many free cocktails available
25 Aug 17:13

Twitter Favorites: [katherinebailey] @sillygwailo brings back memories! I used to go to the one on Railway St

katherinebailey @katherinebailey
@sillygwailo brings back memories! I used to go to the one on Railway St
25 Aug 17:13

Twitter Favorites: [walrusmagazine] Douglas Coupland on why one person's collection of fine art is another person's pile of empty pizza boxes. https://t.co/pWNf92SmrM

The Walrus @walrusmagazine
Douglas Coupland on why one person's collection of fine art is another person's pile of empty pizza boxes. thewalrus.ca/highbrow-hoard…
25 Aug 17:13

Twitter Favorites: [claire_atkin] Waiting patiently for @nenshi and @MayorGregor to tweet this new video out, with commentary https://t.co/8ct0DKDDtd

Claire Atkin @claire_atkin
Waiting patiently for @nenshi and @MayorGregor to tweet this new video out, with commentary youtu.be/NUC2EQvdzmY
25 Aug 17:12

Twitter Favorites: [Planta] Because I often take a picture of my letters before opening, I wonder what this is. #maildropping https://t.co/Bl8v8m8uu2

Joseph Planta @Planta
Because I often take a picture of my letters before opening, I wonder what this is. #maildropping pic.twitter.com/Bl8v8m8uu2
25 Aug 17:12

Twitter Favorites: [bmann] Pretty amazing quote from @RachaelAshe newsletter: “The reality of adulthood is we are at work and at play all the time”

Boris Mann @bmann
Pretty amazing quote from @RachaelAshe newsletter: “The reality of adulthood is we are at work and at play all the time”
25 Aug 17:12

Nexus 5 Gets an Unofficial Android 7.0 Nougat ROM

by Rajesh Pandey
Officially, the Nexus 5 is not going to be updated to Android 7.0 Nougat by Google and has reached its end of life. Unofficially, just a couple of days after Google pushed Nougat’s code to AOSP though, a stable build of the latest and sweetest version of Android is now available for one of the best Nexus devices ever released. Continue reading →
25 Aug 17:12

Community Strategy And Emotions

by Richard Millington

A community strategy is essentially the emotion you wish to amplify to change human behavior.

Changing the platform, revamping social norms, launching a new event…these are all tactics. Sometimes very effective tactics, but tactics nonetheless.

What changes behavior over the long term is emotions. A good tactic might significantly amplify an emotion. But a good strategy will amplify the efficacy of all tactics (even the bad ones).

We so rarely consider what we want members to feel about the community and their contributions to it. When we do consider emotions, we default to positive-sounding emotions. (e.g. we want members to feel excited and happy).

But are these the most powerful emotions? I’m not so sure.

Ask members how they feel about the community and how they feel when they make a contribution to the community (this works better in an interview than a survey). The data here will always surprise you.

The answers will be more nuanced than joy, happiness, and excitement. Really push for people to explain how they feel when they make a contribution. Now translate this into an emotion you can amplify.

For example, members might say they want to be seen and recognised by others, see how other people react to their posts, or appear as an expert. These are motivations, not emotions. They might feel lonely and want to be accepted by their peers, anxious that no-one will respond or excited when people do, and jealous of the top experts.

This gives you some pretty interesting strategies then. You might amplify loneliness and build the sense of community to overcome it. You might focus on the excitement of getting a response and the surprise of a good idea. You might focus on the jealousy of the top experts.

This leads to some pretty clear tactics too. Let’s use a simplified example:

STRATEGY:


“Our strategy is to get regular members to feel jealous of top experts and encourage others to share their tips to also be recognised as an expert by their peers.”

Growth N/A
Content Interview experts who share the most tips.

Provide guest columns to top experts.

Solicit the opinions of top experts on regular news items.

Moderation Provide top experts with moderation rights.

Add a ‘star’ or ‘recognised expert’ next to those who collect the most likes on their tips. Turn tips created by top experts into sticky threads more frequently.

Influence @mention the top experts more frequently in discussions.
Events and Activities Invite top experts to attend and speak at relevant events.

Host webinars with top experts.

User Experience Feature the top experts on the front of the site.  List the number of tips shared or likes received next to each contribution of experts.
Business Integration N/A

Notice now the tactics directly connect to the strategy and the research you gained from the interviews you conducted.

Right now we’re seeing a big search for more tactics at the expense of a sound, researched, strategy. Going mobile, hosting an AMA, or writing a roundup article without a clear idea of the emotion you’re trying to amplify is like throwing darts without a dart board to aim at.

Try to deeply understand how members feel when they join and participate. Now look at possible tactics to amplify that emotion. These are often cheaper, more effective, and easier to measure than what you’re trying today.

25 Aug 17:11

An insider's view on Apple Music exclusives

by Volker Weber
There’s one guy who is behind ALL of these campaigns — and he is light years ahead of everyone else. He works intimately with each artist as a creative peer, and develops an amazing plan, this is no simple land grab. He works closer with the artists than labels do.

Fascinating read. I did not know about this major change in the industry.

More >

25 Aug 17:11

Can Street Design Affect Our Health and Wellbeing?

image

I will be leading one of the public walks as part of this exciting experiment launching next month during Placemaking Week in Vancouver. Read the press release below to learn more and get involved:

Happy Streets Living Lab Offers a Groundbreaking Public Space Experiment

VANCOUVER, BC - Around the world, city streets are being transformed into better places to walk, socialize and celebrate. But how do these changes influence the way we feel and treat other people?

Happy Streets Living Lab:  Presented by  City of Vancouver, MODUS, Urban Realities Laboratory and Happy City Lab is an experiment that will take place during Project for Public Space’s Pro Walk/Pro Bike/Pro Place conference on September 12 - 14, 2016.

The Happy Streets Living Lab will combine research rigor with fun tours of Vancouver, where participants learn about their own physical and emotional responses to the city. It is a valuable opportunity to bring people from around the world together to learn best practices in creating happy spaces that promote social interaction and build trust. The project partners are excited to share this innovative project with conference attendees

“We believe that great public spaces have the ability to foster deep engagement and connections to one’s community, while also generating feelings of well-being. It will be fascinating to see these beliefs put to the test in the Happy Streets Living Lab,” said Vince Verlaan, MODUS Principal and Engagement Specialist. “This research aligns with our objective of creating a lasting legacy of healthy, sustainable and prosperous communities.”

The Happy Streets Living Lab is part of a University of Waterloo research project, led by Dr. Colin Ellard, Director of the Urban Realities Laboratory at the University of Waterloo. The Laboratory has conducted similar studies in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Berlin, Mumbai and Toronto as a part of its mandate to understand the influence of urban design on the psychological state of urban residents.  

“We are very excited to share our methodology in Vancouver and to further explore its potential for understanding how the design of city streets can influence urban life,” said Dr. Ellard.

Each tour will end with a group discussion of the data collected during the tour and the implications for urban planning, and public health and safety. Preliminary results from all the tours will then be shared with conference participants in a plenary session.

“This conference is the ideal setting to continue refining and building on the psycho-physiological experiments that began in New York and continued in Berlin. The opportunity to conduct this public space experiment with 90 of the world’s leading urbanists – and to share the results with 1000+ of them – in Vancouver, my home, is invaluable,” said Charles Montgomery, Principal at Happy City Lab and author of Happy City.

Space for this free experiment is limited. People are encouraged to register now and participate in this groundbreaking public space research.

image

About the Happy Streets Living Lab Partners:

MODUS Planning, Design & Engagement is a 15-person Vancouver-based firm specializing in community planning, urban design and public engagement. By moving “from insight to impact,” we work with a wide range of private and public sector clients to explore address the challenges and opportunities of our time, with a strong focus on collaboration, co-creation, and action.

The City of Vancouver is proud to support the Happy Streets Living Lab through VIVA Vancouver, a program that transforms road spaces into vibrant pedestrian spaces. In collaboration with community groups, local businesses, and regional partners, VIVA facilitates short- and long-term street closures throughout the year, creating public spaces for walking, lounging, and lunching. These spaces enhance the city’s sense of community, encourage walking and cycling, and benefit local businesses.

Urban Realities Laboratory studies the impact of urban design on human psychology.  We employ a wide variety of methods ranging from field studies of behaviour in urban and architectural settings to the use of immersive virtual reality to test predictions about urban behaviour in simulations. Urban Reality Laboratory’s goals are both to contribute to theory in environmental psychology and to develop tools that can be applied to specific problems and issues relating to the psychology of the built environment.

Happy City is a consulting group that helps build happiness into neighborhoods and cities through research, public events, and collaborative consulting. Our work is grounded in evidence from psychology, neuroscience, public health, and behavioral economics. To learn more about this work, please see the book, Happy City: Transforming Our Lives Through Urban Design, written by award-winning author and Happy City principal, Charles Montgomery.


Media Contact:

Jillian Glover
Communications Specialist
Modus Planning, Design and Engagement
jillian@thinkmodus.ca
604-787-0945

Mitchell Reardon
Public Outreach and Coordination
Happy City Lab
mitchell@metropolitancollective.com
778-990-6663

25 Aug 17:11

Leap Motion – Second lap

by windsorr

Reply to this post

RFM AvatarSmall

 

 

 

 

 

This reinvention makes more sense 

  • Following on from the mess of its first launch in 2013 (see here), Leap Motion has now shifted its focus from PCs to Virtual Reality (VR) which is a use case that makes far more sense.
  • The original idea was to use the Leap Motion controller to turn any PC into a touch enabled device but adding it into VR makes far better use of the technology that has been developed.
  • The beauty of the Leap Motion device has always been its ability to faithfully recreate a pair of fully functional hands in 3-dimensional virtual space.
  • In PCs, this is a nice to have but in VR it obviates the need to have any hand controllers which is a problem that I think has not been adequately solved to date.
  • The weakness of the Leap Motion offering is that offers no haptic at all.
  • While this was not a problem in PCs, I think in VR haptics are going to be increasingly important as the experience aims to be as close to real life as possible.
  • How Leap Motion aims to solve this problem is unclear and looking at the products that it has available today, not much seems to have changed over the last three years.
  • This brings me back to the botched launch in 2013, which I have long believed was due in no small part to management execution issues.
  • However, I also believe that management was under intense pressure from its investors to get to market which resulted in good hardware but less than perfect software which meant that the user experience was far from great.
  • The result was a device that users played with a few hours and then threw in a desk draw and forgot about.
  • However, with VR the use case is far more compelling.
  • Leap Motion can detect movement in all joints of all fingers and thumbs which in a virtual 3D environment has far more applications.
  • Furthermore, the device is small enough to mount on the front of a VR headset without meaningfully increasing its weight.
  • The obvious target for Leap Motion has to be integration as the solution would be much less cumbersome with the sensor integrated into the headset.
  • I think that the combination of Leap Motion with a solution to provide haptic feedback (a pair of gloves?) could provide a compelling offering for VR.
  • I still think that Augmented Reality (AR) is the future (see here) but it is far more difficult to implement, meaning that it won’t hit the big time for some years to come.
  • In the meantime, I think that the VR solution with the most promise is Sony, as it is one of the cheapest, already has an installed base of 100m devices that can run it as well as a thriving developer community.
  • However, Sony’s has a legendary ability to surrender dominant market positions with barely a whimper so whether it can hold onto any success it has in VR is questionable.
  • I suspect that Leap Motion will end up being acquired by one of the VR players which I think will be welcomed by its long suffering investors.
25 Aug 17:11

Starting up and maintaining an Everything Notebook

by Raul Pacheco-Vega

It’s been an excellent few months for me, because I have been able to share more of my “tricks and tools of the trade” with people who read my blog, and readers seem to like how my workflow processes help them with their own. As always, I don’t provide “advice”. I simply share my experiences in hopes they will help other academics who are at similar stages of my life, or my own students (or other professors’ students!).

One idea that came to me recently is that, while folks seem excited with the concept of the Everything Notebook (to keep track of their To-Do lists, research notes, ideas, etc.) I don’t think I wrote what I believe are the key elements of how the Everything Notebook works from the start up. In my view, the two things that make my Everything Notebook work for me are the durable plastic tabs and the use of colour (in my case, Sharpie 0.4mm fine markers, and multiple colour highlighters). The third element is the flexibility and ease of adjustment of an Everything Notebook. I can move stuff around very easily, as shown below.

The key to the Everything Notebook’s simplicity is that you don’t need to create an Index (as opposed to the Bullet Journal). Because the Everything Notebook has descriptive titles in each of the rigid plastic tabs that are attached to each section, you don’t need to have a detailed index. While I do try to save some pages for Research, a few for Students, space for To Do lists, and a few pages for Administrative Tasks, I don’t fret if one thing runs over another, or if I end up having to move the plastic tabs from one page to another. The beauty of using plastic durable tabs is that they’re mobile. You don’t depend on specific dividers and therefore, you can vary how many pages you use for each section.

Another important element is flexibility of notes’ location. Because I label each page or set of pages with a cue to the specific content that is in that page, I don’t necessarily need to write all my To Do lists in a specific location. All I do, particularly if I run out of space, is tag the page with the proper cue so that I can know what exactly is filed where.

As shown above, I bring my Everything Notebook everywhere. Even if I’m working online (writing notes, or editing papers), I keep an analog medium to jot down ideas and/or To-Do items. My Everything Notebook is always synchronized with my Project Whiteboard and Google Calendar. I’m also glad other people have taken up the concept!

The important thing for me is that the Everything Notebook gives me the flexibility of not having to be strict about content, or location of said content. I can have a To Do list, followed by a few notes from a scholarly seminar, followed by ideas about a research project, followed by notes from my lectures or scribbles related to a new research paper. Because I use the plastic tabs to organize the notebook, I always know exactly what is located where.

And more importantly, I use the Everything Notebook everyday. I carry it everywhere. My students, colleagues, other academics, participants in meetings, people whom I’ve interviewed during fieldwork, everyone has seen the Everything Notebook, and so far everybody has understood what I use it for.

Caveats to using an Everything Notebook

There are obviously a couple of caveats, though. The first one is obvious, some people are colour-blind and therefore using colour will not help them. The advantage of using plastic tabs (and you can even use traditional adhesive mini-notes) is that you don’t depend on a colour-code. You can simply turn your Everything Notebook around and read what the tab says.

The second caveat is obviously that you need to carry the Everything Notebook around. I do, and it’s the first thing that I usually bring with me. Except when I don’t, and then my life is completely screwed up. That’s why it’s important to have the meetings synchronized with Google Calendar (because my iCal is synchronized to my Google Calendar, so I may forget what I’m meant to be doing, but I don’t miss where I am supposed to be or which meeting I should be attending).

The third caveat is that you may run out of space. If so, and it’s happened to me before, you can start a new Everything Notebook. Just keep the previous one handy in case you need to confer. I have my two most recent Everything Notebooks at my office at the ready just in case I need to confer about specific datasets, ideas, fieldwork, etc.

The Everything Notebook in action, beyond writing and To-Do list planning.

When discussing how to operate the Everything Notebook, Dr. Veronica Kitchen from University of Waterloo asked me what would we do if there are some notes you took by hand in your Everything Notebook and you don’t remember where you left them.

As I noted below, when the article or book chapter, or book, or report is worth writing a memo about (or memo-ing), then I insert a larger tab where I write the citation.

When people ask me “how do you find stuff in your Everything Notebook”, I show them how I use plastic tabs (they’re pretty sturdy and rigid) to mark the content. I use very descriptive titles so that I can find quickly. Also, I use the tabs on the right hand side, on the top and on the bottom.

From the example below: “Lucero Radonic” means notes from my Skype meetings with Dr. Lucero Radonic from Michigan State University, a water anthropologist who shares interest in water governance in Mexico with me. “Seminar with Debora” refers to a seminar I attended that Dr. Debora VanNijnatten (a good friend and colleague from Wilfrid Laurier University) gave at CIDE earlier this year. “LASA 2016” are my notes from the panel where I presented at LASA in late May of this year. “Goals June 2016” should be obvious, those are my writing and mentoring and teaching goals for June.

It is also clear that sometimes you scribble things in notepads, or Post-It notes. You don’t want to lose those notes, and you wonder how to integrate them to the Everything Notebook. What I do is: I staple them. That way, I know for a fact that I won’t be losing the notes I already had written for a project, or a To-Do list that I ended up drafting on a plane or in a line to enter a building.

I am just happy to see that people find my methods useful. Hopefully this post will help those who may need an organization system that doesn’t have to be perfect (because I am FAR from perfect myself!)

25 Aug 17:10

Rogers could be building its own messaging service called En Route

by Ian Hardy

Currently, customers looking to view their Rogers account details or file complaints can contact the carrier by phone, email, online, through the MyRogers app, or via Facebook Messenger. However, likely thanks to the rise of dedicated messaging apps, it seems Rogers could be working on its own dedicated messaging platform.

A new filing submitted to the Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO), seems to indicate Rogers is working on a new service called ‘Rogers EnRoute,’ or possibly just ‘En Route.’

En Route is described in the filing as a “wireless digital messaging services” that provides technical support services related to “computer hardware and software problems.”

There are no other details regarding Rogers’ plans for EnRoute, but it’s possible the new messaging initiative could be build into the company’s current MyRogers app.

SourceCIPO
24 Aug 22:23

Inside Your iPhone’s Brain

by John Voorhees

Steven Levy has a fascinating inside look at Apple’s artificial intelligence and machine learning efforts on Backchannel. Levy spent most of a day with Eddy Cue, Phil Schiller, Craig Federighi, Tom Gruber, and Alex Acero in a wide-ranging discussion of the products impacted by those efforts. Perhaps the most interesting parts of the interviews revolved around what Levy refers to as the Apple Brain inside the iPhone:

How big is this brain, the dynamic cache that enables machine learning on the iPhone? Somewhat to my surprise when I asked Apple, it provided the information: about 200 megabytes, depending on how much personal information is stored (it’s always deleting older data). This includes information about app usage, interactions with other people, neural net processing, a speech modeler, and “natural language event modeling.” It also has data used for the neural nets that power object recognition, face recognition, and scene classification.

And, according to Apple, it’s all done so your preferences, predilections, and peregrinations are private.

Levy also covers the replacement of Siri’s smarts on July 30, 2014 with neural-net system. The impact according to Eddy Cue was immediate:

This was one of those things where the jump was so significant that you do the test again to make sure that somebody didn’t drop a decimal place.

Many people have commented that Siri has improved over time, but without the context beyond one’s own experience or metrics from Apple, the perceived change has been largely anecdotal. According to Acero, however:

The error rate has been cut by a factor of two in all the languages, more than a factor of two in many cases.… That’s mostly due to deep learning and the way we have optimized it — not just the algorithm itself but in the context of the whole end-to-end product.

Levy also delves into whether Apple’s stance on privacy hobbles its ability to effectively implement AI and machine learning. According to Apple, it does not. The most personal information remains on-device in the ‘Apple Brain.’ Other data, which is transmitted to Apple uses techniques like differential privacy, which is coming in iOS 10, to obfuscate a user's identity.

The entire article is worth a read to get a sense of the breadth and depth of Apple’s AI and machine learning efforts and the impact on its products. It’s also fascinating to see Apple continue to open up on its own terms as a way to rebut recent criticisms leveled against it.

→ Source: backchannel.com

24 Aug 22:23

The Julia programming language: amazingly nice

by Mark Watson, author and consultant
Well, at least I am amazed. I took a brief look at Julia a few years ago but since I understood it to be somewhat derivative of GNU/Octave (or Matlab) and R, and since even though I use GNU/Octave and R I don't enjoy these languages, I only gave Julia a very short look.

Fortunately, a current customer uses Julia so I have been ramping up on the language and I very much like it. A bit off topic but I would like to give a shout-out to the O'Relly Safari Books Online service which I recently joined when they had a $200/year guaranteed for life subscription price (half regular price). I am reading "Getting Started with Julia" by Ivo Balbaert which is fine for now. I have "Julia for Data Science" by Zacharias Voulgaris and "Mastering Julia" by Malcolm Sherrington in my reading queue. When learning a new technology having up to date books available really is better than finding information on the web (or at least augmentation to material on the web).

I very much like the tooling for Julia. Julia is a new language but there are already many useful libraries available. Julia uses github for storing modules in the standard library and the integration works very well, at least on Ubuntu Linux. So far, I have been happy just using GNU/gedit for development. I haven't tried Julia on OS X or Windows 10.

The Julia repl is great! Color coding and auto completion are especially well done.

I like just about everything about the Julia language except for 1-based indexing of matrices. Oh well.

Julia is readable, functions are first class objects and programming in Julia is very "Lisp like." With optional type hints (mostly in defining function arguments) Julia is a very high performance language. I love developing in Ruby but I do dream of much higher performance. Julia does not seem like a complete replacement for Ruby (for me) however. That might change.

In addition to doing work with Julia, I have also been experimenting with lots of little coding projects: the Merly web framework (simple, sort of like Sinatra), using the standard HiddenMarkovModels library, and experimenting with a few of the neural network libraries. All good stuff.


24 Aug 22:22

Folk Psychology as a Theory

files/images/tumblr_inline_o34adtrida1qlskdk_1280.jpg


Ian Ravenscroft, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Aug 27, 2016


Given a substantive revision this past week, the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy's article on folk psychology is well worth reading. The idea behind folk psychology is that we can explain the behavior of humans in terms of their possessing mental states. For example, we say that a person 'knows' what the capital of Paris is, that he 'believes' Paris is in Europe, or that she 'wants' to go there. These mental states are representational states and can be thought of as holding 'mental content'. Most everyone believes some version of this theory (hence it's title as a 'folk' theory) and it permeates educational theory. That's why it's important to study this article. And it should also be noted here that my own 'belief' is that the theory is wrong, that there are no representations, mental contents, etc., and that cognitive processes are not linguistic, logical or computational processes. See eliminative materialism.

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24 Aug 22:21

Reflections on Deployment Day 2016

by Fraser Speirs

So it's now been a week since we rolled out our latest iteration of 1:1 iPad at Cedars. What does it look like and how did it go?

Deployment Design

My intention is always to do one three-year deployment, not three one-year deployments. My aim, which we achieved in the 2013 deployment, was that the iPads would go out and not come back to me until the end of the lease.

Our school is straight-through K-12, with a slight bias towards pupils in the Primary department. We decided on a split deployment this time - using iPad minis and 9.7" iPad Pros.

One interesting thing in the discussions about the device was that the name "iPad Pro" might have actually hindered the iPad a little. The idea of buying a "Pro" device for a five-year-old just seemed to absurd to fly when, in both previous deployments, we had purchased the lower-storage fastest iPad. First time round we had no choice, of course, but last time round we bought everyone a 32GB 9.7" iPad with Retina Display. This time, the younger kids got something smaller.

The devices are: 64GB iPad Mini 4 (31 units) and 32GB iPad Pro 9.7" (94 units). This leaves us 1 spare mini and 4 spare iPad Pros. That's 3-4% spare capacity, which is about right. We could probably get away with a bit less given our Mean Time To Repair (it's very quick with an Apple Store 25 minutes away), but it's good to have a couple of identical spares to test things like iOS 10, Shared iPad and so on.

We are deploying the minis to Primary 1-4 (US: K-3) and iPad Pro for everyone else. I have in the past expressed scepticism about the suitability of the iPad mini for younger users and their poorer fine motor skills. I had to abandon that opinion in the face of the weight of evidence that literally every child who had their own iPad had a mini and they were all getting on just fine with it.

We are again using Casper Suite for our MDM, hosted on Amazon EC2. We have been very happy with this product for a couple of years now and there was absolutely no compelling reason to change.

Deployment Changes from 2013-16

There are a number of new technologies coming together in the 2016 deployment that we have not used before.

Firstly, these are the first devices we have purchased since the Device Enrolment Program came to the UK. We are also switching to iOS 9's VPP device assignment from the older iOS 7-era user-assignment model for apps. The huge change of course is the migration to Managed Apple IDs - about which more later.

Migrating to a new MDM Instance

As part of the deployment, I decided to migrate everything to a new instance of Casper Suite. Doing this was remarkably easy and basically involved these steps:

  • Shut down our old EC2 instance
  • Set up a new EC2 instance and install Casper Suite
  • Reconnect the new MDM to DEP and VPP by uploading keys and tokens to the appropriate places.
  • Assigning our DEP devices to the new server and setting it as the default server for new devices.

The main downside to doing this is that we were 2 years into a 3 year reserved instance on EC2 and we couldn't make a new instance of the type that we reserved (m1.small). We are running our new JSS on a t2.small EC2 instance right now and monitoring that before we buy a new reserved instance. In general, I would like to get our EC2 reserved instances lined up with our deployment cadence.

Preparation before the Day

The preparatory stage went remarkably smoothly on the whole. Devices were delivered and it was the coolest thing to be able to see and work with them in DEP while they were still sitting in a TNT loading dock.

Once the devices arrived and were unboxed, the next steps were to:

  • Connect them 20 at a time to Apple Configurator
  • Restore the devices to the latest version of iOS (they all came with 9.3.2 and 9.3.3 was then-current).
  • Use Configurator to kick-start the DEP process.

The restore step is important. Configurator lets you update or restore. Recall that all iOS devices greater than 16GB come with a pre-installed set of apps from the App Store: iWork, iLife and iTunes U. These apps will of course be unmanaged when you get the devices into MDM. You can take them under management remotely but to do so you'd have to scope all those apps onto all those devices and then un-scope any you wanted gone. Easier, to my mind, to just press the other button in Configurator.

All of this preparation went fine, except we didn't have our iPad Pro cases yet. The 9.7" Pro is very similar to the iPad Air 2 but it's not the same and it's definitely not case-compatible. For one thing, there are four speakers on the Pro. Secondly, and more importantly, the iPad Pro is the first iPad with a flash. iPad Air cases partially occlude the flash, which would be a constant problem for indoor exposure metering in photography.

We had decided on the recommendation of many many schools to go with the STM Dux cases. The nomenclature for these cases is confusing when it comes to iPad Pro. The STM Dux case for non-Pro devices is a case with a rubber frame, plastic back and an integrated wraparound cover. The "Dux" for iPad Pro is basically that case without the cover - obviously to allow access to the Smart Connector. We wanted a wraparound case for all our devices. This, for iPads Pro, is called the "Dux Plus".

Still, we got the cases in time and it's all good. The cases seem very robust so far and have a very clever clear plastic panel over the back. Some class teachers have put labels under there to identify individual kids' iPads and they won't wear or peel off.

Rollout Day

We rolled out class by class. We ran into a couple of issues where we jammed the wifi by - maybe - associating too many devices in a short period.

Managed Apple ID Process

Let's just say that the idea of having to use a Managed Apple ID was ... not warmly welcomed by pupils used to free access to the App Store. It wasn't my decision to migrate everyone to a Managed ID, but I had to because of the limitations Apple has placed on iTunes U and Managed IDs.

As a result of this forced migration, a few issues arose. Firstly, I feel that the deployment lost a certain amount of enthusiasm amongst the older students who have had (mostly) free rein up to now. As a result, I'm deploying a range of 'lifestyle' apps for those kids to soften the blow.

Similarly, a few pupils had purchased apps in their school Apple IDs and now have no way back to using those apps on their school devices. Also, some pupils had depended on their iCloud Document syncing in Pages and Keynote instead of backing up to Google Drive. That can be recovered through iCloud.com on a desktop computer but...who has desktop computers any more? ;-)

The setup process as designed in our DEP pre-stage was:

  1. Enter personal wifi password (school-set)
  2. Enable Location Services
  3. Enter Apple ID & Temporary Password
  4. Chance Temporary password (requires entering temp password again, then school password twice)
  5. Accept TrueTone display page
  6. Get to home screen
  7. Enter password for iPad passcode
  8. Confirm password for iPad passcode
  9. Enter password for Google Apps account

I could have controlled the last two steps by not pushing the profiles until later but that would have required interacting with the JSS console in front of the class, which I really didn't want to have to do.

Younger and less-able children were very, very confused by the process of resetting their password. The terms "Current", "New" and "Verify" were too terse to fully explain what they were expected to do.

The "set passcode" prompt and the "Google apps" password prompt were in a race condition so some pupils saw one appearing first then another overtaking it. This led to confusion because I had started explaining a step and then some pupils were presented with dialogs for a separate step.

Basically, this was just too much passwording. Enter the school-provided password five times and the temporary Apple ID password twice (and twice in two screens at that!). This would have been much better if we could have set the final password in Apple School Manager and not required a reset of the password as part of the login.

App Installation

Once pupils had completed the setup, the devices needed a 'kick' in JSS to get them going. I'm not sure why. If I manually prompted the devices to update inventory, apps started getting installed. All devices had pending installations as they had been sitting in setup assistant for about 3 weeks. I didn't have to clear them manually, and probably the apps would have installed next time the devices uploaded inventory (within the next 24h). Unfortunately I needed action to happen in the class basically as soon as Setup Assistant was completed. It would be ideal if the device could signal the MDM "I'm ready now" - which I don't think it can.

App installations proceeded smoothly from there. Caching server worked wonderfully well and we barely touched the Internet the whole day.

I noticed that when a number of apps were being installed, no visual feedback was given on the home screen. The network activity spinner was active but no darkened icons were shown on screen. The apps just appeared once they had been downloaded and installed. Children, who are well used to the App Store, found this confusing and disconcerting.

Overall, though, I have been pretty pleased with the deployment. The network, MDM and caching server all performed very well for Day One.

24 Aug 22:21

Arbutus Thoughts – Spirit Trail Greenway

by Ken Ohrn

There are several examples in Metro Vancouver of what a greenway can be, and here’s one on the North Shore.  It’s called the North Shore Spirit Trail, and is described this way by one of many involved in making it happen, the City of North Vancouver:

Greenways are a key component of the City’s Official Community Plan. To achieve its vision of a liveable, sustainable, diverse, complete community, the City saw the need to integrate its parks and streets systems and create “linear greenways”. This vision was recognized with the 2002 Parks & Greenways Strategic Plan.

The Parks and Greenways Strategic Plan complements both City’s Bicycle Master Plan and Traffic Calming Program by adding to the choices and ways in which people move through the City. Greenways also incorporate a variety of other civic infrastructure in innovative ways. Sidewalks, innovative storm water management, urban forestry, naturalized landscapes, habitat corridors and recreation amenities are all integrated as part of a sustainable approach to connect an increasingly dense community.

Under the Parks & Greenways Strategic Plan, the City aims to provide greenway systems that are accessible to all, including cyclists, inline skaters, pedestrians, seniors and people who use mobility aids.

[Ed:  would commenters please limit their comments on this post to 3 per day]

Spirit Trail.  Note the blackberry bushes Crossing treatment reflects the art and the contribution of the Squamish First Nation in the Spirit Trail A mid-trail rest stop, complete with bike rack The Harbourside West Overpass spans the CN Rail lines, providing a safe, convenient and accessible route for all, enhancing local community connections, providing sustainable travel alternatives and encouraging walking, cycling and wheeled user access. The overpass improves connections between the City's Marine Drive neighbourhood and Harbourside Business Park, which were previously only easily accessible via motorized vehicle use. Due to the intended use by people, not motor vehicles, the bridge is light and elegant. A place to stop and admire the view Note the vegetation (including blackberry bushes)
24 Aug 22:21

DataLayer Exposed: Speaker Jason Denizac

by Thom Crowe
DataLayer Exposed: Speaker Jason Denizac

Jason Denizac from Zendesk is talking at DataLayer and we couldn't wait to hear what will be talking about. So we sat down with him and he told us how at Zendesk they've ported their old REST APIs over to GraphQL and how that's changed how they deliver data to users.

Jason explained how the talk was inspired by a recent project which saw them move to React on the front end, with GraphQL and Relay as the client facing data layer. There they had multiple databases and internal APIs to bring together into a coherent API and it was there they found GraphQL. GraphQL allows a unified schema to be overlaid onto multiple sources of data, without compromising those sources. Jason will explain what drove that move, what benefits resulted for them and the consumers of their GraphQL service.

That's all great, but you can read the abstract for his talk on the DataLayer site; we wanted to get to know a little more about Jason. His headshot for the conference really caught our attention and we think you can see why.

DataLayer Exposed: Speaker Jason Denizac

This rockin' karaoke aficionado didn't disappoint. He was fun to talk to as he shared some about the passion he has behind his data magic.

We talked databases and learned Jason likes polyglot persistence because it allows you to choose the right tools to fit the app you're building. As far as a database for pure "hackability", Jason really likes CouchDB because of its replication protocol, the followers and the processing mode.

He also shared with us that his deep interest is the web and exploration of open protocols. The technologies are modular enough for independent thought to allow people to hack together unexpected solutions to problems. He's really into the development of web 2.0 and the rediscovery of the BitTorrent protocol and replicating over WebRTC data channels. Some of the projects he follows add those to the web stack and recombine them to make some out-of-the-box video streaming, chat and gaming clients

We’re excited for you to meet Jason and all of our speakers at DataLayer on September 28th in Seattle, so we’re offering all Compose users a 20% discount using the coupon code “Compose”. And remember, $99 early bird pricing ends this Friday at midnight so register today.

DataLayer Exposed: Speaker Jason Denizac

24 Aug 18:38

Recommended on Medium: "Blog, You Idiots" in The Hairpin

Blog so we have something good to read.

Continue reading on The Hairpin »

24 Aug 18:38

Google Driving Users Away from Office

by Bardi Golriz

I'm privileged to be on a course with original and creative thinkers from all over the world. Students who are on the cutting edge of technology. There are many MacBooks. And a few Windows laptops. There are a lot of iPads. And one Surface. One entity however completely absent in the classroom is Office1.

I've been a part-time student on this course since 2010, and seen three different sets of full-time students all use Google Drive. These are predominantly Gmail users. That must help. However as someone who regularly uses both Drive and Office Web Apps, I think it's because of more than just the convenience - the former is unquestionably the superior product. 

I'm not interested in comparing Drive to Desktop Office. That's unfair. But, as far as I'm concerned, Drive comfortably beats Office's web client in the two areas I consider the most important: performance and reliability. Without either attribute, I don't consider you to be a ready alternative for the equivalent Desktop client. And Office on the web doesn't have enough of either. There are a lot of things I don't like about Drive from a feature and usability perspective. And I mean a lot. But I always use it with the utmost confidence and security. I can't say the same about web Office. There's a constant lingering sense of worry that my work hasn't been saved. Sometimes it's irrational but not always. Yesterday for example. 

The cherry on Drive's cake is its unparalleled collaboration tools. They're invaluable in an academic setting where one regularly indulges in group work. I'm still in absolute awe when I'm editing a document at the same time as someone else and see their edits in real-time, with both of our changes to the document saved seamlessly. Magical.


I don't know what Microsoft's plans for Office Web Apps are. Recent developments suggest they're prioritising Office 365. That looks a compelling service but next year's batch of students won't find it appealing enough. Not when Drive gives them everything they need in the convenience of a browser for free. Microsoft has a lot of work to do in a browser if they want to avoid Office becoming the next Hotmail. They may have market share today, but they are losing mind share every day. 

1. Another Microsoft product without a presence on campus is SkyDrive due to Dropbox's ubiquity. This is unfortunate as SkyDrive is a world class product.  

24 Aug 18:38

Celebrating 15 Years of WebKit

by Maciej Stachowiak

15 years ago today, on August 24th, 2001, you can see the first check-in to the very same WebKit repository we have been using ever since. This was only a few weeks after the WebKit project was born on June 25th, 2001. Nowadays, WebKit is a well-established open source project. Our 15-year history is in the public repository.

WebKit has come a long way since those early days. It is a true open source project with a public repository. It supports multiple platforms. It has a bunch of exciting modern Web platform features, including many invented by the WebKit team. It has taken performance to far greater levels. And it is the de facto standard for the mobile web.

All of those developments were incredibly exciting to work on. The occasion today is an opportunity to pause and reflect on WebKit’s humble beginnings, and how far it has come. Let’s keep building on this history to make WebKit even more awesome.

24 Aug 18:37

GeoFile: Spatial Reference Systems and Databases

by Abdullah Alger
GeoFile: Spatial Reference Systems and Databases

GeoFile is a series dedicated to looking at geographical data, its features and its uses. In this article, we discuss spatial reference systems, what EPSG codes are, and how databases handle and transform them.

Having and knowing what the right spatial reference system is for your GIS data could be the difference between having the right map or the wrong map when your data points are projected. While you may believe that a map is a map, whether it's flat or a sphere, map spatial reference systems don't work that way. Knowing what spatial reference systems are, their differences, and how to use data from different sources will help you make better decisions when pulling out data and storing it your databases.

What are Spatial Reference Systems?

Spatial reference systems (SRS) consist of components that describe a series of geographic parameters, such as the orientation, latitude, longitude, and elevation in reference to geographic objects, which define coordinate systems and spatial properties on a map.

The underlying assumption of spatial reference systems is that the Earth is a geoid. Since it would be difficult to precisely calculate the Earth as a geoid, we use the next best shape, an ellipsoid (or a flattened sphere; also known as a spheroid). Now we need to select point, a spatial reference point or anchor point, on the ellipsoid for a frame of reference. We call this point a geodetic datum.

GeoFile: Spatial Reference Systems and Databases

Image from ICSM

The point of origin on a map is an easy way to visualize geodetic datum (Point P). It indicates the center and orientation of the ellipsoid. It includes a description of the position and orientation of the ellipsoid. It is made up of an equatorial radius (semi-major axis) and a polar radius (semi-minor axis) (the dotted lines running from N to the equator on image above). These lines are then calculated, producing a flattening measurement that measures the compression relative to the equatorial axis, providing the shape of the ellipsoid. The datum also has a prime meridian that is set to zero longitude (the solid line running from N to the equator). This is usually set to the Greenwich prime meridian; however, it might differ if using an older, or localized datum for a particular area or region.

Don't worry about calculating geodetic datum, unless you need to create your own. Most of the datum that you will use are predefined, so it isn't necessary to get out your calculator and compass to create your own.

Now that we have a datum, we can use a geographical coordinate reference system (or geodetic coordinate system) to provide longitude and latitude coordinates on the ellipsoid. It's important to note that longitude and latitude coordinates depend on the datum used, but their values are not unique to to any particular datum. It is important to note that if you do not know the datum being used, your coordinate system could be off by 1 meter to several hundred meters. Therefore, the consequences of not knowing the datum could pose significant problems.

The last component of the SRS is a projection. Projection refers to taking the Earth as a 3D ellipsoid and squashing it onto a 2D flat surface. There are many types of projections but they all fall on a Cartesian coordinate system and depend on the geographic coordinate reference system used. Choosing which projection to use depends on several factors such as measurement, shape, direction, and range, and each has its tradeoffs. The most common type of projections are conic, cylindrical, and azimuthal/planar. These are classified into different flavors such as Mercator, Lambert Azimuthal Equal Area, Lambert Conformal Conic, Universal Trans Mercator (UTM), national grid systems, state plane, and geodetic. For a description of these, see here.

Just to review what we've covered. A spacial reference system (SRS) is made up of a an ellipsoid, geodetic datum, and a geographic coordinate reference system with an associated projection. Often, when working with SRSs you will find that they are referred to by a number following the acronym EPSG. These are predefined SRSs with unique IDs, which are recognized and used throughout the GIS industry. Let's get to know them better.

EPSG

When working with databases or GIS libraries, you will see the number 4326 referred to a lot. It's full name, EPSG 4326, is a unique SRS identification number developed by the European Petroleum Survey Group, or EPSG. You will also find that EPSG 4326 is referred to as WGS 84. WGS is the World Geodetic System which is a standardized geodetic system developed in 1984. What makes EPSG 4326/WGS 84 well-known is that it is used by the US Department of Defense, NATO, and Global Positioning Systems (GPS).

Identification numbers like 4326 refer to a standardized collection of SRSs and coordinate transformations. These numbers have been archived and can be viewed in the Geodetic Parameter Registry. Below is a snapshot of EPSG 4326 from the registry. When we look at 4326, we notice that it comprises two main features: geodetic datum and ellipsoidal coordinate system (or geodetic coordinate system).

GeoFile: Spatial Reference Systems and Databases View here for full record

As mentioned previously, geodetic coordinate systems are the latitude and longitude points derived from geodetic datum. Geodetic datum refer to a set of points, or anchors, where survey measurements are based. There are two types of datum: global or local. Some localized datum can be more accurate than datum that cover larger areas since they concentrate on one area. We will discuss two of them.

The most recognized datum are WGS 84 (covering the entire world) and NAD 83 (covering only North America). The anchor for WGS 84 is placed at the center of the Earth, while NAD 83 has its anchor placed at the center of North America, lying in the middle of northern Canada. From the registry we can see that although both datum use the same semi-major axis, or radius, they have slightly different flattening calculations. The differences in the calculations are based on the locations where each takes measurements from. NAD 83 uses the North American Plate as a reference, which can change by up to 2 cm per year. WGS 84 does not change, since it takes reference points from all over the Earth.

One tool that will help you to understand ESPG references is ESPG.io. It is a visualization tool that gives you information about datum and coordinate systems and shows you the locations they cover on a map.

Databases and SRSs

When considering databases and geodata, you must understand how your database works with SRSs.

GeoJSON is used by MongoDB and Elasticsearch. By default, GeoJSON is set to WGS 84 (EPSG 4326). According to the IETF standards for GeoJSON, WGS 84 (EPSG 4326) is the only supported datum for GeoJSON. MongoDB follows the GeoJSON standard, but is discussing the possibility of supporting other datum in the future.

PostGIS, the PostgreSQL extension for GIS data, has also set its default to EPSG 4326. But, if you have data that needs to be converted into a different SRS, then PostGIS provides you with the ST_Transform function. This function enables you to take a point, an area, a line, or whatever can be expressed in longitude and latitude coordinates, and transform it to any SRS you require by providing a new EPSG number.

One important note is that PostGIS often refers to EPSG numbers as SRIDs (spacial reference identification number). You don't have to worry about them too much because they are synonymous.

To show you an example of how ST_Tranform works, let's create a table called my_geometry and set the column geom with our data point to EPSG 4269 (NAD 83).

CREATE TABLE my_geometry(  
  gid serial primary key,
  geom geometry(POINT, 4269),
  name text not null
);

Then, we insert a data point using the ST_GeomFromText function. This function allows us to define a point, line, or polygon as a string, and set it to any SRID (spacial reference identification number, or EPSG number). In this case our SRID is EPSG 4269. If we don't set the inserted point to EPSG 4269, we will get a data compatibility error because the value returned from ST_GeomFromText will be in EPSG 4326 and our table requires ESPG 4269.

INSERT INTO my_geometry (geom, name)  
VALUES (  
  ST_GeomFromText('POINT(1 -1)', 4269),
  'My Point'
);

The result will produce the following table that sets the POINT to its Well-Known Text representation.

gid |                        geom                        |   name  
-----+----------------------------------------------------+----------
   1 | 0101000020AD100000000000000000F03F000000000000F0BF | My Point

To transform the geom result to ESPG 4326, we'll use the ST_Transform function. This will allow us to and indicate the SRID that we want the geom to be transferred to.

SELECT  
  geom as original, 
  ST_Transform(geom, 4326) as new 
FROM my_geometry;

This produces the following table that provides us with both the original and the new geom results, which show the geom in EPSG 4269 and 4326, respectively.

                   original                      |                        new                         
----------------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------------
 0101000020AD100000000000000000F03F000000000000F0BF | 0101000020E6100000000000000000F03F000000000000F0BF

Transforming your data with ST_Transform, however, is not without a caveat. If you do a lot of data processing, using the function could produce floating-point errors; therefore, it's recommended that you only use it once instead of retransforming data back and forth a lot.

So, what's the word?

In this article we covered what spatial referencing systems are, what they are composed of, and how EPSG numbers provide a nice referencing system to be able to talk about spatial systems. Additionally, we looked at how PostGIS allows you to transform your geographic data from one spatial system to another, and learned that it's best to transform your data as little as possible.

Next time, we will delve into some practical examples using PostGIS with many more code samples.

Image by Stephen Monroe