TwoRains Blog
Welcome to the TwoRains blog! This page is regularly updated with the latest blog post from one of our team members. For the full archive of posts please see our wordpress page ().
In today's post, Frans tells us about his trip to California for theGeo for Good Summit
The Google (Earth Engine) Experience: Part II
Living the California Dream(in’): 4 days of full-on inspiring applications of geospatial data at theGeo for Good Summit, Sunnyvale CA
Hello again, this is Francesc reporting on my last Google experience: theGeo for Good User Summit2018. My participation in this event followed the planned Google Earth Engine training that I started in Dublin a few months earlier together with theTwoRainsremote sensing team (see our latest post).
- Google Event Center venue at the heart of Google campus in California
TheGeo for Good Summitis an annual event organised by theOutreach program that aims at providing training and resources to non-profits, while showcasing success stories of how individuals and organizations apply Google mapping tools for good causes. In my case, I have known about the Summit since my PhD days, when Google Earth Outreach granted me with a license of GE Pro. The software is freely available to everyone now (you can get the Pro version!), but I remained fascinated by the GE Outreach aims & goals, as well as by the encouraging case studies they were adding each year. And now it was me going to the Summit!
- GE’s director Rebecca Moore addressing the welcoming words in the plenary talks room
In terms of organisation, the Summit was similar to the GEE event held in Dublin, with a mixed agenda of plenary talks, hands-on breakout sessions and -of course! - lots of Hackathon hours to meet and discuss challenges with colleagues. The main difference with Dublin, however, was that theGeo for Goodevent covered all of the available Google mapping tools. Among those, Google Earth has been the longest star product for more than 15 years in a row, but hands-on sessions also included most of its derived and advanced features such as the Pro version, KML coding, Google Maps and API’s.
The workshop also focuses on collecting and managing data on the field through Open Data Kit, a set of tools that theTwoRainsteam have been using in their. The core of the event, nonetheless, was about engaging geospatial storytelling to wider public audiences. To do that, you could use well-known Google resources such as MyMaps and Tour Builder, or create geotagged and 360° images and videos including VR. Among the novelties, I was impressed by the dissemination possibilities of the new Google Earthandfeatures.
- Yes, we toasted marshmallows at Google’s and they have a popcorn maker! It was time for cinema with the inspiring “Into the Okavango”, a National Geographic featured documentary
In the last few years,Geo for Goodhas included an increasing number of GEE training sessions -a fact that only reflects the growing reception of GEE among scholars. After some months working with the platform, I really enjoyed the more advanced sessions conducted directly by the GEE developer team, and I was fond of the thrillinganddatasets.
Besides the practical sessions, we listened to talks from many of global organisations facing the world’s biggest challenges, and it was again a unique opportunity to meet with enthusiastic individuals of geospatial data from all disciplines. Following the outreach perspective of the event, many of the talks and sessions are available online, and I recommend thissummarising the Summit. Last but not least, the Summit was held in the stunning Google HQ in Sunnyvale in a warm and radiant Californian autumn, adding to the Google experience a feeling of being at my Mediterranean home.
- A day in the Summit: GE Engine and lots of coffee
- It’s time for a hackathon!