Does anyone know how to use the post-disaster imaginery in JOSM?
2013/11/12 <[email protected]> > Send talk-ph mailing list submissions to > [email protected] > > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-ph > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to > [email protected] > > You can reach the person managing the list at > [email protected] > > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific > than "Re: Contents of talk-ph digest..." > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. Re: [HOT] Typhoon Haiyan Mapping Progress (Eugene Alvin Villar) > 2. digitalGlobe imagery - haiyan (Erwin Olario) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Tue, 12 Nov 2013 03:46:38 +0800 > From: Eugene Alvin Villar <[email protected]> > To: osm-ph <[email protected]> > Subject: Re: [talk-ph] [HOT] Typhoon Haiyan Mapping Progress > Message-ID: > < > caphqi6+acrlsodippxpxa-7ezfkbvc2j_tjw5-hnykgg68z...@mail.gmail.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > Hello everyone, > > Here are several additional HOT tasks: > > http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/342 - Bantayan Island > http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/343 - Camotes Islands > http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/344 - Roxas City and surroundings > http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/345 - northern Negros Occidental > http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/346 - Roxas City - Kalibo - northernmost tip > of > Iloilo > http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/347 - northern Cebu > > If you know of any other areas that are affected by the typhoon and has > Bing satellite imagery, please do reply. For instance, I have suggested > that a task be created for Coron, Palawan. > > > > On Mon, Nov 11, 2013 at 1:23 AM, Eugene Alvin Villar <[email protected] > >wrote: > > > Thank you to everyone who has helped in mapping the affected areas. > > > > Here are some statistics taken from OSMstats: > > > http://osmstats.altogetherlost.com/index.php?item=countries&country=Philippines > > > > There have been about 120,000 nodes that have been added in the > > Philippines in the past 2 days. Though I don't have the exact numbers, > that > > probably translates to around 20,000 buildings. The rest would be new > > roads, rivers, landuses, and improved coastlines. > > > > There have been at least 60 mappers editing in the Philippines in the > last > > 2 days. The previous spike in the number of editors was in mid-October > > after the 7.2 earthquake that hit Bohol (http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/326 > ). > > > > > > > > On Sun, Nov 10, 2013 at 12:08 PM, Eugene Alvin Villar <[email protected] > >wrote: > > > >> Hello everyone, > >> > >> There are 2 additional HOT Tasks that have been created: > >> > >> 1. http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/339 - Mapping villages in Samar and > Leyte > >> (just the residential areas and roads, no need for buildings) > >> > >> 2. http://tasks.hotosm.org/job/340 - Mapping in detail selected areas > >> that are known to have been highly affected by the typhoon > >> > >> > >> > >> On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 9:41 PM, Andrew Buck <[email protected] > >wrote: > >> > >>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > >>> Hash: SHA1 > >>> > >>> I agree that wider coverage will be needed and I had hoped that by now > >>> we would have a better indication of where to map as well. My reason > >>> for staying with Tacloban for so long was largely due to lack of > >>> knowing where else to shift focus to (although I did allude to this a > >>> bit by suggesting the other villages on the coast northeast of > >>> Tacloban), more importantly due to a second fact... > >>> > >>> When we map an area, it is only really useful for us to map areas that > >>> the aid organizations we work with will be responding to. For the aid > >>> organizations that don't know about, or don't know how to use, our > >>> map; then no matter how good the coverage is, it doesn't help them. > >>> This is the main reason I chose to focus on Tacloban. It is badly hit > >>> (as were many other places as you rightly point out) but it is also a > >>> provincial capital, and it is the largest town in the immediate area. > >>> Because of this I figured that most of the international response > >>> would likely be directed there, and since it is mostly the > >>> international orgs that we tend to work with I figured the map data > >>> would be most useful there. > >>> > >>> Now, that being said I want to make it clear that the explanation > >>> above is not necessarily an argument for continuing to focus entirely > >>> on Tacloban, just merely an explanation of why I hadn't directed > >>> people elsewhere yet. I agree that we will need to spread out our > >>> efforts at some point, and that point may be approaching, the question > >>> is where to focus next. As I mentioned previously, I think the > >>> villages along the coast to the northeast will be hard hit (and due to > >>> their proximity to Tacloban will likely receive international aid). > >>> There are also villages along the coast to the south of Tacloban that > >>> will have been hit hard as well since the eye passed directly over > >>> them. The eye track will likely have done the most damage, or the > >>> area to the north of the eye track since the storm rotates > >>> counterclockwise as it moves westward. > >>> > >>> If anyone has better suggestions of where to spread out to I am > >>> certainly open to them. Like I said I am not saying we need to stay > >>> at Tacloban (and the surrounding area) just explaining why I was > >>> continuing focus there. I know the storm affected a lot to the west > >>> as well but I figured this would be trickier to map for two reasons. > >>> 1) it is a larger area with not such and obvious target for > >>> international aid, and 2) the wind speeds were lower to the west due > >>> to the storm being disrupted by the islands. As for the idea of > >>> mapping the area affected by the earthquake to the south, my > >>> understanding (and this could be wrong) was that most of what we could > >>> do remotely has already been done when the earthquake hit. > >>> > >>> So that is all of my reasoning at the current time for our current > >>> focus. I hope to begin hearing more concrete info from aid orgs today > >>> so I might redirect people when I hear from them, but for now my > >>> advice would be to try to continue with Tacloban (especially the low > >>> lying areas) and simultaneously spread out into the surrounding > >>> villages until/unless we get something concrete from an aid org. > >>> > >>> - -AndrewBuck > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> On 11/09/2013 05:25 AM, Jean-Guilhem Cailton wrote: > >>> > Hi, > >>> > > >>> > According to Al Jazeera, the death toll could be very high, sadly. > >>> > And several millions of people have been affected. > >>> > > >>> > I'd like to remind that an often-mentioned weakness of OSM is the > >>> > uneven quality of the coverage, and that it is not because you have > >>> > a hammer that everything is a nail. > >>> > > >>> > So, while Tacloban was indeed hit very badly, and a detailed > >>> > building map there is undoubtedly useful, it might also be useful > >>> > if some of the mappers who wish to contribute took a broader view, > >>> > to map, for example, some of the roads and villages that are > >>> > visible on (sometimes recent) high resolution Bing imagery > >>> > (http://osmph.github.io/Imagery_Coverage_Map/), but sometimes > >>> > still unmapped in OSM. (Not to mention the rivers). > >>> > > >>> > GNS (http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/GNS) can also be a good > >>> > source for names, even if it sometimes includes old versions of > >>> > duplicated nodes with inaccurate location. High resolution imagery > >>> > can be useful to tell which is right in these cases. > >>> > > >>> > Best wishes, > >>> > > >>> > Jean-Guilhem > >>> > > >>> > >>> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > >>> Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) > >>> Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://www.enigmail.net/ > >>> > >>> iQIcBAEBAgAGBQJSfjttAAoJEK7RwIfxHSXbuyAQAJ7RN1Tqh04GWL0Gb03Tb+nQ > >>> Z4sIRt4Z3wBdOte8MjB3B+W8zGYtUw3kwfbb3DV8tcdKpEiHzjc2+GrjLgoLzZCe > >>> TvxHqFN5Q6srENG180WbZtA8gMESLV5xbeOSt5NU9xnqo24yggWSlAc7FoH2SOSp > >>> 3aMNyrALeW03y406TUH4DwCIBmkwLMWZufdkzOnbwou0Ebd2CcYERepm3f+4ifQM > >>> XI9o8jJt5fspYksaiePmRpMrS8Gn7UznYhzhOsPBbjGlP4wFbazNOsuwE2phBBss > >>> wTX9awNSDqjv6EzebEzDN36I8hSeQEYxnsNrLWmaj/+xydxOfchxZlDKXhJm42Qe > >>> zP0c+HakmZPORnmYCms1FHwjGzH5SKgApK3Vpaa+A/T8z+wqEaWmimhV/mX48aQx > >>> I/pFTnwto+Df35htKYwU1U9xQ7BB+W1FizYqdkc84HaTyvcQkdfPM5YXzokmxLQz > >>> QbP1quYE+M1sESfiZGqIrV2K1AL+NrrBbr1C6r6J9ICtj8swQZpoyvWcg3LR+UqF > >>> 5prd7disNuZ6CPHQkLn+ChdPtC6A4gfXqAFEm2g54Pg5Q5t43Qg0DAVPl4bME5Y5 > >>> I6KCE1zR/bA9ed+uwD7ALcorBGrWla1aylAx1P5RYO5XM0F3zeWzex29oyco2dQT > >>> MyPsP+Btr9e23PyxVpsR > >>> =Mv9K > >>> -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > >>> > >>> _______________________________________________ > >>> talk-ph mailing list > >>> [email protected] > >>> https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-ph > >>> > >> > >> > > > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: < > http://lists.openstreetmap.org/pipermail/talk-ph/attachments/20131112/2facb980/attachment-0001.html > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 2 > Date: Tue, 12 Nov 2013 12:45:51 +0800 > From: Erwin Olario <[email protected]> > To: osm-ph <[email protected]> > Subject: [talk-ph] digitalGlobe imagery - haiyan > Message-ID: > <CAPmGdL_RiQ-qeKcOLySAiC9= > [email protected]> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" > > http://www.digitalglobeblog.com/2013/11/11/typhoonhaiyan/ > > Press statement: > > *On Friday, devastation hit the Philippines. The massively destructive > typhoon, Haiyan, turned into one of the strongest tropical cyclones ever > recorded at landfall, with winds estimated at 195 mph, gusts up to 235 mph > and a storm surge that rose up to 20 feet high. As with any natural > disaster, rapid, comprehensive, unclassified satellite coverage can be an > invaluable tool for responding to these major events.* > > *On November 07, 2013 at 7 pm EST, several hours before Typhoon Haiyan made > landfall, DigitalGlobe activated FirstLook > <http://www.digitalglobe.com/products/insight/firstlook>, an online > subscription service for emergency managers and enterprise customers that > provides fast, web-based access to pre- and post-event imagery of natural > and manmade disasters. In the first few days, following the initial > devastation, DigitalGlobe?s satellites collected and delivered over 19,000 > square kilometersof imagery in the hardest hit areas, including Tacloban > City and the surrounding areas. FirstLook?s frequent revisit times have > enabled rapid delivery of quality imagery content during this time-critical > event.* > > *Below is a chilling image chip, depicting the impact from typhoon Haiyan.* > > *WE NEED YOUR HELP ? JOIN THE CROWD:The scale of the storm?s destruction > has been massive. In addition to collecting imagery, we need volunteers to > help us map the devastation. In support of such efforts, DigitalGlobe has > activated a crowdsourcing campaign, open to anyone willing to help.* > > *http://www.tomnod.com/nod/challenge/haiyantyphoon2013 > <http://www.tomnod.com/nod/challenge/haiyantyphoon2013>* > > *For this campaign, we will be releasing the crowd produced results to the > open source community. Contact DigitalGlobe?s Tomnod platform team at > <[email protected]>[email protected] <[email protected]> if you are interested > in > receiving access to the Haiyan data.* > > *More resources from DigitalGlobe:* > > *For media: please use required attribution ?Satellite image courtesy of > DigitalGlobe? and copyright. See our usage > policy http://www.digitalglobe.com/usage#usage-information > <http://www.digitalglobe.com/usage#usage-information>.* > > *For geospatial professionals:here is the catalog ID > < > https://browse.digitalglobe.com/imagefinder/showBrowseImage?catalogId=103001002841F600&imageHeight=natres&imageWidth=natres > > > you > can use to quickly access your area of interest.* > > *For U.S. government employees: Use your .gov or .mil address to obtain > access to our high resolution satellite imagery via My DigitalGlobe > <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3pSr9XqhUe8>, and NGA?s EnhancedView > program.* > > *Download our complete FirstLook Report here > <http://www.slideshare.net/DigitalGlobe/ph-typhoon-haiyan2013nov11>. * > > *This area on the west side of Cancabato Bay bore some of the heaviest > brunt. Debris from the storm surge is seen in the lower left area. You can > also make out a ?Help Us? sign in front of the Redemptorist Church* > > See also DigitalGlobe's FirstLook imagery prepared as a slide > show<http://www.slideshare.net/DigitalGlobe/ph-typhoon-haiyan2013nov11> > . > > > > -- > *Erwin Olario* > - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - > ? email: erwin@ <[email protected]>*n**GNU**it**y**.**net*< > http://ngnuity.net/> > | [email protected] > ? mobile (PHL): +63 908 817 2013 > ? voicemail / sms (USA): +1 347 746 9461 > ? OpenPGP key: 3A93D56B | 5D42 7CCB 8827 9046 1ACB 0B94 63A4 81CE 3A93 D56B > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: < > http://lists.openstreetmap.org/pipermail/talk-ph/attachments/20131112/6d5872d9/attachment.html > > > > ------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > talk-ph mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-ph > > > End of talk-ph Digest, Vol 64, Issue 17 > *************************************** >
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