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Thank you for your interest! Here it is - The Whys of Where - was the focus of the presentation - Whys Of Where | Joseph Kerski | TEDxVail - YouTube --Joseph K
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04-24-2018
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Sahar: On your #2 question - https://community.esri.com/community/education/blog/2018/04/24/gis-career-pathway-guidelines <-- See my post on GIS career and interview guidelines. I hope it is helpful - it includes job interview tactics, networking, resume and CV building, and much more. I hope it is helpful! --Joseph Kerski
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04-24-2018
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I recently gave a presentation focused on providing guidelines for those who are seeking a career in GIS or a related career that will include GIS in some significant way (such as in city planning, wildlife biology, health informatics, and so on), and have posted it here. The guidelines includes strategies on networking, resumes vs. CVs, interviewing, writing a cover letter, online presence, creating a storymap of your CV, and much more. I am grateful to my colleague Nick Kelch at Esri for some of his words of wisdom and slides as I prepared this presentation. In the presentation, I include links to videos and other presentations I have created on this topic. I am very excited about the future for anyone involved with geospatial technology, as it becomes a fundamental part of 21sdt Century decision making. I hope it is helpful and I look forward to your feedback.
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04-24-2018
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This is really impressive. I will share with academics I know who are doing crime analysis as well or teaching in criminal justice programs.
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04-23-2018
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I did not know I was "part" of your class! What a great honor! Hope all is well. Spring is here - even in Wisconsin I hope!
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04-20-2018
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David (and others): The easiest and most efficient way to work with images is to upload them directly into the Story Map Builder for the app you are using. What I described above is just in response to some inquiries I have received about how to use this method, but I wouldn't use it as standard practice... it is just a way of getting those ArcGIS Online photos to work. One of the advantages of uploading your images directly into the Story Map Builder is that it optimizes your images for fast display. In addition, another advantage is that the images get stored in your story map, so there's nothing extra to manage (in the case of the Map Tour, the images are stored in a feature service that the Map Tour builder automatically creates for you). --Joseph Kerski
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04-18-2018
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What story map app are you using? The advice depends on the app type. Thanks. --Joseph
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04-17-2018
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What is it like to give a TED talk on mapping or GIS? I encourage you to seize any opportunity you can to give a presentation on why WHERE matters - your university, school board, city council, or TED. I reflect on my TED experiences in the video below: What is it like to give a TED talk? - YouTube --Joseph Kerski
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04-17-2018
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On a related topic, please see my video on What is it like to give a TED talk? - YouTube --Joseph Kerski
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04-17-2018
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On a related topic, see my video with this content on: What is it like to give a TED talk? - YouTube --Joseph Kerski
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04-17-2018
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Brian, for pics that are not georeferenced, either use Geotag Photos Online or another service that geotags photos OR just drag the photos on the web map as you create a Map Tour to their correct locations. --Joseph Kerski
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04-13-2018
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Waverly: 1. I have never had a problem in Chrome changing any of the Map Tour images to a video. You have to use the EMBED code for the video rather than the actual full URL for the video. You can still use Picasaweb/Google Plus for the images, but Google messed up a good thing and so it is much more clunky than it was in Picasaweb, as I explain here: https://community.esri.com/community/education/blog/2017/02/17/photo-guidelines-for-arcgis-online-maps-including-story-maps ... in my photo guidelines. 2. You can use Vimeo and other formats in Cascades and Map Journals, but for Map Tours, I've only been able to use YouTube. The OTHER way to use other video though is to edit the CAPTION and put a LINK to the video there. It won't play INSIDE the story map but at least it will work. I hope this helps. Thanks for being a story map champion. --Joseph K
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04-13-2018
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What is GIS? It may seem odd to still be discussing “what is GIS” nowadays, given the fact that GIS has now passed its 50 th birthday. But, considering that GIS has evolved in many ways and will continue to do even more rapidly in terms of its functionality, platform, data, application areas, audience, and social context, perhaps we continually need to revisit what it is. In addition, GIS is also at the same time, a set of tools, an approach to understanding the world, a discipline, and part of other disciplines such as geodesign and GIScience. Furthermore, new audiences are continually discovering GIS and applying it to new fields and problems. Yes, it does make sense that such a topic needs to be defined and understood. As is most likely the case with you reading this essay, I so firmly believe in the power of GIS to make our world more efficient, healthier, and happier, and I never tire of talking with people about what GIS is. I do so wherever I have the opportunity—in workshops, presentations, courses, books, and even in everyday life such as on airport shuttles, community functions, and on elevators. I encourage you to work on your “elevator speech” if you don’t already have one, as I have here and here. Another way of introducing people to the definition of GIS is through a video. These videos have been important teaching resources going back to Roger Tomlinson’s Data for Decisions films from 1967 through today. Besides that of Dr. Tomlinson, some of my favorites are those from Esri, Rebekah Jones, GIS Videos TV, and Esri Ireland. but I also recently created my own video on the topic with my own interpretation of what GIS is, and why it matters to education and society. Many of us remember the core GIS definitions from our university textbooks, which usually included the following: GIS is composed of hardware, software, data, methods (tools, models, and procedures), and people. Another useful and oft-cited definition is, “GIS is a system for collecting, management, manipulation, analysis, and presentation of spatially referenced data.” Still another definition is that a GIS enables us to help capture, model, store, manage, and present complex systems. Another way to conceptualize GIS—Geographic Information Systems—is to break apart its three words: The “G” or “Geographic” component refers to the location-component that GIS has—everything in a GIS is referenced to real-world coordinates. These coordinates can define a single point, or a line or polygon. They can also define the starting point and extent of a grid, or image. The “I” or “Information” component refers to the informational database behind the spatial data; a geo-database, usually stored as a table or set of related tables, containing spatial fields (such as latitude-longitude or street address or city names), and aspatial fields (such as housing type or number of people between 10 and 19 years old). The “S” or “System” component ties the “G” and the “I” segments together—one can select a feature via using the map, or via a row in the data table. The “S” component ensures that a GIS is not just a set of graphics floating around in cyberspace, but that the attributes are always linked to the mapped feature. By combining the spatial with the aspatial data, we create a holistic view of the world. GIS data are analyzed in layers, which can cover such themes as land use, land cover, hydrography, zoning, ecoregions, transportation, elevation, climate, and more. The process-oriented definition of GIS is that: A GIS is a computer-based system that provides for the collection, storage, analysis, and display of georeferenced data. A problem-solving definition of GIS is: A GIS is a decision support system involving the integration of spatially referenced data in a problem-solving environment. GIS is sometimes defined in terms of the questions it can answer, including: Location: What is at………….? This question seeks to find out what exists at a particular location. A location can be described in many ways, using, for example place name, post code, or geographic reference such as longitude/latitude. Condition: Where is it………….? The second question is the converse of the first and requires spatial data to answer. Instead of identifying what exists at a given location, one may wish to find location(s) where certain conditions are satisfied (such as an unforested section of at-least 2000 square meters in size, within 100 meters of road, and with soils suitable for supporting buildings). Aspatial Questions: "What's the average number of people working with GIS in each location?" is an aspatial question - the answer to which does not require the stored value of latitude and longitude; nor does it describe where the places are in relation with each other. Spatial Questions. "How many people work with GIS in the major neighborhoods or centers of Delhi" OR " Which centers lie within 10 km of each other? ", OR " What is the shortest route passing through all these centers". These are spatial questions that can only be answered using latitude and longitude data and other information such as the radius of the Earth. GIS can answer such questions. About five years ago, Esri and other organizations began focusing on a transformation in GIS from a set of tools that are changing into a platform, here, and here. More recently, some presentations have focused on GIS moving from a system of record to a system of engagement. Each of these definitions has its place—they all help us conceptualize what GIS is and contribute to the richness of its evolving nature. My own definitions as I speak about in this video are as follows: GIS is part of the geotechnologies. Back in 2004, the US Department of Labor identified three hot, key, growing fields for the 21 st Century: Nanotechnologies, biotechnologies, and geotechnologies. GIS, along with GPS, web mapping, and remote sensing, are part of the geotechnologies. Some people and programs prefer the terms geodata, location analytics, geoinformatics, or geomatics. GIS is all about solving spatial problems in our world from local to global scale. Thus, it is an application of geography. Spatial problems all have to do with the “where” question. Where are the fire hydrants in my community? Where do natural hazards occur and how do they affect communities? How could sea level rise impact coastal lands? Energy, water, migration, biodiversity loss, sustainable agriculture, human health, city planning, and other issues of our 21 st Century world can be better understood and solved using GIS. GIS is composed of several key elements—hardware, software (which is increasingly on the web), spatial data (also increasingly on the web) including real-time feeds, tools, methods, and people. People apply GIS in decision-making environments, in nonprofit organizations, private industry, academia, and government organizations to make a positive difference in our world by solving problems. GIS is a key technology for our world, as increasing pressure exists on the environment through resource use and population. GIS is all about critical thinking, spatial thinking, and making our world more sustainable, healthier, and happier. A few of my other videos about GIS include its application to education and geography, and reflecting on GIS at a giant cube, why GIS is better than paper maps, my TED talk on mapping, and making every day GIS day. What is the definition of GIS that you find to be most useful? How do you think GIS will change in the coming years?
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04-13-2018
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Thanks Candace! It will be fun and interesting and I am honored to be with my colleagues in this MOOC AMA! Joseph Joseph J. Kerski, Ph.D., GISP | Education Manager Esri | 1 International Court | Broomfield CO 80021-3200 | USA T 303 449 7779<tel:303%20449%207779> x1-8237 | M 303 625 3925<tel:303%20625%203925> | [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | esri.com<http://esri.com/> esriurl.com/josephkerski | http://twitter.com/josephkerski THE SCIENCE OF WHERE™
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04-03-2018
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Hi Ken: Very cool! I know some very good geospatial librarians - Phil White U of Colorado, Miriam Olivares Yale, Stace Maples Stanford, Marcy Bidney UWM - perhaps if you contact one of them, they will be able to guide you. I would think the original authors, if they were still alive, would be grateful that you are interested and are making the map available, but I'm not sure how to best advise. --Joseph Kerski
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04-03-2018
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