Wednesday 21 January 2015

Wrecks off the Irish Coast

10 minutes to kill before a seminar - so no better time for a quick post!

The work I do with the SFI bathymetry project means I have to gather lots of different datasets. Two of the datasets are found on the GSI or INFOMAR GIS viewers, these are multi beam SONAR and aerial bathymetric LiDAR. They have a lot of great data freely available on there - but one distraction I came across was the shipwreck dataset. This is a dataset showing the location of, and information on, multiple shipwrecks along the Irish coast. Another cool feature is you can see the scan of the wrecks.

Here is one of the RMS Lusitania - a very famous WW1 ship whose sinking was credited with helping to bring America into the war.



Obviously they are not all as easily identifiable, some are old Napoleonic Frigates, etc. A very cool website - but the lack of wrecks on the west coast is quite puzzling...


Tuesday 13 January 2015

Bramor from c-Astral

I spent the end of last week going through the ground school and simulator training for the Bramor from c-Astral. The Asctec Falcon 8 is a great piece of kit and lots of our earlier projects went really well, but the Bramor is really in a different league. The Falcon 8 is an Octocopter, small, very sturdy and manouverable, useful for surveying small areas or inspecting buildings and other vertical structures. It can be carried in one hand, launched from a roof, and if you're brave enough, caught in your hand on return as the manufacturers demonstrate.

The Bramor on the other hand, looks like a stealth-bomber



Needs a catapult to launch



And a parachute to land.



High speeds, long range, high altitude capability.

All currently forbidden by regulations.

Monday 5 January 2015

Shiny New Year

Happy New Year to everyone.

First post of a shiny new year is nothing to do with remote sensing or Geomatics, but rather an interesting research article I came across on Science Direct about the reason behind our love for shiny things. Apparently our love for shiny/glossy things goes back to our need for water! Paper is herePeople generally prefer things printed on glossy paper, but their preference for shiny/glossy material increased significantly after the survey participants had been given 8 salty crackers by the Belgian scientists.
A busy 2015 ahead, the next few months particularly so. A new Remote Sensing module to give at the end of the month, multiple SFI reports due, a SFI bathymetry project deliverable, UAS groundschool and flightschool in Cork, persuade the SCS to let me transfer the IIS commission on Remote Sensing over, software development with NorbSoftDev (we hope to have the alpha version ready by the end of February, then only have two months to get to Beta and a RC - June release deadline).

Looking at that list after the last week or so of slothful gluttony it makes me want to go home and eat turkey and cry into my tin of Roses.

About Me

My photo
My name is Conor. I am a Lecturer at the Department of Geography at Maynooth University. These few lines will (hopefully) chart my progress through academia and the world of research.