Events
SEMINAR with Dr. John Cloud – Why are drones called “drones”?: A history in which etymology and entomology converge for war
This seminar is co-sponsored by NC State's Center for Geospatial Analytics and the Science, Technology and Society Program. Abstract: In popular perception, there is a great bifurcation of "drones"; they are either large and lethal, with names like Predator and Reaper, or they are small and buzzy and might eventually deliver pizzas, and at worst…
Geospatial Forum with Dr. Siva Ravada – Trends and Research Opportunities in Spatial Big Data Analytics and Cloud Computing
Dr. Siva Ravada – Senior Director of Development, Oracle Spatial & Graph and MapViewer, Server Technologies
MGIST New Student Orientation
AGENDA 9:15 am - 9:30 am | Arrival & Check-in | Jordan Hall 5th Floor Lobby 9:30 am - 10 am | Welcome & Introductions | 5103 Jordan Hall 10 am - 10:45 am | Icebreaker | 5103 Jordan Hall 10:50 am - 11 am | BREAK 11 am - 12 pm | Curriculum Overview | 5103…
Webinar — Tangible Landscape: open source environment for geospatial learning, science, and community engagement
Presented by Helena Mitasova, Anna Petrasova, Brendan Harmon, Vaclav Petras, Payam Tabrizian, Ross Meentemeyer | Center for Geospatial Analytics Register here to watch live.
Geospatial Forum with Dr. Ben Watson – Location Experience: Where We’ve Been, Are, and May Be
Dr. Ben Watson | Associate Professor | Dept. of Computer Science | NC State University Abstract: Finding our way has always been necessary, and we have always tried to make it easier. Yet today, wayfinding is changing so rapidly that it makes our heads spin. What have we lost? What might we gain? I will use…
Geospatial Studio – Intro to GRASS GIS
GRASS GIS is a powerful open-source tool for performing geospatial analyses across a range of disciplines. Take your first steps in GRASS GIS by attending the Geospatial Studio and learning how to use this free software. After the introduction, there will be time to try your own data in GRASS GIS. Attendees are encouraged to…
Geospatial Forum with Dr. Paul Byrne – The Geological Evolution of Mercury Determined with GIS
Dr. Paul Byrne | Assistant Professor | Dept. of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences | NC State University Abstract: Until 2008 Mercury was a poorly understood planet, with less than half of it imaged by visiting spacecraft. NASA's MESSENGER mission to Mercury returned global image and topographic data and – together with gravity, spectral, and compositional…