http://www.mit100k.org/contests/business-plan-contest/ Google Doc: https://docs.google.com/docum...
Public Lab is an open community which collaboratively develops accessible, open source, Do-It-Yourself technologies for investigating local environmental health and justice issues.
2 CURRENT | warren |
March 02, 2011 21:59
| over 13 years ago
Public Laboratory: kits and educational services for DIY mappingPublicLaboratory.org - about@publiclaboratory.org Summary
We help people make their own high-resolution “satellite” maps by attaching digital cameras to balloons and kites. Our active online community at grassrootsmapping.org and publiclaboratory.org includes hundreds of Do-It-Yourself mappers who have adopted our tools and techniques to monitor environmental crises, humanitarian disasters, land rights disputes, and even local sustainable agriculture. We now seek to offer kits for students, activists, architects, farmers, humanitarian organizations, and other would-be mappers to get started making, interpreting, and publishing aerial imagery. NeedThe widespread availability of good satellite imagery holds great promise for environmental, disaster response, and even urban planning -- but the high costs associated with producing such data puts the greatest advantages beyond the reach of most users. Tasking fresh satellite imagery and capturing new imagery frequently -- key to monitoring changes in the environment over time, such as during a disaster -- are simply out of the question, even for many large organizations. As up-to-date imagery plays a larger role in crisis response, limited access to new imagery has stalled efforts to perform damage assessment, or to monitor unfolding crises. SolutionBy enabling even the smallest organizations to produce and publish their own aerial imagery, we open up the power of remote sensing and interpretation to a much broader public. Over the past year, we have worked to build an open community of DIY mappers, who use our website to share experiences, data, and advice. We are continuing to develop this body of participants along the lines of the Arduino and Maker communities -- based around sharing user-generated content about the balloon mapping platform. Our organization seeks to support this growing community, by providing educational and training services, and further technological development of the mapping platform, as well as online resources such as our web-based mapping analysis suite, video tutorials, and a forum for users to post and discuss their work. AudienceFrom activist groups to community foundations, a wide variety of smaller organizations have found uses for on-demand mapping tools, and have proven our tools’ utility. We are also in talks with larger organizations such as the World Bank and the Red Cross to provide training to their staff and partner organizations. By offering prepackaged instructional materials and kits, we seek to expand our program and scale to provide tools and educational services to a much larger public. A second and perhaps much larger market for such kits and educational programs is education -- our mapping tools have already been adopted by a variety of educators, from elementary and after-school programs to university-level courses on geographic information systems, urban design, and environmental studies. Our printed and online curricular materials are helping students become proficient in making, interpreting, and publishing map data, and our online map analysis suite can take the place of more expensive proprietary software. Priorities
TeamCommunity Coordinator, project oversight and management - Shannon Dosemagen Product Engineer, platform development and distribution - Jeffrey Warren Mapping Lead, map processing and publishing - Stewart Long Educational Outreach & Planning - Sara Wylie |
Revert | |
1 | warren |
March 02, 2011 21:57
| over 13 years ago
(http://www.mit100k.org/contests/business-plan-contest/) Public Laboratory: kits and educational services for DIY mappingPublicLaboratory.org - about@publiclaboratory.org Summary
We help people make their own high-resolution “satellite” maps by attaching digital cameras to balloons and kites. Our active online community at grassrootsmapping.org and publiclaboratory.org includes hundreds of Do-It-Yourself mappers who have adopted our tools and techniques to monitor environmental crises, humanitarian disasters, land rights disputes, and even local sustainable agriculture. We now seek to offer kits for students, activists, architects, farmers, humanitarian organizations, and other would-be mappers to get started making, interpreting, and publishing aerial imagery. NeedThe widespread availability of good satellite imagery holds great promise for environmental, disaster response, and even urban planning -- but the high costs associated with producing such data puts the greatest advantages beyond the reach of most users. Tasking fresh satellite imagery and capturing new imagery frequently -- key to monitoring changes in the environment over time, such as during a disaster -- are simply out of the question, even for many large organizations. As up-to-date imagery plays a larger role in crisis response, limited access to new imagery has stalled efforts to perform damage assessment, or to monitor unfolding crises. SolutionBy enabling even the smallest organizations to produce and publish their own aerial imagery, we open up the power of remote sensing and interpretation to a much broader public. Over the past year, we have worked to build an open community of DIY mappers, who use our website to share experiences, data, and advice. We are continuing to develop this body of participants along the lines of the Arduino and Maker communities -- based around sharing user-generated content about the balloon mapping platform. Our organization seeks to support this growing community, by providing educational and training services, and further technological development of the mapping platform, as well as online resources such as our web-based mapping analysis suite, video tutorials, and a forum for users to post and discuss their work. AudienceFrom activist groups to community foundations, a wide variety of smaller organizations have found uses for on-demand mapping tools, and have proven our tools’ utility. We are also in talks with larger organizations such as the World Bank and the Red Cross to provide training to their staff and partner organizations. By offering prepackaged instructional materials and kits, we seek to expand our program and scale to provide tools and educational services to a much larger public. A second and perhaps much larger market for such kits and educational programs is education -- our mapping tools have already been adopted by a variety of educators, from elementary and after-school programs to university-level courses on geographic information systems, urban design, and environmental studies. Our printed and online curricular materials are helping students become proficient in making, interpreting, and publishing map data, and our online map analysis suite can take the place of more expensive proprietary software. Priorities
TeamCommunity Coordinator, project oversight and management - Shannon Dosemagen Product Engineer, platform development and distribution - Jeffrey Warren Mapping Lead, map processing and publishing - Stewart Long Educational Outreach & Planning - Sara Wylie |
Revert | |
0 | warren |
March 02, 2011 21:57
| over 13 years ago
Public Laboratory: kits and educational services for DIY mappingPublicLaboratory.org - about@publiclaboratory.org Summary
We help people make their own high-resolution “satellite” maps by attaching digital cameras to balloons and kites. Our active online community at grassrootsmapping.org and publiclaboratory.org includes hundreds of Do-It-Yourself mappers who have adopted our tools and techniques to monitor environmental crises, humanitarian disasters, land rights disputes, and even local sustainable agriculture. We now seek to offer kits for students, activists, architects, farmers, humanitarian organizations, and other would-be mappers to get started making, interpreting, and publishing aerial imagery. NeedThe widespread availability of good satellite imagery holds great promise for environmental, disaster response, and even urban planning -- but the high costs associated with producing such data puts the greatest advantages beyond the reach of most users. Tasking fresh satellite imagery and capturing new imagery frequently -- key to monitoring changes in the environment over time, such as during a disaster -- are simply out of the question, even for many large organizations. As up-to-date imagery plays a larger role in crisis response, limited access to new imagery has stalled efforts to perform damage assessment, or to monitor unfolding crises. SolutionBy enabling even the smallest organizations to produce and publish their own aerial imagery, we open up the power of remote sensing and interpretation to a much broader public. Over the past year, we have worked to build an open community of DIY mappers, who use our website to share experiences, data, and advice. We are continuing to develop this body of participants along the lines of the Arduino and Maker communities -- based around sharing user-generated content about the balloon mapping platform. Our organization seeks to support this growing community, by providing educational and training services, and further technological development of the mapping platform, as well as online resources such as our web-based mapping analysis suite, video tutorials, and a forum for users to post and discuss their work. AudienceFrom activist groups to community foundations, a wide variety of smaller organizations have found uses for on-demand mapping tools, and have proven our tools’ utility. We are also in talks with larger organizations such as the World Bank and the Red Cross to provide training to their staff and partner organizations. By offering prepackaged instructional materials and kits, we seek to expand our program and scale to provide tools and educational services to a much larger public. A second and perhaps much larger market for such kits and educational programs is education -- our mapping tools have already been adopted by a variety of educators, from elementary and after-school programs to university-level courses on geographic information systems, urban design, and environmental studies. Our printed and online curricular materials are helping students become proficient in making, interpreting, and publishing map data, and our online map analysis suite can take the place of more expensive proprietary software. Priorities
TeamCommunity Coordinator, project oversight and management - Shannon Dosemagen Product Engineer, platform development and distribution - Jeffrey Warren Mapping Lead, map processing and publishing - Stewart Long Educational Outreach & Planning - Sara Wylie |
Revert |