Peta Gunatanah Malaysia 2014 -2018 ("Malaysia's Land Cover 2014 - 2018") web application is a platform generated for the Quality Assessment activity organized by Forest Research Institute Malaysia (FRIM) on 23rd June 2024.
The workshop aims to collect field/reference data from Malaysian's state agencies in the effort to verify the quality of the land cover classification output generated in support of CO2 release measurement from converted agricultural lands.
Participants are able access the app via conventional browsers from their mobile devices and submit drawings/sketches that they have captured within interactive data layers.
This web app aims to support direct input from source onto the task of improving the accuracy of the generated land cover maps. Vectors generated from this exercise are readily standardized with the required data scheme from quality assessment, making full use of the ArcGIS Online ecosystem full to a produce concrete output and actionable information.
I have started to post some videos demonstrating some tools in ArcGIS Pro. Short ones and pretty quick ones which I strived for since I absolutely am frightened with the idea of irritating people with unnecessary voice-over. It has no garnered much response and it's cool with me. Although, the lack of traction does things to my insides, I go back to the real reason I am doing thing, which is to stash the tools that I managed to learn on my own by trials and errors and keep them somewhere I can refer back to it to remember how it works.
Creating maps involves a number of iterative processes made to suit the intended output. Although creating maps itself is a form of art; heavily reliant on target audience's knowledge and aesthetical preference, it is still an inherently democratic science. Thus, knowing the mainstream technology and tools in the industry to express your vision or message is given. So for those just starting out with using geographical information software (GIS) for your final year project or research, this videos are meant for you. The purpose is not to overwhelm you with too many information, or distract you with my narration, but to follow in real-time the process from the start up of the software to the running of tools that generates the information needed.
Knowing fully well that there is an endless variety of GIS software or tools out there, processes that you need to execute to make things happen may vary in name and functionalities. Forget the beef between ArcGIS and QGIS, of which one is the better tool; if it serves your needs, then use it. You're not obliged to pledge loyalty to software or brands although you are encouraged to maintain integrity in your beliefs when it comes to corporate versus open source tools in the industry. Both choices come with their advantages and disadvantages. Yours truly uses QGIS and ArcGIS Pro interchangeably. If it doesn't work in ArcGIS Pro, which I use primarily, I'll jump to using QGIS. It's not a big deal. If it works painlessly, there is no reason to feel bad about using it.
So far, the content I have made emphasizes mostly on ArcGIS Pro or Esri products since using them is how I come to learn more about geology and geography. QGIS was a name I did not learn of in my university years when ArcGIS versions start with the digit 9οΈβ£, so you can catch my drift.
We can go on and on about theoretical stuff and our smarter pals usually knows what to do when faced with the tools. Unfortunately, I fall in the percentile that needed to land on the job to understand what on earth I am supposed to do. This series of videos are for those who have the same problem as I do and need to see the magic actually happening before knowing what to do. And for the most part, there are so many things to read and try out before you get it right. So hopefully, the demos can kickstart some thoughts or observation in the logic within the software's ecosystem and become more than just a technical power-user.
This week, I touched on some tools that I found helpful when dealing with point vector data, so feel free to check it out ππ»
Next week, I'm thinking of exploring some series of point analysis and space time cube is beckoning for me to test it out. Until then, stay cool and drop a word if you need any clarifications on the demos!
Tool: ArcGIS Pro, ArcGIS Pro Deep Learning extension, Python, Jupyter Notebook Technique: Deep learning; semantic segmentation, cartography, remote sensing
The presentation of abstract outlining the implementation of deep learning in land cover classification across the Borneo island. It uses the Sentinel-2 image data and the band combination that differentiates the bareland, tree cover as well as waterbodies and croplands whilst training the U-Net model using the referenced data collected.
Please find the abstract published here:
Warta Geologi, Vol. 47, No. 1, April 2021
The presentation slide can be accessed at the following link ππ»:
Google Earth Pro is one of the most powerful freely available software one can use for location investigation. If you're a non-tech GIS user who needs to know just enough to get your work going, then let's hit the ground running with this tutorial for starters.
π’ Beginner-friendly.
π Free with no hidden monetary cost.
π₯οΈ Available for Windows, Mac and Linux.
Studying is hard enough when you are fighting the onset of hormonal hurricane of emotions while you're a teenager. Then you have you formative 5 to 6 years of collegiate years where you learn that your idealistic notions of the world is just plain snobbish and that you're one of the many that finds satisfaction in pushing your ideas into other people's head. Doing all that while studying, it was hard too.
Then comes the job hunting, climbing ladders to nowhere from one workplace to another...just drifting. That was the vacation off from studying and just wanting to find stability.
Then one day, you broke your heart at the same time you get an opportunity to a decent work somewhere. You ran. Then it was about understanding this whole new dimension of knowledge that you've fallen in love with. It was like your first love came back to find you and tell you he's back and that he won't leave you alone anymore. So, back to the books you fall into.
So yeah...studying is a rollercoaster of emotions. Learning is a lifelong journey. You're never too old to learn something new. And then phrase where you can't teach old dogs new tricks is just plain inaccurate. You can teach them new tricks and they can do it if they want to. It's the matter of either they want to do it or if their body can still keep up with them.
If you're an older student, I feel you. You feel left behind at times and frustrated because you feel like you can't catch up with things. If you're someone who's starting to work on research studies, it may be a harder state of mind. Because you're almost always on your own lamenting on you're comprehension of theories and questioning if you get whatever you absorbed right. So...it is hard. How do you know that you're alright and that you're not spinning down the road of doomed isolation? You don't. These are some of the glaring things I think are the universal problems among people who, with the courage of a lion, answered the call of hermitage and subject themselves to an occupation so feared that it is deemed over once high school ends; student:
Wardrobe reduction to daily uniform of hoodies/sweaters and jog-pants/sweatpants
It's totally ok. If you're wearing the same one everyday for the rest of the week, you still win. It's practical, it's easy and for hijabsters, the hoodie helps with instant full head cover while you run to receive those stuff you endlessly ordered online. There's nothing to be ashamed off.
π‘I say: Shower πΏ. Every. Day. Twice a day is most ideal. Stay fresh and hygienic. If you're not going anywhere nor are you working out in those attire, then you're good. At least for a week. When you shower, you're giving your body a break from the exhausting task of slouching, the heat of your brain going overdrive and your own face breaking out from the stress. So yeah...shower. Wash your face. Brush your teeth. You're gonna be at risk of letting yourself go when you're left alone too comfortable in your own company. If you're an introvert, it feels like heaven but it doesn't mean you should be at the risk of losing out on the joys of prepping yourself to look good once in a while. Regularly make the effort to find decent clothes you'll use to go out on a Saturday window shopping and kick back to relax. On the rare occasion you get a break from your endless paper chasing, Zoom calls and writing, you can use your wardrobe clearing day to match few clothing and have a runway at home yourself or for a date with yourself to the Netflix movie you're gonna watch on your laptop. Who says you can't dress up to do online shopping? That's the only way you'll know that you do not need that new shade of Forencos lipstick you saw the other day. Duh.
Sudden weight gain/loss
I can't say that is unexpected especially if you're the kind who can go long without exercises and the type who munch while you work (which is a bad habit by the way). But sometimes you can't help if especially if you live on your own or have your own living space. Being on your own makes it kind of easy to get off-track about the norm of things; how much have you eaten today...is that your 5th coffee...should you be finishing that leftovers...etc. It is harder if you don't have your own kitchen and rely on packed food or processed ones.
π‘I say: I can assure you, it is NOT unusual. This happens often. Each one of us have different eating habits. There isn't a flexible advise to cater this problem. But it helps to think that when you're setting up a study environment, you're setting up a living environment that enable you to be inspired enough for productivity. I make it a point to have food available but at a good distance and exercise attire/equipment nearby. Better yet, wear them. To curb that crazy cravings, I try my best to have my meal on-time; breakfast at 8 am, lunch at 12 pm or 1 pm etc. Eat what you love, but in moderation. Hydrate regularly. It's hard, I know. All the chipsπ and chocolate chip cookiesπͺ and sweetened 3-in-1 lattesβ...I just...well, just remember...in moderation and you're a human. Don't beat yourself up if you eat them anyway.
Back pain, knee pain, frozen shoulder...everything hurts
I have a hard time tearing away from what I am doing for the 20-minutes-work-5-minutes-rest rule but I try my best to maintain good posture. The bad habit of crouching and slouching at desk jobs is a universal problem. At the onset of the pandemic, for the first time in my life, my back felt strained. I panicked and started to seriously stretch myself and found that not only I am killing my back, I was not breathing properly when I am doing my work due to my posture.
π‘I say: Don't break the bank trying to buy new furniture or tools because from experience, you end up not actually using them for the purpose you bought them in the first place. Eg. treadmill...you're more likely to hang your clothes or towels there...or super expensive yoga mats. Carpet works just fine too.
Standing desk is deemed to have little to no effects on spinal/muscle health by some studies but I went on ahead and made a make-shift standing desk. I found that I'm more alert when I work standing and breathe better. There was no contest...standing desk is a choice made. My standing table is an old dining table that I turned into my bed where I put my portable laptop desk. So, it also works as a barre that I used to stretch my legs for that mid-splits I've been working on.
These are some of the stuff that plague me daily and how I cope. How about you guys? How do you take care of yourself as someone who willingly serve yourself on a platter to tertiary educational torture to console your ever-thirsty curious mind?
The year 2021 is looming over us and I am dying to have some sort of control over what I could be doing for the next 365 days. While 2020 had been a year of 'character building', I discover alot of things about everything around me and myself. For starters, I am an avid planner; surprisingly. But it does not mean that I follow through with them. See what I did right there? I am admitting the truth behind self-study and lifetime of learning.
With alot of things I have planned to breathe new life to my own progress and time management, I went hunting for some interesting stuff in the internet for inspiration and try-outs. And guess what? I found one and I think most people may have been using this already in full swing because the review is 5 β!
πππππππππ
Taskade is simply a project/team management tool. Ah ah ah...before you write me off, hear me out. Taskade is aimed to help teams to plan, organize or manage their tasks and prioritize output for decision-making. It is simply an interactive planner sans organizer sans dashboard that sees where you're at with your work, what you've managed to get done and communicate tasks among people in your team; IF you have a whole team working on some sort of project. Hence, the chat capability that is implemented in this tool.
At my job, I work in a team of only 2 people; me and another colleague, and we're the regional programme unit which is apart of the bigger unit of team mates spread elsewhere in other regions. So, just because your unit is small, it doesn't mean that your task load complements your pint-sized manpower. So, I've been looking for platforms that could help me organize our productivity and ensure high-quality output. Just because technology is more advanced, it doesn'e mean there isn't any learning curve, right? So I tried just about anything under the sun for project/team management; Asana, Slack, Discord, the pre-existing Google..., but none of them could nail all shortcomings precisely; due dates, assignment of tasks, progress, sub-tasks, interactive commenting, multiplatform sync, brainstorming etc. Channels in Slack gives me headache -- same with Discord, and Telegram channels is too 'static' and 'one-way street' for me to view everything.
I found Taskade after trying to find a complementary 'Forest: Focus' extension at the Google Chrome extensions marketplace. There are plenty of interesting high-quality extensions as of late and I am pleasantyl surprised because earlier this year, most of them were quite 'beta' in their functionality. I saw a 'Bullet Journal' extension that someone raved about and another individual commented: 'Isn't this Taskade?'. The curious cat I am, I googled it and was not disappointed. What are the main keywords that hooked me?:
FREE
Google-integrated
Remote work environment advocacy
Multi-platform
What features do Taskade actually have? β¨
Given that it is an All-in-One Collaboration tool, it is understandable if the GUI is pleasing on the eyes. I do understand that first-impression is everything; color, packaging, fore-front information and visual, but it was really the functionality that delivers me to salvation. If you're an active member of Dev.to, then you'll catch feels with this theme that Taskade delivers. Key features in Taskade that you should try out:
Task list
Collaborators invitation feature (no organizational handle required)
Chat feature (with a call feature!)
Workspace feature (nothing new but...I'll get back to this later)
5 interchangeable neural-forest task list templates; List, Board, Action, Mindmap and Org Chart -- seamless with no error.
The capability to utilize this very platform as a presentation or exported into PDF task list printout.
Safe to say, Taskade buried me alive with the curation of beautiful images for the background; again...not relevant but needed to be said.
The Live Demosandbo lets you try it out for yourself although, at first glance, you may be wondering what on earth you are looking at. But it won't take long before you discover that it is quite intuitive.
Did I mention you can download and access it from just about ANYWHERE? Laptops, browser extensions and even smartphone apps. I'm not kidding when I said Taskade is multiplatform; they work on Windows, Mac, Android, iOS and Linux. Currently, I am testing it out using the Chrome extension and installed the app in my Android phone. It works like I expect it to so far.
What is the difference between the FREE and PAID version? π°π°π°
As I just mentioned, you can sign-up for it for free and use it for life...for free. The priced version is seemingly there to accommodate the file size per upload you require; as of now. For free plan, you can upload 5MB file per upload while the paid version increases the size to 50MB per upload. Both versions offer:
Unlimited storage
Unlimited tasks entry
Unlimited project creation
Unlimited collaborators addition
The development team is currently adding more functionalities such as Project Activity Tracking, Integration to Dropbox, Google Drive and One Drive as well as Email Integration -- available for free.
Although it is mentioned that the free version of Taskade includes unlimited tasks, collaborators and all essential features, it was also mentioned that you will need to upgrade if you exceed the workspace limits which doesn't actually have any entailing elaborations which I will try to dig soon enough. But safe to say that if you are a single person using this tool, you are considered a team of 'one' where your shared projects in workspace to your 'editors' are still considered free. Only workspace the addition of workspace members are billed. This may imply that there are certain limits to how many individuals you can add into your workspace before you are required to upgrade. So far, visually, I see that the limit may be 2 people that makes up to 3 people per workspace (including yourself). You can find some details to pricing and FAQs here:
Taskade | Simple Pricing
Personally, I don't think USD5 is a hard bargain if you're self-employed and work with external parties collaboratively. If you're apart of an organization, feel free to ask for demo from them. Discount is possible if you're from a nonprofit or educational institution.
How I use Taskade? β
Well, given that it was free to sign-up, I tried it out straight away and I'm happy to report that I successfully managed to use it without having to google nor view any how-tos. That is a good thing! In fact, I am quite elated with just how easy it is to use this tool that I have used my personal email to help centralize and manage my work and personal work side-by-side. If you prefer some satellite view of your progress and all the task you need to complete to clear off certain objective, this is not a bad organization.
So I created 2 workspace: one for work and one for my personal tasks. Then I just collate all my tasks into monthly projects.
My personal tasks involve me updating my study progress and curating stuff I like online into my Tumblr blog.
Create studyblr workspace
Create new project in the studyblr workspace to organize and brainstorm Tumblr contents I plan to create and post: Tumblr: 2021/01.
Utilize the Mindmap template from all the options of templates shared and start creating the and organizing the content I want and tasks I need to execute to develop them.
Et voila! There all there is to it! It is easy peasy and you can start adding due dates as reminders and links as resources as well as hashtags for filtering in future. Check out some drafting I did so far in the screenshots below!
For more updates, check out their Updates page that fully utilizes Taskade to share all the updates straight from December 2017 till present and the chat function is there available for you to ask the Taskade team about the feature updates directly. Now that's awesome cause you know something's good if the one who makes them, actually uses them.πππ