<html><head><style> body {height: 100%; color:#000000; font-size:12pt; font-family:Arial;}</style></head><body>have you looked at geozui4d? it's done by dr Colin Ware, U. New Hampshire. the link is here:<br>http://vislab-ccom.unh.edu/GeoZui4D/<br>Note: i had troubble trying to load in ubuntu<br><br><br><br><br>----- Original Message -----<br>From: Mike Toews <mwtoews@gmail.com><br>To: OSGeo Discussions <discuss@lists.osgeo.org><br>Cc: timmichelsen@gmx-topmail.de<br>Sent: Tue, 07 Sep 2010 14:27:30 -0000 (UTC)<br>Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Re: Support of 4D (time based) data sets<br><br>On 7 September 2010 04:11, Timmie <timmichelsen@gmx-topmail.de> wrote:<br>> how do you intend to deal with aggregated data sets?<br>> E.g. 10-years average for every month of the year.<br><br>For all calculations on NetCDF files (including your example), you can<br>try NCO[1]. These command-line tools require extensive documentation<br>reading, and I recommend keeping a log of notes for commands that<br>work. Many useful examples are also provided in the documentation.<br><br>On 7 September 2010 03:16, andrea antonello <andrea.antonello@gmail.com> wrote:<br>>> The NASA tool Panoply (http://www.giss.nasa.gov/tools/panoply/) does this quite<br>>> nicely.<br>><br>> I think it doesn't if you have small local datasets, I have never been<br>> able to zoom in.<br><br>I used ncview[2] to view and produce images for animations used in<br>presentations (using imagemagick). All my NC files were in a small<br>region using UTM coordinates, so many viewers didn't know how to show<br>the data.<br><br>[1] http://nco.sourceforge.net/<br>[2] http://meteora.ucsd.edu/~pierce/ncview_home_page.html (this needs<br>X and needs to be compiled -- no binaries or packages available)<br><br>-Mike<br>_______________________________________________<br>Discuss mailing list<br>Discuss@lists.osgeo.org<br>http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss<br><br></andrea.antonello@gmail.com></timmichelsen@gmx-topmail.de></body></html>