[Geo4All] Geo Data, Urbanisation, Climate Changes and Tropical Africa
Dan Bwanika
bulemezi at gmail.com
Tue Dec 12 22:52:52 PST 2017
Pat
Africa was slow, very slow in the past to handle such tragedies. Now
there is the urgency. Once again Africa has to be grateful for grate
innovator and innovationns that makes it possible to highlight these
and other similar issues in such public forums for action.
One more important issue here is that Africa's forests are not only
beautiful but enormous resources for rare medicinal drugs and other
compounds that can save humanity from cancers, Alzheimer and such
diseases. For evolutionists , the research possibilities are enormous.
It will be huge hard work to catalogue all this data but for those
with passion it is all rewarding and a destination to a Noble Prize
worthy pursuing.
Hopefully; researchers, inventors and innovators, students and their
professors, tree lovers, environmental enthusiasts and professors will
find room to do more for the betterment of humanity.
Uganda welcomes all. (Ron cattle keepers in Uganda are in battle with
ticks can you help?!)
Best Wishes
Daniel Bwanika
On 12/12/17, Hogan, Patrick (ARC-PX) <patrick.hogan at nasa.gov> wrote:
> Daniel and the Africa Contingent,
>
> Our heart goes out to so much of humanity having to deal with a diminishing
> world due to over consumption by others.
>
> In light of this sadness, if I may, still some good news!
> First of all, the GeoForAll Lab www.AWorldBridge.com is successfully
> delivering a UN/FAO product specifically to serve the urgent needs of North
> Africa, in addressing the recent infestation of the Fall Armyworm (moth/
> caterpillar), https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_armyworm. Ron Fortunato is
> getting kudos from FAO for the monitoring system his New York Fei Tian
> University students built for FAO. I will let Ron share the details if
> anyone is interested.
>
> This is in addition to the Locust Intervention tracking system AWorldBridge
> is also building for FAO for North Africa. And of course there is also the
> OpenCitySmart work his GeoForAll labs are continuing to work on.
>
> The other good news is that there has just been a new release of ESA-NASA
> WebWorldWind! v0.9.0 (we are conservative!).
> The European Space Agency (ESA) has standardized on this platform and is
> working with NASA to accelerate its development.
> https://github.com/NASAWorldWind/WebWorldWind/releases/tag/v0.9.0
>
> Forum post:
> https://forum.worldwindcentral.com/forum/web-world-wind/web-world-wind-help/158071-web-worldwind-v0-9-0-now-available
>
> WebWorldWind is already the backbone for the ESA Sentinel apps (pretty cool
> stuff):
> Sentinel App for iOS:
> https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/esa-sentinel/id1036738151
> Sentinel App for Android:
> https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=esa.sentinel
>
> Given the UN OpenGIS group has recently selected WebWorldWind for their web
> apps, this new version will give them a powerful start.
> https://worldwind.arc.nasa.gov/
>
> -Patrick.Hogan at nasa.gov
> (650) 269-2788 (c)
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: GeoForAll [mailto:geoforall-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Dan
> Bwanika
> Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2017 6:44 AM
> To: GeoForAll
> Cc: BISA-IPEG; ACUMEN; Urban Geography Discussion and Announcement Forum
> Subject: [Geo4All] Geo Data, Urbanisation, Climate Changes and Tropical
> Africa
>
> Forum
>
> Africa in its efforts to develop, what were once Dense Tropical forests are
> now turning into human settlements. This is where geo data science comes in
> handy.
>
> Most African countries do not have animal, insect and plant genetic data
> banks or museums.
>
> It’s a double tragedy now that climate change too is impacting this region
> negatively. The dense Tropical forests have helped Africans to survive in
> many different ways with medicinal plants and different types of forests
> foods that unfortunately are undocumented.
>
> This knowledge is crucial for sustainable development and can be lost if Geo
> Data Science does not establish its footprint here. Typical forest people
> with base knowledge is also rapidly disappearing.
>
> Best Wishes
> Daniel Bwanika.
> _____________________________
> Bwanika Nakyesawa Luwero
>
> Daniel Bwanika
> Box 12413 Kampala
> Uganda
>
> t: +256-752-972-960
> f: facebook.com/uidc.uganda
> www.uidc-ea.org
> e: uidcug at gmail.com
> t: @uidc_ug
>
--
_____________________________
Bwanika Nakyesawa Luwero
Daniel Bwanika
Box 12413 Kampala
Uganda
t: +256-752-972-960
f: facebook.com/uidc.uganda
www.uidc-ea.org
e: uidcug at gmail.com
t: @uidc_ug
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: greenroads0.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 189363 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/geoforall/attachments/20171213/4a151c75/attachment.jpg>
More information about the GeoForAll
mailing list