Use your smartphone to become a Citizen Scientist with Project Noah
source: http://www.grist.org/article/2011-02-11-use-your-smartphone-to-become-a-citizen-scient-with-...
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- DeliaTheArtist
- added this
It's called Project Noah (the "NOAH" stands for "Networked Organisms and Habitats"), and its creator is a guy named Yasser Ansari, a self-described bio-geek-turned-telecom nerd.
The app allows you to take a picture of a flower, animal, or other living creature, helps you identify it, and tells you about other wildlife that might be in the area. Upload your shot and it will show up on a global map with the observations of other users.
"Imagine a field guide for every type of organism on the planet, a butterfly net, and a quick and easy way to grab field notes, thrown on top of [a smartphone]," says Ansari in a presentation. "My vision for this is part Darwin's field guide, part vintage science instrument, and a dollop of biopunk/steampunk for good measure."
Top users so far include a nine-year-old home-schooled girl in New Zealand and a teacher from Spain who has logged more than 1,200 spottings.
Some of the sightings are exotic, but some -- squirrels, cows, pansies -- are much more everyday. Ansari says that taking a closer look at the living things around us, no matter how common, is all about combating "nature deficit disorder": "I'm trying to bring back that [childlike] wonderment," he says. "I'm trying to reignite that curiosity for the natural world that we all had when we were younger."
http://www.grist.org/article/2011-02-11-use-your-smartphone-to-become-a-citizen-...
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- tags:
- iPhone, smartphone, Droid, Citizen Science
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good_stuff
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This is a neat app. It would be especially helpful when trying to identify poisen ivy. I wonder if it would be able to tell the difference between poisenous and non-poisenous mushrooms. Anybody know if it works for fungi?
- 1 year ago
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good_stuff
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LivingPong
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good_stuff:
that's a great idea, people often have trouble identifying fungi. :)
I've be warned by people not to eat common varieties of field mushrooms, even though they are perfectly fine to eat. It would be great to have an app I could just point to, apparently years of mycology experience, correct identification procedures and good old books isn't enough evidence for the odd person. There are always some fungi I can't find in books though so this would definitely be a handy addition. I'll have to check it out.
I'd imagine fungi would hopefully be part of the varieties of life included. I hope so anyway.
- 1 year ago
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LivingPong
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royulery
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i'm having trouble registering.
- 1 year ago
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royulery
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Agent_Alpha
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Now that seems right up my alley. Wait a minute! Its a pokedex!
http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSFX2UKz4i7LO2e1dEjc4-KVzEryAqcUXtXthmUqInOsUtd2hPH
- 1 year ago
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Agent_Alpha
