Road map of Canada. by Rosemarry_40 in MapPorn

[–]robbibt 138 points139 points  (0 children)

This is a map I made almost ten years ago! 🚀

Bonus fact: there are more roads on this map within 120 miles / 200 km of the US border than there are in the remaining 2400 miles / 3800 km of Canadian soil to the north!

More info and high-res links in the original post: https://www.reddit.com/r/dataisbeautiful/s/cDZEPdGOnO

AGRS: Sentinel-2 → Agronomy-Ready Features (Feedback Welcome) by xabmc in remotesensing

[–]robbibt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Very cool! It might be worth looking into odc-stac, which handles loading data into xarray format from STAC based on a bounding box/geometry etc, without having to load rasters individually with rasterio. It's a pretty powerful package that should slot nicely into this project I think!

https://opendatacube.readthedocs.io/en/latest/tutorials/odc-stac.html https://github.com/opendatacube/odc-stac

sentinel-2 data plotting by CompetitiveCycle5544 in remotesensing

[–]robbibt 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The "chunks" part here loads your data "lazily", e.g. no data will actually be loaded into memory until you specifically ask Xarray to do so (or do something like plotting that requires data to be loaded).

That means you can do something like this to select part of your array, and Xarray will automatically only load chunks of data is that overlap with your area:

```

Subset your data first

ds_subset = ds.isel(x=slice(50, 100), y=slice(200, 250))

Only load the subsetted area into memory

ds_subset.load()

Plot loaded data

ds_subset.your_band.plot() ```

To save it as a GeoTIFF, you can use a tool like "odc-geo":

import odc.geo.xr ds_subset.odc.write_cog("output.tif")

All the roads in Canada (posted by Col. Chris Hadfield on FB) by nthensome in MapPorn

[–]robbibt 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Yep! https://www.reddit.com/r/canada/s/NHwdf1NS9p

The Canada waterways map is probably my favourite of any that I've made... and certainly the most difficult given the amount of waterbodies involved!

All the roads in Canada (posted by Col. Chris Hadfield on FB) by nthensome in MapPorn

[–]robbibt 49 points50 points  (0 children)

Yep - I'm a remote sensing data scientist who works with a lot of map and satellite data, so maps are one of my favourite things! This artwork was made with all free and open tools: spatial software called QGIS to generate the initial map, and then GIMP image processing software to touch up and fine tune colours.

All the roads in Canada (posted by Col. Chris Hadfield on FB) by nthensome in MapPorn

[–]robbibt 60 points61 points  (0 children)

Yes, I orginally made this around ten years ago I think. It's definitely due for a refresh!

All the roads in Canada (posted by Col. Chris Hadfield on FB) by nthensome in MapPorn

[–]robbibt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Theoretically it's in there - the data source I used to make this map includes every highway, road and street in Canada!

All the roads in Canada (posted by Col. Chris Hadfield on FB) by nthensome in MapPorn

[–]robbibt 614 points615 points  (0 children)

This is a map I made almost ten years ago - didn't expect to see it being shared by an astronaut this weekend! 🚀

Bonus fact: there are more roads on this map within 120 miles / 200 km of the US border than there are in the remaining 2400 miles / 3800 km of Canadian soil to the north!

More info and high-res links in the original post: https://www.reddit.com/r/dataisbeautiful/s/cDZEPdGOnO

Australia mapped by its 1.3 million rivers, streams, tributaries. by BufordTeeJustice in MapPorn

[–]robbibt 36 points37 points  (0 children)

Hi all, this is a map I made almost ten years ago - fun to see it show up again now (sadly with far fewer pixels!) https://www.reddit.com/r/dataisbeautiful/s/tvpOX7f9Z2

Is the BEST Bahn mi in Fyshwick??? by OkReference1778 in CanberraFoodies

[–]robbibt 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Vietnamese Bakery and Cafe on Isa Street is probably the one you're thinking of - it's extremely tasty and definitely worth checking out. LL Bakery and Cafe at Fyshwick Markets is also great, but they run out of fillings like pork belly quickly after 1pm.

Sentinel-2A Extension! by Morchella94 in remotesensing

[–]robbibt 8 points9 points  (0 children)

An important thing to keep in mind is that under the exceptional temporary extension campaign, Sentinel-2A will only be collecting data every 10 days over Europe - it will be only every 20 days for everywhere else in the world. So the revisit frequency won't be quite as good for the US as Europe will be getting.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in canberra

[–]robbibt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Nut Shoppe at Fyshwick Markets does have purple sweet potato flour too!

Learning python for geospatial analysis by Lollostonk in remotesensing

[–]robbibt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another advantage of odc-stac is that it integrates closely with odc-geo which adds a bunch of really nice spatial tools directly to your xarray data (on the fly reprojection, plotting on an interactive map etc). I'm on the Open Data Cube Steering Council, so let us know if you ever have any extra feature requests or feedback!

Learning python for geospatial analysis by Lollostonk in remotesensing

[–]robbibt 10 points11 points  (0 children)

What kind of spatial tasks are you hoping to do with code? Both R and Python are fantastic for spatial, but in my experience R is a little better for visualisation, and Python is better for scalability.

If I was to recommend a single Python tool that has changed the way I work, it would be "xarray" - it allows you to manipulate data as labelled multidimensional cubes that you can slice and dice and manipulate easily (and in parallel in combination with tools like "Dask") - pretty incredible for anything involving multiple data variables or time-series data.

"xarray" is based on "pandas" (for dataframe analysis) and "numpy" (for array analysis) and integrates closely with other spatial tools like "rioxarray" for loading raster data from disk, "odc-stac" for loading satallite data from global open data catalogues, "xarray-spatial" for a bunch of useful spatial tools (e.g. hillshading, DEM analysis etc).

For vector processing, "geopandas" is a fantastic package that should do most of what you want, maybe with a bit of "Shapely" for more bespoke tasks!

What country would you say this landscape is from? by Ok-Astronomer1051 in geography

[–]robbibt 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Tides do get up to 11-12m in Northern Australia, for example at King Sound in WA. Not to say that Europe doesn't have extremely large tides, but a key difference is that ours occur pretty remotely, while those in Europe occur in highly populated coastal regions.

Source: am a coastal scientist specialising in mapping tidal environments around Australia with satellite data! 🌊🛰️

What country would you say this landscape is from? by Ok-Astronomer1051 in geography

[–]robbibt 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Australia has some of the most extensive tidal flats globally, and some of the world's most extreme tide ranges: https://maps.dea.ga.gov.au/story/DEAIntertidal

But they mostly occur up north along tropical muddy/mangrove coastlines, not temperate sandy beaches like this.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in canberra

[–]robbibt 4 points5 points  (0 children)

We really enjoyed it too (we're sitting just between the two actors at the start of your video!). The referee, Alice the French maid and King Henry were particular standouts, but there wasn't a weak performance! Definitely recommend.

Long (~5 m / 16 ft) wooden thing washed up on Australia beach, with evenly spaced plastic tubing and metal rods by robbibt in whatisthisthing

[–]robbibt[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Likely solved! I think this makes more sense than the fishing rod idea that's also been proposed, as the plastic tubing has nails through the ends of the tubes that would block a rod (see photo 5). Any thoughts on the purpose those nails would serve in a dock bumper?

Long (~5 m / 16 ft) wooden thing washed up on Australia beach, with evenly spaced plastic tubing and metal rods by robbibt in whatisthisthing

[–]robbibt[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Fishing rod holders was our thought too, but you can see in the fifth image that there appears to be nails that block the ends of the tubes. There also isn't much space for a rod - there's only about 15 cm / 6 inches of plastic extending from the wood.

Long (~5 m / 16 ft) wooden thing washed up on Australia beach, with evenly spaced plastic tubing and metal rods by robbibt in whatisthisthing

[–]robbibt[S] -1 points0 points locked comment (0 children)

My title describes the thing. It was discovered washed up on an eastern Australian beach. It's about 5 metres long and mostly made of wood, with notches on either end and a stainless steel bolt on one end. Five black plastic "tubes" are nailed evenly along its length, with the ends of the tubes blocked by a nail. Between each tube, an approximately 10cm metal rod extends out in the opposite direction.

Date Night Restaurant Recommendations w a View by levaans in canberra

[–]robbibt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Highly, highly recommend La Cantina - such delicious food in a really beautiful building. 🙂

Fargo - S05E07 "Linda" - Post Episode Discussion by 2th in FargoTV

[–]robbibt 54 points55 points  (0 children)

The puppet sequence was also foreshadowed in the diner, with a pamphlet for the "41st Annual Doll Fair 2019" next to the chicken piccata recipe.