I agree with Charlie! Ron Fortunato and his team are clearly  an example of 
excellence in research and education: kudos to them!!!
Cheers
Maria



Inviato dal mio dispositivo Samsung


-------- Messaggio originale --------
Da: Charlie Schweik <cschw...@pubpol.umass.edu>
Data: 05/04/18 14:17 (GMT+01:00)
A: Suchith Anand <suchith.an...@nottingham.ac.uk>
Cc: discuss@lists.osgeo.org, geofor...@lists.osgeo.org
Oggetto: Re: [Geo4All] [OSGeo-Discuss] AWorldBridge GeoForAll Lab Delivers for 
FAO in Africa

I couldn't resist publicly giving a shout-out to Ron Fortunato and AWorldBridge 
and their connection to these other organizations. In my view, they are leading 
the globe in this kind of cross organizational "commons-based peer production" 
effort and all GeoForAll labs should consider trying to mimic what they are 
doing.

Great work Ron and teams!

Charlie Schweik



On Thu, Apr 5, 2018 at 6:29 AM, Suchith Anand 
<suchith.an...@nottingham.ac.uk<mailto:suchith.an...@nottingham.ac.uk>> wrote:

Dear colleagues,


I would like to congratulate our GeoForAll lab colleagues -  Ron Fortunato’s 
and his students at AWorldBridge for their exceptional determination and 
efforts in contributing technical excellence and substantive achievements to 
assisting small-holder farmers in Africa in managing the Fall Armyworm through 
the Fall Armyworm Monitoring & Early Warning System mobile app .  They built 
this for FAO that FAO then released as their app! Details at  
http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/1106850/icode/


The Fall Army Worm is having a devastating impact on Africa. If you want to 
know more about the Fall Army Worm FAW, see this,

http://www.fao.org/food-chain-crisis/how-we-work/plant-protection/fallarmyworm/en/



Ron’s AWorldBridge is one of the GeoForAll Labs (they have two labs - one  
running projects for NASA and UN FAO in Middletown, NY, USA and a second one 
running delivering corresponding data including climate change studies for 
USGS, NOAA and NASA at Barrow, Alaska, USA. Everything they produce is open 
source.



Please see  FAO thank you certificate

https://worldwind.arc.nasa.gov/fao/WorldBridgeCertificate.pdf



Thanks to Patrick for sharing this excellent news.


A World Bridge is an international award-winning program for learning 21st 
Century Skills, using advanced teaching methods that incorporate real- world 
projects involving industry and government partners. A World Bridge continually 
advances educational models for international leadership, economic development, 
and educational research. These dynamic projects involve the design and 
implementation of Real-world, Real-time Project- Based Learning into the 
curriculum. Students develop professional skills while working on 
locally-oriented projects that have relevance to the larger global community, 
such as urban management and sustainable resources. Details at 
http://aworldbridge.com


I am particularly impressed by their work with students through NASA Europa 
Challenge. Alaska’s A World Bridge program in Kodiak won back-to-back NASA 
Europa - International Grand Challenges the past two years, competing against 
the world’s “Best and the Brightest” to generate solutions to societal issues 
that will benefit both the local and world communities.  The students are also 
working on the NASA OpenCitySmart global initiative, which challenges “the 
world’s best and brightest” to find solutions for creating sustainable 
communities. They are looking for renewable energy solutions and the 
development of shared energy grids suitable for Arctic conditions.


Please see the amazing work that the students are doing that was summarised in 
our June 2017 Newsletter at 
https://www.osgeo.org/wp-content/uploads/Newsletter-Vol-3_6.pdf


We are very grateful to the contributions of these amazing students to 
GeoForAll. It is important that we can share these amazing ideas with all so 
that it keeps building more synergies. We are a global community, and it is 
this global perspective which gives us strength. It is important that we 
highlight and share ideas from colleagues in different parts of our home planet.


Best wishes,


Suchith


This message and any attachment are intended solely for the addressee
and may contain confidential information. If you have received this
message in error, please contact the sender and delete the email and
attachment.

Any views or opinions expressed by the author of this email do not
necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nottingham. Email
communications with the University of Nottingham may be monitored
where permitted by law.





_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
Discuss@lists.osgeo.org<mailto:Discuss@lists.osgeo.org>
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss



--
Charlie Schweik

Professor
Department of Environmental Conservation & School of Public Policy
University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Facebook: Charles.Schweik
Twitter: @cschweik

_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
Discuss@lists.osgeo.org
https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss

Reply via email to