The Path to STAC 1.0.0
The STAC Community’s plan to get to 1.0.0 in early 2021.
The STAC Community’s plan to get to 1.0.0 in early 2021.
Serverless computing is increasingly popular because of the promise of lower cost and the convenience it provides to users who do not need to focus on server management. This has resulted in the availability of a number of proprietary and open-source serverless solutions. We seek to understand how the performance of serverless computing depends on a number of design issues using several popular open-source serverless platforms. We identify the idiosyncrasies affecting performance (throughput and latency) for different open-source serverless platforms. Further, we observe that just having either resource-based (CPU and memory) or workload-based (request per second (RPS) or concurrent requests) auto-scaling is inadequate to address the needs of the serverless platforms.
Scientific data has traditionally been distributed via downloads from data server to local computer. This way of working suffers from limitations as scientific datasets grow towards the petabyte scale. A “cloud-native data repository,” as defined in this paper, offers several advantages over traditional data repositories—performance, reliability, cost-effectiveness, collaboration, reproducibility, creativity, downstream impacts, and access & inclusion. These objectives motivate a set of best practices for cloud-native data repositories: analysis-ready data, cloud-optimized (ARCO) formats, and loose coupling with data-proximate computing. The Pangeo Project has developed a prototype implementation of these principles by using open-source scientific Python tools. By providing an ARCO data catalog together with on-demand, scalable distributed computing, Pangeo enables users to process big data at rates exceeding 10 GB/s. Several challenges must be resolved in order to realize cloud computing’s full potential for scientific research, such as organizing funding, training users, and enforcing data privacy requirements.
An international team of scientists has used artificial intelligence and commercial satellites to identify an unexpectedly large number of trees spread across arid and semi-arid areas.
USGS Landsat has just released Collection 2, a major upgrade to the Landsat archive that improves accuracy, improves cloud compatibility and usability, and expands access to standard higher-level products
GEO Analytics Canada has been featured in the September 2020 ’Association Québécoise de Télédétection (L’AQT) Bulletin.
There is increasing interest in using machine learning to automatically analyse remote sensing data and increase our understanding of complex environmental systems. While there are benefits from this approach, there are also some barriers to its use. This POSTnote examines the value of these approaches, and the technical and ethical challenges for wider implementation.
On July 14 2020, GEO Analytics Canada was introduced at the 2020 Canadian Symposium on Remote Sensing. The video presentation that was given at the symposium is available here.
In collaboration with the Amazon Web Service (AWS) Public Dataset Program, NASA has made the following datasets available in Cloud Optimized GeoTIFF (COG) format for the COVID-19 Space Apps Challenge.
The Group on Earth Observations (GEO) Virtual Symposium 2020 will be held from June 15-19, 2020. The global GEO community will benefit from a series of interactive webinars that will provide in-depth discussions from experts on a range of relevant issues to the GEO Work Programme Flagships, Initiatives and Activities. Session topics will focus on the first year of 2020-2022 GEO Work Programme, focusing on strengthening the capability of GEO Work Programme activities to implement their plans effectively.