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From YouTube: SimPEG meeting October 16, 2019
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A
And
we
can,
we
can
catch
up.
It's
been
a
couple
of
couple
of
weeks
and
I
know
lots
of
happened
to
think
for
everyone
yeah.
It
is
somebody
BC
want
to
start
us
off.
Maybe
with
a
bit
of
an
update,
I
guess
there
was
a
late
shift
to
little
stuff.
Last
week,
there's
PCGS
there's
my
and
March
stuff
yeah.
Do
you
want
to
go
around
the
table.
C
B
Group
of
people
that
are
here
at
UBC
Jeff,
you
should
be
very
proud
to
know
them
because
they
they
actually
gave
an
amazing
presentation.
So
Devin
talk
for
most
of
the
morning
about
jiff
tools
and
kind
of
how
it
works
and
the
archiving,
and
then
Dom
talked
about
the
em1
D
so
brought
into
into
they're
the
same
thing.
I
actually
gave
a
opening
on
the
afternoon
about
the
need
for
open
source
resources.
So
we
actually
have
that
available.
It's
it's
online,
so
it's
recorded,
it
was
recorded.
Oh,
it's
not
great
we're
having
a
little
bit.
B
The
one
thing
I
mean
the
companies
are
now
like:
100
percent
dead,
on,
like
okay,
open
source
and
something
they're
they're,
really
that
they're
really
completely
accepting
of
that,
and
also
supportive
of
continued
development.
I
think
that
is
really
good.
I
mean
compare
that
to
where
all
this
was
a
year
ago,
it's
like
night
and
day.
A
B
B
That's
good,
and
then
people
went
through
the
DC
resistivity
well,
DC,
resistivity
and
I
people
basically
published
Sigma
on
the
DC
gave
just
an
absolutely
smashing
presentation
and
people.
People
are
really
impressed
with
the
amount
of
effort
at
work
that
has.
B
The
resulting
excellent
I
was
really
good
and
then
the
dog
came
in
then
after
coffee
had
talked
a
bit
about
kind
of
other
developments,
with
respect
to
both
the
the
FBI
and
you're
kind
of
where
we're
going
with
with
Cephei
and
the
open
source
work,
and
that
was
again
really
well.
We
see
the
MBI
stuff
is,
has
got
a
lot
of
potential,
as
well
as
all
the
potential
and
stuff,
and
so
people
are
just
continually
interested
in
and
then
I
ended
up
with
a
feel
to
the
companies
about
the
need
for
archiving
and
maintenance.
B
They
were
all
they
were
actually
all
fully
on
board.
All
seven
companies,
I
believe,
will
support
a
two-year
project
for
maintenance
port,
so
the
connections
there.
The
first
connection
is
to
support
Romans
he's
primarily
on
the
Fortran
code.
So
that's
not
so
much
of
a
synthetic
but
death
will
be
will
be
supported
up
this
and
his
mandate
will
be
yo
support
all
the
codes.
So
that's
the
yo
jib
tools
itself
as
well.
As
you
know,
the
open
source
codes
and
IRC
quotes
add
to
develop
tests
and
develop
documentation.
B
A
B
A
B
He
and
I
both
gave
fields
along
with
Dom
at
Tebow,
especially
who
talked
about
the
all
the
work
that
he's
been
doing
with
respect
to
enter
physical,
urges
and
yeah
I
think
the
companies
are
really
really
engaged
and
very
interested
in
this.
So
the
potential
for
half
a
consortium
would
be
I,
think
high
and
they're
completely
on
board,
with
everything
being
developed
in
same
thing,
completely
open
source.
So
it's
great,
it
is
absolutely
great
I
mean
you
can
just
feel
that
kind
of
movement
towards
the
open
source
and
just
comfort
zone
with
it.
D
A
A
So
yeah,
that's
great,
and
what's
your
take
on
sort
of
timelines
of
this
timelines
of
a
new
consortium
coming
together,
because
what
I'm,
what
I'm
thinking
of
is
that
one
of
the
things
I
think
we're
gonna
need
to
do
is
put
some
slightly
more
formal
governance
and
stuff
in
place
for
simpe,
just
so
that
it's
documented
how
decisions
are
made,
and
so
that
is
all
like
clear
and
transparent
both
to
companies
and
to
I
mean
and
to
outside
contributors,
who
may
or
may
not
be
connected
at
all,
with
UBC
jiff
like
Peter,
for
example,
yeah.
B
B
A
B
So
that
was
that
was
pretty
successful
the
rest
of
the
afternoon
that
was
really
taken
over
by
DOM
and
Chris
John
Mugabi
at
Mira,
and
really
talking
about
the
evolution
of
Geoscience
analyst
and
developments
that
they're
doing.
As
far
as
you
know,
incorporating
Jif
tools
and
VP
codes
and
other
stuff.
So
and
again
the
companies
were
really
really
I.
E
B
B
I
give
you
one
more
update
on
the
my
Mar
stuff,
so
as
I
guess,
there's
I,
guess,
there's
just
us
here
right,
so
yeah,
okay,
so
I
tell
people
that's
happening
here.
So
initially
we
were
planning
to
actually
start
teaching
in
a
week
from
now
at
Mon
State,
but
that
kind
of
hit
a
roadblock,
because
we
found
out
that
in
order
to
get
business
visas
and
in
order
to
transfer
equipment,
we
needed
to
establish
a
memory
Understanding
between
the
University
and
the
national
government.
B
B
So
as
it's
planned
right
now,
you're
not
going
to
go
and
do
the
field
work
or
the
training
in
a
couple
weeks,
but
I'm
still
going
to
go
over
and
as
of
this
morning,
I
have
a
meeting
a
day-long
meeting
with
SAR
and
men
in
their
capital
cities.
So
we're
going
to
go.
There
spend
a
day
with
them,
trying
to
kind
of
iron
out
all
the
logistic
details,
but
more
well
equally
important.
We
want
to
get
buy-in
for
our
project
at
the
national
level.
We
have
actually
been
targeting
completely
the
wrong
people.
B
We've
been
kind
of
working
at
a
very
small
group
of
people
at
the
state
level:
okay,
who
are
moderately
Susy
astok
if
whatever
but
that's
the
wrong
people,
we
should
be
working
at
the
national
level
and
I
think
we're
now
there.
So
if
we
could
get
the
national
group
to
be
on
board
and
they
you
know,
they
can
ask
people
from
individual
states
to
participate
and
that
could
make
you
know
our
catchment
much
bigger
and
our
impact
much
bigger,
yeah
exactly
so
start
from
the
top.
B
B
The
other
thing
that
we
found
out,
which
we
had
no
idea
before,
is
that
they're
they're
actually
are
in
Myanmar
a
number
of
Ireson
instruments,
at
least
10.
So
there's
ten
instruments
that
we're
so
we're
not
taking
over
the
first
instrument.
Okay,
and
so
we
probably
didn't-
need
to
donate
anything,
but
anyway,
there's
ten
instruments
there
and
you
know
if
we
can
somehow
connect
with
people
who
are
using
those
instruments
or
organizations.
Then
that's
another
area
of
catchment
and
yeah.
So
that's
also.
That
means
that
these
people
are
interested
in
DC,
resistivity,
so
I
think.
C
B
Mars
called
the
irrigation
department,
so
there's
the
DRD
Department
of
rural
development
and
then
there's
the
irrigation
department,
so
water
guys
so
they're.
My
be
some
really
nice
connections
that
we
can
get
between.
You
know
all
of
our
sempai
stuff
that
we're
developing
and
the
teaching
tools
and
soggies
apps
for
converting-
and
you
know
the
irrigation,
so
I'm
really
excited
I'm,
really
excited
I.
Think
there's
the
potential
here
for
us
to
go
to
my
mark
and
really
make
an
impact.
So
we.
B
Just
need
to
find
the
right
people
and
we
need
to
get
them
on
board,
but
I
can
spend
two
days
in
their
capitals
and
then
I'm
going
to
go
to
mala
mean
and
then
that's
where
we
were
going
to
carry
out
the
course.
So
we'll
still
do
that.
There
will
still
carry,
of
course,
but
it
would
just
be
under
a
different
kind
of
structure
and
the
fact
that
people
now
and
male'
mean
we'll
have
some
directions
from
the
top
from
the
national
level.
Like
get
your
butts
out,
there.
B
B
A
You
have
showed
some
photos
from
the
last
time
you
were
around,
like
just
of
people
out
in
the
field
grab
some
screenshots
of
some
of
the
apps,
a
screenshot
or
two
from
EMGs
eye
and
just
kind
of
put
together
like
basically
a
splashy
blog
post,
so
that
if,
when
duck
you're
you're
having
meetings,
if
you
have
something
to
point
people
to
that
says,
like
hey
we're
using
state-of-the-art
cool
things,
you
should
be
excited
about
this
yeah.
C
C
A
So
take
a
look,
so
we
have
I
think
a
GSI
medium
account.
If
you
sign
up
on
medium
and
just
ping
me
your
name,
I'll,
add
you,
but
you
can
basically
start.
You
can
start
writing
a
draft
even
before
before
I
add
you
and
then
you
can
take
a
look
at
the
disk
ones.
Those
are
actually
probably
too
long.
I
would
try
and
aim
for,
like
you
know,
a
one
to
two
minute
read
for
a
blog.
That
was
nothing
nothing
super
intense,
but
just
like
a
high
level
overview.
A
E
A
Something
like
that
medium
sort
of
gives
you
like
a
read
time,
estimate
and
I
would
aim
for,
like
you
know,
no
more
than
five
minute
read
time:
okay,
yeah
cool,
that's
great.
A
E
A
D
A
D
C
D
A
E
D
C
A
D
A
D
Made
me
think,
maybe
there's
a
way
for
us
to
leverage
this,
because
we
will
want
to
be
able
to
store
a
tree
meshes
and
all
that
right
and
and
h5.
It's
not
a
bad
way
to
do
it.
So
maybe
I'll
reach
outdoors
I'll
keep
thinking
about
how
we
can
you
know
you
need
a
way
for
us
to
store
our
results,
our
problems
if
we
wanted
to
go
that
way.
D
A
It
that's
a
good
point:
DOM
and
I
think
I've
been
playing
around
a
bit
with
hdf5,
just
as
I'm
trying
to
save
stuff
up
at
nursed
and
I
think
what
would
be
try.
What
would
be
nice
to
try
and
do
is
structure
like
how
we
want
to
save
things
sort
of
internally
and
then,
if
that
happens,
to
align
with
geo
h5,
that's
great,
if
not
like,
but
that's
ok.
A
We
can
have
a
simple
like
write
to
h5
s
or
the
I/o,
but
basically
getting
like
what
would
be
really
nice
is
if
we
can
write
basically
a
general
like
internal,
simple
IO
that
basically
is
structured,
but
we
can
swap
out
the
backend
so
doing
like
JSON
is
probably
the
simple
like
dumbest
way
to
do
it.
H5
is
nice
for
HPC
systems,
and
then
czar
is
what
we
want
to
do
on
the
cloud.
But
basically
it's
all
the
same.
An
x-ray
might
actually
be
a
nice
tool
for
doing
that.
They
have
a
pretty
good
eye.
D
D
D
A
A
Care
enough
I
can't
give
you
all
a
quick
update.
I
was
in
Bogota
last
week,
which
was
awesome
so
I
gave
we
did
two
things.
So
is
it's
a
quiet,
Latin,
America
and
so
I
gave
a
short
workshop
with
Donnie
and
Alba
he's
also
a
jupiter
developer.
He
lives
in
argentina,
so
we
gave
a
workshop
on
using
widgets
and
rich
displays
in
Jupiter.
I
can
send
you
actually
the
the
notebooks
that
we
used.
A
Yeah
for
sure,
unfortunately,
the
the
tutorial
wasn't
recorded,
but
the
notebooks
are
there
and
you
can.
You
can
play
around
with
them
and
fernando
did
a
really
good
job
documenting
them.
So
they
do
actually
reads
like
a
story
so
yeah
you
should
be
able
to
follow
along
hopefully,
and
if
not
then
feel
free
to
ping.
A
It's
one
we're
gonna,
try
and
refine,
because
a
lot
of
people
like
don't
are
not
as
well
connected
with
widgets
and
sort
of
how
powerful
they
are,
and
so
that
was
one
of
our
big
goals
is
to
just
demonstrate,
like
some
of
the
cool
things
that
you
can
do
so
I
showed
off
some
of
some
of
our
like
the
GSI
labs
apps
and
the
dashboard
that
we
put
together
for
the
good
of
my
NMR
project,
just
to
give
people
a
sampling
of
like
here.
Some
of
the
the
things
you
can
do.
I.
A
Dressed
up
goes
a
keynote,
so
gotta
be
gotta,
be
looking
sharp,
but
I
think
it
I
think
it
went
well.
I
would
love
any
feedback
that
people
have
seems
like
it
was
all
received
so
yeah,
but
it
was
a
really
like.
It
was
a
pretty
amazing
audience,
a
lot
of
extremely
motivated
people.
Super
friendly,
like
welcoming
warm
crowd
and
actually
there's
quite
a
few
Geoscience
connections.
So
one
of
the
other
keynotes
was
Pedro.
His
last
name
is
escaping
me,
but
he
works
with
NVIDIA.
A
So
Nvidia
does
GPUs
and
he's
done
a
lot
of
work
with
Petrobras,
which
is
the
big
oil
and
gas
company
in
Brazil,
he's
based
in
Brazil,
getting
their
simulations
and
stuff
up
and
running
on
GPUs,
so
I'm
gonna
fire
off
an
email
at
some
point
and
just
get
a
sense
of
like
what
sort
of
solvers
and
things
like
that
that
they
actually
have
plugged
in,
because
we
might
be
able
to
take
advantage
of
some
of
that
and
play
around
with
simpang
on
GPUs
and
just
see
what
that's
like
so
yeah.
C
A
C
C
E
C
C
A
All
right,
oh
and
the
only
other
thing
that
just
want
to
put
out
there
to
be
sort
of
thinking
about
it
with
the
Mayan
Mar
project
is
also
not
that
things
have
been
delayed.
A
bit
is
potentially
what
sort
of
things
we
want
to
prioritize
within
EMGs
I
to
get
that
to
perhaps
be
a
more
useful
resource
like
out
of
the
box
for
people
there
and
yeah.
That's
something
we
can
perhaps
just
think
through
and
start
to
yeah
get
back
into
motion
that.
C
C
A
So,
actually,
like
the
content,
that's
in
EMGs
eye
right
now,
it's
organized
it's
really
hard
to
find
stuff
and
because
we
have
way
too,
like
the
treated
goes
way
too
deep
in
some
places
and
there's
sort
of
duplicate
labels
of
some
things
like
there's
a
bit
of
it's
not
clear
where
information
should
be
stored.
So
some
of
the
restructuring
I
think
should
really
follow
the
presentation
layout
that
we
used
for
the
disk,
because
that
seemed
to
be
like
pretty
clear
and
followed
like
a
fairly
nice
streamlined
process.
A
A
He
was
asking
about
comparisons
with
analytics,
so
a
magnetic
dipole
in
a
whole
space,
but
in
frequency
domain,
and
he
was
asking
to
compare
between
like
a
point,
dipole
receiver
and
loop
receivers,
and
he
wanted
to
take
care
of
all
of
the
normalizations
with
respect
to
you
if
you're
actually
measuring
db/dt
instead
of
be,
and
also
perhaps,
if
you
have
a
permeable
core
to
the
coil
and
like
what
what
are
actually
the
steps
that
you
need
to
take
to
go
from
a
point.
A
B
C
C
B
A
Yeah
and
then
it
would
actually
serve
like
this
impact
documentation.
It
can
serve
the
EMP
law.
Documentation
like
it
could
be
actually
really
huge
for
a
lot
of
these
open
e/m
codes,
because
there
are
well
and
I
mean
I,
I'm
sure.
We've
all
seen
this
with
the
questions
we
get
about
simpe
in
a
lot
of
cases,
it's
not
actually
about
functionality,
like
you
pick
up
on
something
fundamental
that
somebody
doesn't
understand
and
that's
a
lot
harder
to
spend
time
explaining,
and
so.