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From YouTube: UCF TAC Meeting 2021 07 22
Description
UCF TAC Meeting 2021 07 22
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A
A
B
A
C
B
B
D
A
C
D
A
Thank
you,
Sean
yeah.
If
you
can
just
to
help
me
out
with
capturing
minutes,
if
you
can
update
your
name
and
the
participants
list
to
include
your
organization
or
your
affiliation,
you
can
do
that
just
by
clicking
on
participants
and
clicking
on
your
name
and
clicking
on
rename
I
have
your
name
is
written
down.
I
just
don't
know
who
you're
out
with
thank
you.
A
F
D
Are
you
guys
able
to
see
the
you
see
my
screen?
Yes,
awesome,
yeah!
Let's
start
it
welcome
I
mean
there
are,
there
might
be
people
keep
joining,
but
we
have
an
exciting
presentation
today,
so
I
wanna
just
get
it
kicked
off.
Welcome
to
joining
July's
UCF
tech
meeting.
For
this
last
meeting
we
have
external
presenter
Mike
from
Hawk
i660.
D
It's
going
to
introduce
us
to
the
amazing
application
that
built
on
top
of
its
GL
and
we're
also
going
to
have
some
UCF
membership
and
board
updates
and
project
transfer
updates
on
the
UCF
projects
and
in
the
end
we
are
going
to
have
with
GL
development
update
as
well.
D
and
they
are
building
applications
based
on
the
GL
and
using
their
unique
commercial
satellite
constellation
identifies
and
process
a
broad
range
of
radio
frequency
signals,
so
their
their
application
helps
people
visualize
and
analyze,
radio
frequency
data
and
it's
very
exciting
and
looks
very
sci-fi,
so
yeah
Mike
welcome
to
the
meeting.
I
know
there
are
more
people
from
Hawkeye
joining
so
welcome
everybody,
and
do
you
want
to
go
into
your
application,
sure
and
presentation
right,
foreign.
B
To
show
our
work
to
you
to
everyone
and
share
what
we've
been
doing
and
some
of
the
technology
that
we
work
with
I
have
a
few
slides
just
to
give
you
a
little
background
on
Hawkeye
and
who
we
are,
what
we
do
as
our
core
capability
and
then
we'll
Dive
Right
into
the
application
itself
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
technology
that
we
use
behind
the
scenes
and
the
functionality
that
we
implemented.
B
As
mentioned,
I'm
Mike
werling
I'm,
the
director
of
Enterprise
applications.
So
our
group
is
responsible
primarily
for
the
the
customer
facing
systems
of
our
architecture.
I'm
joined
by
Hyun
SEO
he's
our
principal
designer
responsible
for
the
the
Sci-Fi
look,
as
you
said,
to
the
application
as
well
as
Tim
Pavlik
who's,
our
vice
president
of
products
and
the
development
team.
B
I
asked
to
join
us
just
to
be
here
to
answer
questions
and
see
see
where
things
go
so
Sergio
and
Jordan
and
I'm
not
sure
if
Tanisha
joined
us
on
the
line,
as
well
as
Chad
margotta
who's
our
product
leader
product
for
the
the
application.
So
that's
our
team,
we're
happy
to
answer
questions
as
we
go
and
give
you
a
perspective
of
what
we've
done
and
why
we've
done
it
so
Hawkeye
360.
B
we've
got
a
lot
going
on.
We
are
a
data
analytics
company
and
part
of
our
day.
Our
data
that
we
do
is
what
we
collect
ourselves
from
our
own
satellite
constellation.
So
we
launch
small
satellites.
We
have
six
functional
in
orbit
right
now
and
they
work
in
sets
of
three
in
clusters
to
do
RF,
radio
frequency
geolocation
on
the
Earth.
B
We
do
a
variety
of
different
signals
and
we
work
with
a
bunch
of
different
domain
areas
to
try
to
support
situational
awareness,
understanding
of
patterns
and
and
general,
providing
this
data
out
to
a
variety
of
different
customers
who
can
extract
value
and
perform
additional
analysis
on
the
data.
So
it's
it's
another
Earth
sensing
model,
but
instead
of
imagery
or
radar,
we're
actually
detecting
radio
energy
emissions
and
then
triangulating
down
on
those.
B
As
mentioned,
we
have
a
satellite
constellation
and
they
fly
in
a
pattern
of
in
a
group
of
three
to
do
the
the
radio
triangulation
piece,
but
they
don't
actually
talk
to
each
other.
They
they
record
their
location,
the
precise
time
of
of
sensing
and
the
radio
emission
energy
which
is
downlinked,
and
then
we
have
back-end
algorithms
that
do
geolocation
based
on
those
raw
files.
B
So
you
think
of
it
kind
of
as
a
as
an
audio
file
captured
by
the
satellites
themselves,
and
then
all
three
of
them
are
combined
and
looking
at
the
timestamps
and
the
energy
frequencies
able
to
tell
when
we
have
the
same
emission
and
then
based
on
the
time
and
the
mathematics
behind
that
the
scenes
there
actually
pinpoint
on
the
Earth,
where
we
think
it's
going
to
be,
we
say
pinpoint
and
we
show
points
a
lot,
but
it's
really
an
error
area.
B
We
say
it's
kind
of
in
this
area
to
the
best
probability
that
we
can
determine
so
you'll
see
some
of
that
as
we
go
through
the
demo.
On
top
of
that,
we
perform
some
additional
analytics
where
we're
bringing
in
other
data
sources,
commercial,
ship,
tracking
data,
commercial
ship
information,
information
data.
We
do
our
primary
focus.
Initially
is
maritime
domain
and
we're
moving
into
Overland
terrestrial
kind
of
analysis
as
we
go,
and
what
we
do
is
we
deliver
that
data
as
files
to
customers?
B
So
initially
we
were
assuming
that
customers
would
ingest
that
data
into
their
spatial
data
infrastructure.
They
would
bring
it
into
their
their
esri
platform
or
their
qgis
or
opengeo,
publish
it
as
their
own
WMS
build
their
own
web
apps
around
it
and
we
found
there
was
still
a
gap.
Some
customers
do
are
sophisticated
and
do
that
kind
of
stuff,
and
some
need
a
user
interface
and
the
capability
to
actually
work
with
our
data
to
get
the
best
value
out
of
it.
B
Our
product
team,
specifically
Tim,
saw
Kepler
and
was
was
really
impressed
with
with
the
visualization
capabilities
of
Kepler
and
the
the
way
that
it
worked,
and
we
talked
about
it
and
I
said
well.
Kepler's
is
really
good,
but
I
think
we're
going
to
need
a
more
customized
application
and
we
could
take
the
the
pieces
that
make
up
Kepler
and
rebuild
them
into
our
own
flavor
application.
So
that's
how
we
came
on
to
using
deck
GL
and
the
map
box
capabilities
under
the
covers.
G
B
And
then
to
look
for
patterns
and
really
start
to
look
at
what
are
the
things
that
we
can
then
start
predicting.
So
this
is
an
early
product.
We've
been
complete
for
we've
been
working
on
it
for
about
a
year
and
We've
made
a
lot
of
great
progress,
but
we've
still
got
a
lot
of
capabilities.
B
We
want
to
explore
and
build
into
the
system,
so
that's
kind
of
the
top
level
view
of
what
it
is
that
we've
done
in
terms
of
the
capability
that
we're
bringing
to
customers
the
how
we
did
it
is
not
usually
we
some
we
talk
about.
Normally
we
just
run
demos
and
try
to
sell
the
software,
but
for
this
group,
I'm
sure
we're
interested
in
what's
under
the
covers,
we
did
develop
it
using
typescript,
react
and
Redux
behind
the
scenes
with
deck
GL.
B
We
use
nebula
for
some
of
the
the
editing
capability,
you'll
see
as
well
as
Luma
for
some
of
the
rendering
fine
tuning
that
we
do
behind
the
scenes
behind
that
we
actually
publish
our
data
as
mapbox
Vector
tiles.
So
we
have
used
tile
strata
and
open
source
products
to
connect
to
postgis
and
publish
our
data,
live
as
Vector
tiles,
and
then
we
ingest
those
into
the
deck
using
the
mvt
layer
and
a
whole
lot
of
custom,
rendering
that
goes
along
behind
it.
B
The
map,
the
tile
strata,
we
did
customize
a
bit
because
we
needed
to
add
some
query
capabilities,
some
parameterization
of
the
URLs,
so
that
we
could
do
mostly
the
temporal
requirements
that
we
have
for
moving
through
time
also
backing
it
is
a
set
of
web
services.
Your
some
of
them
are
your
traditional
crud.
You
know
create,
read,
delete,
database
kind
of
capabilities
to
maintain
the
state
we
use
graphql,
as
our
API.
B
Primarily
we
have
still
have
a
few
Legacy
rest
calls
that
we
use,
but
we've
been
moving
into
the
graphql
world
for
our
API,
and
that's
really
the
the
architecture
and
framework
that
we
use
for
the
application.
Anybody
have
questions
at
this
point.
Well,
I
change,
change,
screens,.
B
So
this
is
the
mission
space
application
it's
running.
This
is
the
instance
running
on
our
test
platform
and
we
break
up
the
application
or
the
user
experience
into
what
we
call
playbooks.
So
if
a
user
is
focusing
on
multiple
missions
doing
different
analysis
of
maybe
maybe
there
are
fisheries
and
they
want
to
see
the
different
fishery
areas
and
they
want
to
break
them
up,
so
they
can
switch
between
them
easily.
They
can
build
different
playbooks
and
they
can
even
share
those
playbooks
with
other
people
in
their
organization.
B
And
when
the
user
goes
into
it,
then
we
they
jump
right
into
the
map
with
an
overview
of
the
area,
see
a
lot
of
the
features
here
that
go
into
mission
space.
So
the
first
thing
everybody
notices
is
the
map,
of
course,
and
what
we're
showing
there
is
is
a
heat
map
style,
aggregation
of
the
RF
data.
B
As
everybody
knows,
when
you,
when
you
have
a
dense
Point
data
set,
it
can
be
difficult
to
display
it
at
a
at
a
high
zoom
level
to
to
be
able
to
extract
any
information
out
because
it
becomes
just
a
Big
Blob.
So
what
we've
done
is
abstracted
it
out
in
aggregation
to
present
to
the
user,
where
data
is
that
they
might
want
to
look
at
so
you
can
see
that
each
box
is
is
outlined
to
show
the
quantity
of
data.
B
That's
not
currently
visible
in
terms
of
filtering
and
different
settings
that
you
can
have
inside
the
application.
You
can
see
some
have
fill
patterns
which
show
the
density
of
data
that
is
actually
unfiltered
and
is
visible,
and
some
of
the
squares
have
a
Green
Dot
annotating
them.
Some
of
our
data
were
actually
able
to
extract
identifying
information
about
the
vessel.
In
this
case
it's
called
a
Mimsy,
it's
a
ship
identifier
that
is
broadcast
by
some
of
their
data.
B
So
if
we
can
extract
that
from
our
RF
sensing
we
record
it
and
then
we
can
actually
show
the
user
where
we
were
able
to
actually
identify
a
ship
up
at
the
top.
You
see
that
we
have
a
Time
bar,
so
RF
data
is
very,
very
temporal
in
nature,
we're
taking
pictures
if
you
will
or
harvesting
data
and
the
next
time
we
Harvest
data
in
that
same
spot,
it's
going
to
be
different.
Things
have
moved,
the
emitters,
are
different.
B
Capabilities
are
different,
so,
as
I
move
the
time
bar
around
you
can
see
that
the
underlying
data
reflects.
We
have
two
different
time
sequences.
One
is
the
domain,
which
is
the
query
that
is
actually
going
to
the
back
end
and
saying
give
me
all
the
data
for
this
time
period,
and
then
we
have
a
range
where
the
user
can
actually
play
with
that
data
and
that
way
we're
not
reissuing
the
query
every
time
that
they
want
to
view
data
against
different.
A
B
Or
maybe
Jump
Around
in
time,
animate,
the
playback
so
actually
sequence
through
the
time.
None
of
that
is
running
server,
queries
on
the
back
end,
except
to
maybe
load
new
tiles,
if
needed.
So
when
the
user
Zooms
in
and
out
we're
using
the
standard
map
pile
retrieve
capability,
so
you
can
see
that
the
data
actually
refines
and
the
aggregation
decomposes
into
smaller
blocks,
as
we
zoom
in
you
get
down
to
a
certain
zoom
level
flip
over
and
actually
look
at
the
icon
view
of
the
data.
B
A
B
B
Let's
see,
we
do
have
some
of
your
basic
base
map
configuration,
so
you
can
switch
between
satellite
view
or
simple
view.
We
were
looking
for
map
backgrounds
that
didn't
distract
from
the
data.
It
gives
you
enough
context
to
know
where
you
are
in
the
world
between
the
minimap
and,
of
course,
the
the
main
map,
but
without
over
overloading
the
user
with
a
lot
of
information,
and
they
can,
they
can
choose
to
go
and
turn
on
more
and
more
labeling
and
information.
B
Is
they
choose
to
get
more
and
more
context
for
their
map
or
they
can
turn
it
all
off
to
really
focus
on
a
certain
level
of
data,
there's
an
interaction
model
for
everything.
So
now
we
start
looking
at
some
of
that
analysis,
I
clicked
on
this
VHF
bit
and
we
can
see
that
it
is
from
July
21st
800,
0849
UTC.
B
It
was
Channel
67,
so
we're
taking
the
frequency
and
parsitting
in
into
the
channels
that
VHF
uses
and
then
we're
going
out
to
another
data
source
saying
what
are
the
commercial
service
providers
giving
us
to
say
what
ship
tracking
is
in
the
area?
So
our
VHF
doesn't
have
anything
except.
B
Okay,
so
now
we
can
start
pulling
in
information
from
another
source
to
say
these
are
possibly
the
vessel
that
did
this
incrimination,
because
the
commercial
providers
who
get
the
beacon
traffic
from
the
vessels
say
that
they
saw
they
were
reported
along
this
this.
These
points
right
here
at
this
point
here,
so
we
can
see
that
this
ship
from
Hong
Kong
is,
is
one
of
the
vessels
that
was
was
detected
and
we
can
actually
pull
up
additional
information
on
that
ship.
B
So
we
can
see
the
owner
the
detection,
information
from
Hawkeye
the
and
dive
into
some
of
the
details
of
that
vessel.
B
We
have
some
other
information
that
we
extract
from
that.
What
we
call
insights
are
things
like
dark
ships
and
ships
that
stop
broadcasting
their
commercial
Beacon,
maybe
turn
it
off,
or
maybe
they
had
a
software
glitch
or
something,
and
actually
now
you
can
see,
we
actually
start
populating
some
of
those
dark
vessels.
B
These
are
ships
that
we
didn't
weren't
detected
by
that
commercial
AIS,
the
commercial
ship
sensing
provider,
so
you
can
find
the
same
kind
of
information,
and
now
we
start
loading
track
information
to
say
where.
A
B
Those
vessels
in
the
past,
so
you
can
actually
start
to
see
where
they
came
from
and
and
then
the
sequence
that
they
they
brought
in.
B
We
also
have
Rendezvous,
which
are
vessels
that
were
in
the
same
area,
going
the
same
path
and
doing
a
certain
with
a
certain
distance
and
a
certain
speed.
So
again
the
internet
action
to
highlight
and
determine
where
they
are,
we
go
and
look
for
them
in
other
other
identified
areas.
So
we
can
see
that
there's
multiple
highlights
on
here,
so
these
vessels
were
actually
detected
in
multiple
places.
B
Data
processing
to
go
look
up
where
things
are,
what
they're
and
where
similar
things
are
happening,
load
auxiliary
data
from
other
sources
to
bring
in
and
see
what
other
behaviors
can
we
find
so
those
those
signals
over
here
on
the
main
tab
when
I'm
not
selected
on
anything,
we
can
also
see
that
we're
counting
we're
giving
the
user
statistics
on
what
they
see
on
the
map.
So
in
this
case
there
were
seven
l-band
detections,
so
we
can
turn
on
x-band.
B
B
B
Change
the
color
using
the
different
settings,
so
this
is
where
I
might
want
to
bookmark
a
spot
and
and
say
there
was
an
interesting
event
here.
There's
something
I
maybe
want
to
go.
Look
at
or
if
this
is
a
shared
Playbook
I
could
actually
annotate
here
and
other
users
could
see
this
annotation
and
know
that
I
wanted
to
look
there
and
and
found
something.
Interesting
I
could
even
take
this
and
Mark
it
as
a
geofence,
and
we
have
the
wording
capability.
B
B
Geofence
and
say
I
want
to
be
alerted
when
the
system
detects
any
of
these
signals
in
that
area,
and
what
actually
happens
is
that
is
a
server-side
alert.
It's
now
published
to
the
server
and
it's
running
so
even
if
I
log
out
of
the
application,
that
definition
will
still
be
checked
against
our
data
and
if
some
some
new
data
comes
in
that
matches
the
criteria
I
would
start
getting
that
information
over
here
and
I
also
might
get
an
email
if
I
set
those
configurations
up
so
that
I
know.
Oh
new
data
came
in.
B
B
B
E
Yeah
I
think
only
thing
that
wasn't
covered
was
just
a
heat
map
selection.
You
can
select
the
heat
map
squares.
Each
of
the
squares
are
clickable,
so
the
user
can
see
at
a
localized
like
a
localized
statistics
on
that
area
and
the
idea
of
snapshots
so
like,
for
example,
if
you
click
yeah,
whatever
Mike,
just
clicked
on
the
snapshot
icon.
What
this
is
for
is
missions
are
never
I
want
to
find
something
and
I
find
it
right
away
it's
a
process.
E
So
what
this
is
for
is,
as
the
analyst
kind
of
you
know,
puts
in
different
actions
in
the
application.
They
can
continue
to
click
on
that
snapshot,
icon
and
basically
go
to
a
read-only
mode
where
it'll
take
them
to
where
they
were
at
the
spot,
where
they
clicked
on
the
snapshot
icon.
So
they
can
kind
of
flip
through
it
like
a
presentation
of
this
is,
if
I
find
something
interesting.
E
I
click
on
that
and
I
can
always
go
back
to
it,
and
the
idea
is
showing
it
off
or
sharing
it
with
somebody
else
so
that
they
can
go
and
mess
around
kind
of
like
a
more
in-depth
screenshot.
If
you
will-
and
they
don't
have
the
fear,
they
don't
have
to
fear
about
messing
up
anything
on
the
active
session.
B
E
You,
oh
and
Tyler
did
the
time
opacity
might
be
the
cool
one
I
think
the
only
one
to
show
the
left.
B
Yeah
we
started
out
with
mapbox
GL
just
straight
trying
to
do
it
in
just
mapbox
Trail
and
then
some
of
these
rendering
capabilities
we
need
to
deal
with
that.
We
just
couldn't
meet
easily
there
and
where
it
doesn't
do
under
attack.
E
B
B
B
Yeah
now
you
can
start
seeing
these
are
the
actual
error
ellipses
associated
with
the
RF
detection.
So
it's
the
center
point
is
what
we
display
with
the
icon,
but
it's
actually
somewhere
in
95
probability
that
it's
somewhere
within
this
this
alerts,
some
of
the
data
depending
on
the
satellite
geometry,
might
have
larger
ellipses.
You
can
see
this
expand
over.
Here
is
a
little
bit
larger,
but
of
course
our
processing
team
is
constantly
working
to
drive
up
our
accuracy
and
drive
down
the
size
of
these.
B
These
error
ellipses,
so
it's
a
as
a
customer
I
could
say
well.
I
really
want
to
focus
on
the
super
precise
best
Precision
that
we've
got
for
the
data
and
filter
out
anything
by
that
error,
ellipse
error
and
then
like
it's,
not
area,
it's
sending
money
assuming
major
axis,
so
the
biggest
taxes
under
yours.
B
B
So
it's
definitely
been
a
learning
experience,
but
able
to
find
a
lot
of
value
from
the
libraries
like
Beck
and
Kepler
yeah,
and
that
box
to
be
able
to
do
this.
D
This
is
amazing,
I
I
have
so
many
questions.
So
just
so,
you
know
where
I
open
up
the
floor
for
for
open
questions,
so
John
Pines
I
do
have
one
that
I.
You
know
on
a
high
level.
I
think.
Can
you
because
this
is
like
I'll,
have
detection
and
then
ship
tracking
it's
kind
of
new
domain,
at
least
to
me.
So
can
you
explain
a
little
bit
about
you
know
what
are
some
of
the
use
cases
of
your
application
and
how
are
you
a
customer
using
this.
B
Yeah,
some
of
the
use
cases
are
one
of
our
big
one.
Is
fisheries
and
I?
Don't
know
if
I
have
Tim's
demo
up
here,
okay,
I
have
it
but
to
be
able
to
look
at.
B
B
So
now
you
can
start
to
see
some
of
the
economic
zones
of
different
countries
and
we
we
can
start
to
look
over
time
at
where
shipping
is
occurring
and
start
to
look
for
patterns
in
identifying
vessels
that
maybe
are
in
the
area
and.
B
We
see
a
lot
of
traffic
here,
but
then
those
commercial
beacons
go
dark
within
the
zone,
so
there's
a
lot
of
ships
outside
and
then
the
Hawkeye
data,
so
a
ship
may
stop
broadcasting
their
their
Beacon.
That
they're
legally
supposed
to
say
here:
I,
am
it's
a
ship
safety
kind
of
Beacon
that
they
can
broadcast
and
other
ships
receive.
But
of
course,
if
they're
going
to
go
somewhere,
they're
not
supposed
to
they'll
turn
that
off,
but
they
leave
their
radar
on.
B
They
still
use
VHF
push
to
talk
radios
to
talk
to
each
other
and
those
are
the
signals
that
Hawkeye
detects
and
and
says
well,
there's
corresponding
activity.
Here
you
can
see
within
the
easy-
and
in
this
case
it's
an
l-band,
so
there's
a
SAT
phone
in
use
right
there
is
that
somebody
who's
supposed
to
be
there
or.
A
B
That's
part
of
what
the
analyst
can
do
and
start
to
to
view
that
and
in
fact
identifying
Rendezvous
that
happened
outside
of
the
easy,
because
fishing
vessels
don't
necessarily
go
back
to
Port
every
time
they
finish
their
catch,
they
rendezvous
with
a
refrigerator
ship
and
then
they
run
as
a
tanker
and.
F
B
Yeah,
so
in
this
case,
can
you
probably
want
it
better
than
I
can
at
this
point,
I
wanted
to
go
ahead
and
I'll
just
drive.
F
Yeah,
what
what
we
should
see
if
the
signals
you
can
advance
to
the
next
I,
don't
see
any
any
data
in
there
here
we
go
okay,
so
I
put
a
dark
red
line
around
a
blob
of
vessels.
You're
like
what's
up
with
this
and
it's
along
the
bottom
of
the
exclusive
economic
zone.
You
can
see
of
Ecuador,
so
Mike.
If
you
shrink
the
timeline
back
to
just
a
couple
of
days
in
the
beginning,
yeah
one
really
cool
feature.
F
These
guys
did
was,
did
the
put
in
a
play
button,
so
it'll
March
it
along
at
these
increments,
so
go
ahead
and
hit
play.
What
we're
going
to
see
is
this
Fleet
of
Chinese
vessels,
and
you
know
that,
because
you
look
at
the
flags
to
the
lower
right,
there
goes
along
the
edge
of
the
eec
later
we'll
show
you
that
they
go
inside
of
it,
but
here
they
stretch
out
and
they
say
well
we're
done
there.
Let's
go
over
here
to
the
Ecuador
eez
and
then
they'll
move
down
the
coast.
F
Yeah
open
it
up
all
the
way
and
you'll
see
how
many
Chinese
vessels
you
see
the
flag,
dynamically
changes.
There
can't
read
it
from
here,
but.
G
F
Good
yeah
actually
go
to
the
next
snapshot.
There's
a
rendezvous
snapshot
in
here
there
we
go
and
we
zoom
in
there
I
annotated
it.
Mike
was
talking
about
annotations
earlier,
can't
see
if
those
are
Rendezvous
on
my
phone,
but
are
they
there
we
go,
you
can
click
on
any
one
of
those
rendezvous
and
you
see
those
are
two
vessels
that
are
co-traveling
with
each
other
and
Mike
can
show
you
the
baseball
cards,
because
what
we'll
see
there's
a
preview
there,
but
is
that
a
turn
my
phone
this
way?
F
F
If
you
just
you
could
zoom
out
a
little,
the
annotations
will
will
show
you
where
they
are,
but
what
we're
able
to
find
in
just
a
few
clicks
with
these
Rendezvous
was
that
there's
a
whole
Fleet
of
Chinese
vessels
like
140
of
them
down
here.
Many
of
them
are
fishing.
F
There's
a
reefer
is
that
a
reefer
ship
yeah
yeah,
so
they
offloaded
on
the
refrigerator
they
get
they
gas
up
with
the
oil
tanker
and
they
keep
going
now
if
we
were
to
go
back
open
up
the
time
frame,
turn
off,
analytics
and
turn
on
signals.
So
now
I'm
turning
off
my
rendezvous,
I'm
going
to
turn
on
my
signals
and
watch
the
line.
Oh
look
at
that
now.
F
You
begin
to
see
we
have
x-band,
which
means
our
vessels,
navigating
on
the
other
side
of
that
that
country
line
and
l-band,
which
means
there's
mobile,
sat
phones
in
there
as
well.
Now
they
turned
out
their
AIS
and
I
think
you
can't
see
them,
but
Hawkeyes
radio
frequency
data
picks
them
up
and
we
even
got
one
of
our
business
partners
Airbus
to
do
a
synthetic
aperture
radar
shot
of
one
of
these,
and
you
can
see
it's
a
fishing
vessel.
F
So
what
we
think
is
really
neat
about
this
Maritime
scenario
is,
it
shows
a
pattern
of
life
with
and
the
last
thing
like,
maybe
could
you
just
show
dark
ships,
because
here
are
the
things
that
you
can
see
in
AIS,
but
look
at
that.
It's
just
crazy
the
amount
of
dark
ships-
that's
that's
them
going
off
their
AIS
and
so
the
dark
ship
fishing
all
along
there
and
then
over
the
eez
and
I'll
hand
it
back
to
you.
Mike
thanks
Tim.
B
D
Can
I
have
a
quick
just
a
quick
question
about
this?
Is
so
fascinating,
so
I
know
with
the
AIS
data
you
can
capture
Cloud
sign
a
lot
of
information
about
the
ship,
but
how
would
you
able
to
determine
from
the
albino
x-band
that
this
is
like
a
Chinese
ship
with
the
you
know,
information
you
show
below
and
they
also
contain
any
LF
data.
B
F
Well,
we
we
got
the
SAR
data
for
that
there's.
What
it
does
is
the
Hawkeye
data
will
cue
another
another
form,
another
source
of
intelligence.
To
take
a
look.
There
are
indicators
in
L
band
as
to
what
the
phone
number
is
and
stuff
like
that.
We
don't.
We
don't
pull
those
out
of
there,
but
we're
moving
toward
where
we
can
identify
the
radio
wave
itself.
So
that's
where
we're
headed
to
identify
the
unknown
signals,
the
ones
that
don't
have
a
Mimsy.
B
So
in
this
case,
we
don't
know
that
this
l-band
was
a
Chinese
ship.
It's
just
it's
up
to
the
analysts
to
say:
oh
I,
see
this
traffic
I
see
a
lot
of
of
vessels
of
with
the
Chinese
flag,
but
I
don't
see
anything
over
here
in
the
terms
of
the
commercial
of
the
beacon
broadcast,
but
I
still
see
ships
doing
something
over
there.
So
that's
where
the
analysts
would
then
take
it
to
start
determining
it
what's
going
on.
You
know
it's
benign.
Maybe
there
is
something
legal
going
on
or
maybe
not.
E
Yeah
in
terms
of
the
narrative,
the
the
associating
an
L
band
that
is
not
identified
to
something
else,
would
be
actually
a
good
use
case
of,
like
there's
a
little
download
button
up
in
the
top
right
corner,
where
it
would
just
export
all
the
dots
that
the
analyst
is
seeing
in
a
geojson
file,
and
they
would
put
that
in
Arc
with
an
overlay
with
SAR,
for
example,
to
make
that
determination.
E
D
So
the
like,
the
analysts
you
referring
to
here
will
be
some
kind
of
ocean
Association
as
opposed
to
regulate
illegal.
You
know,
Marine
fishing
activities.
B
C
B
C
No,
this
is
it.
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
yes,
sorry,
I
guess
when
your
presentation
concluded
I
had
a
power
outage
and
I'm
trying
to
reconnect
here
with
my
it's
my
iPhone
network,
so
you
know
I
just
wanted
to
give
you
some
comments
on
this.
You
know
that's
the
kind
of
original
creator
of
dectia.
Let's
just
it's
just
incredibly
gratifying
to
see
that
you
know
what
you
guys
have
built
here.
You
know
we
took
lots
of
pains
to
design.
This
is
a
kind
of
a
composable.
C
You
know
an
extensible
framework
to
you
know,
allow
this
type
of
really
customized
experiences
and
to
see
someone
be
able
to
do
that
with
these
Frameworks
and
do
it
in
such
an
incredibly.
You
know
beautiful
and
and
compelling
way
you
know
it's
just
it's
kind
of
it's
a
huge
seeing
what
you've
done.
It's
amazing,
amazing,
I,
I
and
I
love
the
entire
design.
You
know
I
can
see
what
you've
done.
You
know
how
you've
used
the
Frameworks
and
and
I
think
the
end
result
is
beautiful.
C
You
know
from
the
UCF
hat.
I
would
say
that
you
know
you
know
it's
great
that
you're
here
I
mean
this.
The
reason
why
we've
taken
all
of
this
into
this
you
know
not
only
open
source
but
into
open
governance,
which
is
what
the
urban
Computing
Foundation
here
is
about,
is
to
make
sure
that
those
of
us
who
who
build
on
these
things
on
these
Frameworks.
C
You
know
that
we
have
the
you
know
the
ability
to
make
sure
that
these
Frameworks,
you
know
continue
to
you,
know,
exist
and
be
supported,
and-
and
you
know,
when
we're
building
products,
you
know
and
making
big
choices
right,
then
then
being
able
to
have
this
technical
Foundation,
you
know
to
be
you
know,
vibrant
and
to
continue
to
to
be
supported,
and
also
obviously
prove
this
open
governance
process.
C
We
provide
a
path
to
contr,
to
become
a
contributor
and
to
kind
of
have
an
influence
and
so
on,
and
so
and
and
obviously
you've
done
a
lot
of
custom
work
here
and
some
of
that
maybe
things
you
want
to
be
proprietary,
but
we're
also
always
looking
for
I
mean
this
was
built
by
by
contributions
from
from
people
like
us,
and
so
that's
one
of
the
discussions
suggestions
I
had
to
tune,
but
you
know
perhaps
you'd
like
to
be
able
to
to
bring
some
of
these
things
back
into
the
Frameworks.
C
B
Yeah
I
would
love
to
continue
that
discussion.
I
mean
obviously
we're
we're
heavy
users
of
the
MBT
layer,
and
you
know
I've
posted
on
the
slack
forums.
Trying
to
do
this.
Aggregation
in
a
tile
format
is
is
a
very
interesting
problem
when
we
actually
solved
it
in
this
version
by
pushing
the
aggregation
off
the
server
side.
B
So
the
this
map
layer
that
you
see
here
is
actually
aggregation
on
through
a
Friday
database
queries,
but
now
we're
now
that
we
understand
deck
GL
and
the
models
are
better
we're
looking
at
did
we
do
it
client
side
instead
to
give
us
much
more
flexibility
in
what
rendering
we
can
do
with
this.
With
this
View
and.
B
Know
yeah:
it's
been
an
excellent
tool
and
I
would
you
know
we
could
have
done
this
without
deck
GL,
but
we
wouldn't
have
got
it
done
in
I,
don't
know
10
how
many
months
did
we
do
before
we
had
the
first
version
and
I
think
like
four
months,
I
think
something
like
that
before
we
were
able
to
get
our
first
view
up
to
say
this
is
actually
possible.
F
B
C
Yeah
and
I
mean
in
a
in
a
just
an
area
like
the
mvt
layer
right,
it's
in
a
you
know,
deck
gel
itself.
Is
you
know
it's
it's
a
very
big
framework
today
right,
it's
been
development
for
for
six
years
and
the
MBT
layer
is
just
starting
to
become.
You
know
very
sophisticated.
It's
multiple
companies.
We
have
huge
contributions
from
Costco,
for
instance,
into
providing.
C
You
know,
binary
support
and-
and
we
see
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
users
out
there
who
who
really
need
this
capability
of
being
able
to
do
really
sophisticated
things
with
the
energy
layer
to
kind
of
do
you
know
things
like
you
know
that
you
want
to
do.
Dynamic
aggregation
of
daytime
client-side
I
mean
one
thing
that
would
obviously,
as
you
say,
improve
your
experience
is
to
get
this
back-end
round
trip
whenever
you
zoom
in
right.
C
I,
think
that
is
something
that
that
Tech
GL
can
potentially
help
you
with
so,
and
you
know,
over
the
accumulation
of
all
these
contributions,
it'd
be
very
hard
for
one
company
to
take
this
all
the
way,
but
you
know
together
we're
building
on
each
other's.
You
know
improvements
and
and
continuously
you
know,
leveling
up
the
capabilities
so.
B
Yeah
I
will
say
one
of
our
next
iterations
or
tasks
on
our
list
is
actually
to
move
to
the
New
Globe
view.
Experiment
that's
happening
in
deck
to
we
do
have
customers
who
are
working
up.
You
know
in
the
Arctic
in
the
North,
Pole
and
fabricator
projection.
Isn't
all
that
useful?
When
you
get
up
to
that
area,
it
actually
starts
to
look
a
lot
better
and
a
lot
more
useful.
C
C
You
know.
Basically
you
could
still
use
flat
Maps,
but
have
you
know
non-non
locator
projections?
So
there's
a
question
of
what
what
you
know?
What
type
of
input
coordinates?
Do
we
support
and
how
do
we
project
them
on
the
screen
and
I'd
love?
If
there
was
someone
who
really
wanted
to
dig
into
that,
we
we
know
what
to
do,
but
you
know
it's
a
bit
of
work,
but
that
would
be
an
amazing.
You
know
new
capability,
I
think
for
the
framework.
B
C
Yeah,
that's.
We
have
basic
support
for
that
with
a
wrap
longitude
feature,
but
you
know
it's
a
so
yeah
these
are,
and
these
are
the
things
that
takes
you
know
by
implementing
these
things.
We
really
take
this
into
really
a
production
kind
of
caliber
framework
right
I
mean
doing
a
little
bit
of
visualization
is
easy,
but
tackling
all
these
edge
cases
is
where,
where
it
gets
tricky,
so
you
know
amazing,
amazing,
stuff,
very
inspirational.
Thank
you.
B
G
Good
question:
I
I
had
seen
the
couple
YouTube
videos
about
like
fishing
in
near
Iceland
recently
and,
and
it
really
seemed
to
be
touching
on
the
same
fishery
kind
of
description,
but
it's
mostly,
it
was
going
over
like
Decades
of
History,
yeah
and
I
was
just
curious
if,
if
that
is
like
similar
like
similar
kind
of
work,
that
still
goes
on
today,
like
is
that
the
same
thing
as
as
dark
fishing
in
places
or
I
I?
Don't
even
like?
Is
this
a
tool?
F
Absolutely
I
mean
that
is
yeah
I.
Can't
I
can't
comment
on
that.
As
a
matter
of
fact,
Global
fishing
watch
wants
to
team
up
with
us
to
do
illegal
fishing.
It's
like
illegal,
un,
unregulated
and
underreported
is
the
category
but
yeah.
It's
very
useful.
B
B
To
add
to
the
analysis
and
we're
we're
really
exposing
activities
that
are
are
normally
hidden
right,
we're
actually
we're
looking
at
it
in
a
different
way.
Imagery
can
do
that,
but
of
course,
imagery
you've
got
a
much
smaller
area
that
you
can
survey
with
with
one
image
capture,
whereas
one
survey
for
us
for
a
given
signal
might
be
horizon
or
Horizon,
so
it
can
be
a
much
larger
snapshot
of
what's
going
on.
That
then
drives
the
next
level
of
analysis
and
feeds
into
this
image,
and
maybe
you.
F
Know
you
might
be
interested
in
another
one.
We
did
with
garamba
national
park
in
Republica
Congo,
they
were
having
problems
with
poachers,
and
so
they
had
us
fly
over
the
park.
Only
animals
and
and
Rangers
are
supposed
to
be
there
and
they
know
what
they
look
like
and
we
got
some
mobile
sat
phone
activity
in
the
park
and
they
went
out
and
confirmed
that
they
were
have
been
campfires
there.
So
it
was
either
Rebels
or
poachers,
so
they
found
it
very
useful
as
well.
G
It's
really
interesting,
my
last
question
we
might
not
have
time
for
but
I'm
really
curious.
Just
you
know,
looking
at
your
UI,
it's
very
well
designed
and
there's
like
a
lot
of
custom,
cohesive
elements
both
on
the
map
and
in
all
the
Chrome
kind
of
around
the
map.
Now
I'm
I'm
very
curious
to
just
hear
about
design
process.
You
know
an
approach
to
that,
because
it's
hard
and
I
think
that
you've
really
you've
got
a
great
execution.
E
E
So
I
would
say
you
know
in
short,
I
guess
as
an
Easter
egg
too.
If
anyone
plays
RTS
games.
E
It's
always
contained
with
on
the
bottom
or
some
kind
of
fixed
place.
So
whatever
there's
couple
things,
one
is
in
terms
of
the
visual.
It
is
expecting
something
at
the
same
place,
whether
it
is
specific
data
or
aggregation
data
and
in
terms
of
the
ux,
the
I
would
say
well,
actually,
actually
that
kind
of
extends
to
the
ux2,
like
basically
nothing
the
user
clicks
on.
Or
does
you
know
when
the
user
interacts
with
the
application?
For
example,
there's
like
a
pin
icon
that
Mike
talked
about
where
it
takes
the
user
to
someplace.
E
If
that's
out
of
scope
for
the
date
range
or
the
date
domain,
it
would
ask
the
user
if
they
want
to
go
there
rather
than
just
taking
something.
So
that's
kind
of
a
first
design
principle
was
never
do
something
with
an
assumption
of
what
the
user
wants
and
two
is
having
a
basically
what
you
said,
the
Chrome
it
not
a
movable
Chrome.
E
Basically
that
might
have
to
change
later
on,
because
people
want
to
put
things
on
top
or
annotate
them
further,
but
at
least
in
the
first
iteration
it
was
about
putting
information
where
the
user
can
expect
it
at
a
consistent
basis,
and
then
the
third
would
be
I
think
this
is.
This
is
kind
of
one
of
those
evolutionary
things
in
design
is
you
saw
the
icon
sets?
The
color
scheme
was
pretty
pretty
heavily
thought
out.
E
So,
whenever
Mike
clicked
on
something,
it
was
a
bright
pink
and
that
was
reserved
that
color
is
only
reserved
for
something
that
the
user
has
clicked
on
on
the
map
versus
when
there
was
something
associated
like
I
think
there
was
like
another
ship
that
shared
the
same
identifier.
That
is
always
going
to
be
in
purple
a
darker
shade,
like
an
indirect
something
that
the
machine
produces,
and
then
it
tells
the
user
hey.
This
is
something
that
I
also
saw
you
might
be
interested
in
it.
E
So
color
coordination
was
a
big
thing:
yeah
consistency
in
terms
of
information,
a
displacement
and
and
non
it's
like
not
automation
or
not,
not
stopping
automation,
but
just
not
assuming
what
the
user
is
going
to
do
not
oversimplifying.
It
basically
be
simple,
but
be
also
transparent,
so
I
think
those
were
the
the
big
Design,
Elements
and
yeah
I
think
I.
Think
in
in
a
nutshell.
Those
three
would
be
it.
C
D
I
can
go
through
the
updates,
so
on
the
UCF
side,
the
FourSquare
has
officially
joined
the
UCF
as
a
member
Premier
member
so
and
it
was
appointed
to
be
bbcf
board.
Also,
the
chair
of
the
youth
Port,
starting
until
end
of
2022.,
welcome
and
congratulations
to
IP,
so
we're
currently
review
our
next
year
budget
and
you
know,
hen
hint,
Chris,
Kerman
so,
but
I
think
we're
on
good
track
of
of
having
enough
budget
to
cover
next
year.
C
Yeah,
so
we've
worked
for
a
long
time
on
the
8.5
release,
so
this
GL
is
the
kind
of
umbrella
name
for
all
the
Frameworks
and
it's
numbered
in
sync,
with
the
deck
so
the
actual
8.5,
all
the
dependent
Frameworks
are
now
released.
Officially
so
loaders
gl3s
are
the
module
8.5
material,
3.5
and
I.
Think
the
final
bit
of
the
actual
8.5
is
published
and
I
expect.
This
will
be,
you
know
the
release.
The
official
release
of
texture
8.5
is
imminent.
C
Obviously,
other
Downstream
Frameworks
also
need
to
update
I
know
it
started
in
some
cases,
and
you
know
it's
a
good
time.
We
usually
every
four
months.
We
have
a
an
open
governance
planning,
meeting
an
open,
Planning,
meeting
and
I
think
it's
been
a
while.
So
we
we
see
if,
when
sharji
is
back,
if
she
can,
you
know
we
will
get
this
organized.
Obviously
you
know
we
can
look
for
identify
areas
of
interest
in
that
meeting
and
there's
just
a
couple
of
ideas
here.
C
So
with
collaborators
I
hear
mapbox,
Vector
tiles
could
be
another
area
from
this
next,
so
the
goal
is
also
to
grow.
Obviously,
the
urban
Computing
foundation
with
the
new
relevant
projects
has
been
transferring
from
map
dot,
blue
and
I.
Think
that
he's
not
I
think
he's
out
today,
but
I
think.
The
sense
here
is
that
this
will
become
a
new
top
level
UCF
project.
It
is
kind
of
a
visual
extension
for
flow
Maps,
but
it's
a
project,
that's
managed
by
Ilia.
So
maybe
we'll
not
do
that
as
part
of
the
visual
open
governance.
C
Next
I
believe
Hubble
GL
transfer
is
in
progress.
I
have
not
had
confirmation
that
it
from
Uber
to
UCF
I
haven't
had
confirmation
that
it
has
completed
the
video
generation
framework.
We're
very
interested
in
nebula
and
I
understand
also
Hawkeyes
using
it.
It's
it's
still
not
transferred
into
the
foundation.
It
has
been
proposed,
but
I
don't
think,
there's
progress.
C
C
Next
also,
some
of
the
kind
of
foundational
Frameworks
are
still
Uber,
Frameworks
they're
open
source,
but
not
part
of
the
open
governance
and
we're
thinking
about
how
to
handle
the
situation.
I,
don't
think
we
need
to
go
into
the
detail,
but
ideally
UCF
would
be
kind
of
complete
and
consistent,
and
so
we
can
comfortably
manage
both
the
governance
and
also
like
the
addition
of
you,
know,
access
and
other
things
to
to
these
Frameworks
without
you
know,
involving
other
companies
and,
finally,
obviously
we're
always
interested
in
in
building
out
the
foundation.
C
So
if
anyone
has
projects,
you
would
like
to
contribute
features.
You
would
like
to
contribute
to
existing
projects
other
projects.
You
would
like
to
see
added
I
personally
love
to
see
an
open
source
base,
map
Library.
We
do
have
maps
and
but
it's
not
under
active
development,
but
there
are
many
other
ideas
so
and
I
think
this
is
the
final
slide.
D
Awesome
and
yeah
in
terms
of
I
think
open
open
source
libraries
that
we
want
to
add
and
just
again
Empress
is
on
the
on
this
point
that
if
you
work
with
anything
in
the
past
that
you
think
is
relevant
to
a
man,
computer
Foundation,
please
start
me
and
Nick
know
and
we
are,
and
we
were
actively
reaching
out
to
people
that
own
this
project
to
see
their
Wellness
to
contribute
to
or
at
UCF.
G
Our
proposals
is
it
best
to
have
you
know
a
working
implementation
outside
of
the
foundation
up
and
running
and
kind
of
established
before
proposing
it
to
the
foundation
or
do
you
do
proposals
come
in
the
form
of
like
really
early
stage
projects
as
well.
D
I
think
we
welcome
projects
at
any
stage
and
obviously
has
to
be
first
have
some
code
and
open
source
and
not
even
maybe,
if
you
want
to
open
source-
and
you
know
the
thing
is
we'll
talk
about
the
legal
perspective
that
but
yeah
in
general,
we
usually
project
will
grow
as
they
joining
the
foundation
and
Tech
Geo,
Enterprise
girl,
so
much
I
think
for
a
couple
of
years
and
so
yeah
at
any
stage.
It's
welcome
foreign.
B
Thanks
again
for
having.