From 116a6d16b502984a9613b0482fd46830727b3671 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ian Carroll Date: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 14:03:30 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 1/3] add title and link --- workshops/index.qmd | 6 ++++++ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+) diff --git a/workshops/index.qmd b/workshops/index.qmd index 716b73d5..e49ca52f 100644 --- a/workshops/index.qmd +++ b/workshops/index.qmd @@ -4,6 +4,12 @@ title: Workshops & Hackathons We develop tutorials for teaching events that each have their own e-book. The following is a list of past workshops or hackathons we have hosted with links to their respective e-books. Tutorials are developed to teach open science and Cloud workflows for specific audiences. They are a snapshot in time as workflows with NASA Earthdata Cloud emerge and evolve. We will be updating [How-To Guides](../how-tos/index.qmd) as more stable ("source") instruction as we develop and learn from the teachings below. +## 2024 PACE Hackweek + +[**https://pacehackweek.github.io/pace-2024/**](https://pacehackweek.github.io/pace-2024/) + +Text comming ... + ## 2024 SWOT Data Access Workshop [https://podaac.github.io/2024-SWOT-Hydro-Workshop/](https://podaac.github.io/2024-SWOT-Hydro-Workshop/) From cce59890df1cc95ec3cafe16dc3afdf35919e090 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ian Carroll Date: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 21:08:17 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 2/3] add description --- workshops/index.qmd | 7 +++---- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/workshops/index.qmd b/workshops/index.qmd index e49ca52f..5a277a95 100644 --- a/workshops/index.qmd +++ b/workshops/index.qmd @@ -8,11 +8,11 @@ We develop tutorials for teaching events that each have their own e-book. The fo [**https://pacehackweek.github.io/pace-2024/**](https://pacehackweek.github.io/pace-2024/) -Text comming ... +The NASA Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) Hackweek was a social-coding sprint held August 4-8 in-person at the [University of Maryland Baltimore County](https://umbc.edu/) and fiscally supported by the [Ocean Carbon & Biogeochemistry](https://www.us-ocb.org/) program. The course utilized the [CryoCloud JupyterHub](https://book.cryointhecloud.com/intro.html) maintained through a structured partnership between organizers from the NASA Cryosphere community and the International Interactive Computing Collaboration (2i2c) team. Eighty-nine applications were received for the 41 available spots for participants, 10 traveled from abroad. Each day was divided into science lectures, coding tutorials, and group project work. Every evening included a social event: Bob Ross Paint Night, a “fireside chat” with NASA Program Managers, a local crab feast at Patapsco State Park, Nerd Nite ("talent" show), and PACE Trivia. Science questions hacked on include detecting anomalies in PACE hyperspectral remote sensing reflectance signals, studying relationships between aerosol and surface ocean properties impacted by wildfires and smoke plumes, and studying biological and physical characteristics of a Gulf Stream eddy using both PACE and SWOT data. Links to slides, notebooks, project repositories, and recordings (when available from the video editor) are available on the website. ## 2024 SWOT Data Access Workshop -[https://podaac.github.io/2024-SWOT-Hydro-Workshop/](https://podaac.github.io/2024-SWOT-Hydro-Workshop/) +[**https://podaac.github.io/2024-SWOT-Hydro-Workshop/**](https://podaac.github.io/2024-SWOT-Hydro-Workshop/) The Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite, a joint NASA-CNES venture, provides unprecedented measurements of surface water extents and elevations for hydrologic science and applications. This workshop focuses on the SWOT Hydrology datasets including river and lake vector data in shapefiles, and raster, pixel cloud, and pixel vector data in netCDF. In this pre-meeting workshop hosted by the Physical Oceanography Distributed Active Archive Center (PO.DAAC) for the AGU Chapman: Remote Sensing of the Water Cycle Conference, participants are introduced to SWOT and the various ways to access and utilize its data products, including via cloud computing, local download, and data transformation tools. @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ The International Space Station is a critical asset for the Earth science commun This workshop is hosted by [NASA Land Processes Distributed Activate Archive Center (LP DAAC)](https://lpdaac.usgs.gov/) and [NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)](https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/) with support from the [NASA Openscapes](https://nasa-openscapes.github.io/) project. Hands-on exercises will be executed from a Jupyter Hub on the Openscapes 2i2c cloud instance. -## 2023 GEDI / ICESat-2 Workshop +## 2023 GEDI / ICESat-2 Workshop [**https://nasa-openscapes.github.io/2023-ssc/**](https://nasa-openscapes.github.io/2023-ssc/){.uri} @@ -66,4 +66,3 @@ The **Cloud Hackathon: Transitioning Earthdata Workflows to the Cloud** is a vir 2. **Enable** science and applications workflows in the cloud that leverage NASA Earth Observations and capabilities (services) from within the NASA Earthdata Cloud, hosted in Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud, thus increasing NASA Earthdata data utility and meaningfulness for science and applications use cases. 3. **Foster community engagement** utilizing Earthdata cloud tools and services in support of open science and open data. - From fe1ce3303abf64cd1ef8a6706033f555210c367c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Ian Carroll Date: Mon, 16 Sep 2024 11:25:41 -0400 Subject: [PATCH 3/3] grammer and other improvements Co-authored-by: Andy Teucher --- workshops/index.qmd | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/workshops/index.qmd b/workshops/index.qmd index 5a277a95..0435d43d 100644 --- a/workshops/index.qmd +++ b/workshops/index.qmd @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ We develop tutorials for teaching events that each have their own e-book. The fo [**https://pacehackweek.github.io/pace-2024/**](https://pacehackweek.github.io/pace-2024/) -The NASA Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) Hackweek was a social-coding sprint held August 4-8 in-person at the [University of Maryland Baltimore County](https://umbc.edu/) and fiscally supported by the [Ocean Carbon & Biogeochemistry](https://www.us-ocb.org/) program. The course utilized the [CryoCloud JupyterHub](https://book.cryointhecloud.com/intro.html) maintained through a structured partnership between organizers from the NASA Cryosphere community and the International Interactive Computing Collaboration (2i2c) team. Eighty-nine applications were received for the 41 available spots for participants, 10 traveled from abroad. Each day was divided into science lectures, coding tutorials, and group project work. Every evening included a social event: Bob Ross Paint Night, a “fireside chat” with NASA Program Managers, a local crab feast at Patapsco State Park, Nerd Nite ("talent" show), and PACE Trivia. Science questions hacked on include detecting anomalies in PACE hyperspectral remote sensing reflectance signals, studying relationships between aerosol and surface ocean properties impacted by wildfires and smoke plumes, and studying biological and physical characteristics of a Gulf Stream eddy using both PACE and SWOT data. Links to slides, notebooks, project repositories, and recordings (when available from the video editor) are available on the website. +The NASA Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) Hackweek was a social-coding sprint held August 4-8 in-person at the [University of Maryland Baltimore County](https://umbc.edu/), and fiscally supported by the [Ocean Carbon & Biogeochemistry](https://www.us-ocb.org/) program. The course utilized the [CryoCloud JupyterHub](https://book.cryointhecloud.com/intro.html), which is maintained through a structured partnership between organizers from the NASA Cryosphere community and the International Interactive Computing Collaboration (2i2c) team. Forty one participants from 89 applicants attended the event, including 10 who traveled from abroad. Each day was divided into science lectures, coding tutorials, and group project work. Every evening included a social event: a Bob Ross Paint Night, a “fireside chat” with NASA Program Managers, a local crab feast at Patapsco State Park, Nerd Nite ("talent" show), and PACE Trivia. We hacked on many interesting science questions, such as detecting anomalies in PACE hyperspectral remote sensing reflectance signals, studying relationships between aerosol and surface ocean properties impacted by wildfires and smoke plumes, and studying biological and physical characteristics of a Gulf Stream eddy using both PACE and SWOT data. Links to slides, notebooks, project repositories, and recordings (when available from the video editor) are available on the website. ## 2024 SWOT Data Access Workshop