↓ Skip to Main Content

Open Data Aha!

Main Navigation

  • Home
  • About Open Data Aha!
  • Email updates when new events are added
  • Events
    • Categories
    • Locations
    • My Bookings
    • Tags
  • Events Calendar and map
  • Experimental interactive word clouds for GODAN-related posts
  • Feeds (experimental)
  • Feeds from blogs
  • Feeds from Journalism
  • Feeds from Social Media
  • Get in touch
  • Mashup of posts on a single map
  • Most recent posts, mapped
  • Open Data (related) Feeds
  • Open Data Camp
  • Open Data Champions
  • Open Data Scotland – posts on a map
  • Open Data Scotland – The Twitters
  • Posts
  • posts on a large map
  • Posts on a map – aid related
  • Posts on a Map – crime related
  • Posts on a map – food and agriculture related
  • Posts on a map – local data related
  • Posts on a map – policy / decision-making related
  • Posts on a map – smart city / Internet of Things (IoT) related
  • test about
  • test timeline
  • Using Data as a policy maker – presentation slides and other output
  • What is open data?
Home › Posts tagged On the Wight

Tag: On the Wight

Good stuff, continued

By Mark Posted on September 15, 2015 Posted in Benefits of open data, Big Data, Commercial opportunities, Data, Greater efficiency, Informing Decision-making, Innovation, Open Data Aha, Posts from feeds, Public safety, Resilience, Saving money, Smart communities, Visualising data Tagged with Chris Gutteridge, crowdsourcing, Crowdsourcing Landscape Change, Data stories, data visualisation, DATA.GOV.UK, Dr Ash Smith, flood, Flood Event Model, Flooding, Hampshire, Hartree Centre, Isle of Wight, Know Now, Landscape Watch, Landscape Watch Hampshire, Mark Braggins, minecraft, Nick Allott, NquiringMinds, On the Wight, open data, Open Data Camp, Remote Sensing Application Consultants (RSAC), STFC, University of Portsmouth, University of Southampton, Ventnor
Good stuff, continued

This is a slightly edited version of a post originally published on DATA.GOV.UK In my previous post I argued that a combination of ‘chance’ and open data can lead to good stuff happening. I supplied a few examples, and also …

Good stuff, continued Read more »

© 2023 Open Data Aha! | Powered by Responsive Theme