On the Air Again!

March 25th, 2009 by elanus

Well ahead of the April 2 ETA, CONE Welder appears to be back on the air. I’m not sure if it’s going to stay up, or if this is just teasing us with some temporary fun that’s going to go away again, but I’ll take it.

abirch got the first shots, including this excellent one of the Barred Owl:

Image 145854

Yay! Texas birds again!

Update: Hm. Yeah, it still seems to be fairly flaky. I’ve had it go up and down on me during my two attempts to use it this morning. So maybe we’re still waiting on replacement hardware.

Craig Has Waxwings

March 21st, 2009 by elanus

Since the newfangled telerobotic camera at CONE Welder is still down, it’s a good time to check in with the old-fashioned Newmark-powered camera on Craig’s deck. And look what we have here: A new (for his deck) species: Cedar Waxwing.

craig_waxwing

Camera’s Down

March 3rd, 2009 by elanus

From loughman1, word that the camera is down:

From: [loughman1]
Subject: CONE Welder camera is down
Date: March 3, 2009 4:08:05 PM PST

CONE Welder players,

The camera at Welder stopped working around 2:30 PST this afternoon. When it did not come back up again, I sent a message to Yan and Dez at 3:00. Just now (4:00PST) I received a message from Yan that the problem seems to be at Welder. No prognosis.

Kay

Update: And now, as of 7:51 a.m. Pacific time on Wednesday, Kay writes that it’s back up again. Yay!

Later update: And now, as of 9:13 a.m. Pacific time on Wednesday, it appears to be back down again. Rats!

Still later update: loughman1 forwards the following:

Subject: Welder Camera installation delayed
Date: March 20, 2009 5:06:00 PM PDT

CONE Welder players,

In response to my query this afternoon, Dez Song reports:

“Due to spring break, the parts we ordered have not even arrived yet. I would postpone the date to April 2nd for the camera to come back up. ”

So I guess that means, check back in a couple of weeks. I’ll let you know if I hear anything more.

Kay

Third Time’s the Charm

March 3rd, 2009 by elanus

The American Robin has showed up on the camera only twice since the beginning of CONE Welder, each time in a distant, tiny shot of the bird perching in the bare tree. Until yesterday, that is, when an American Robin showed up to take a drink at the fountain and gave us some really great shots. My favorite (and yours, judging by the assigned favorites points) was this one, taken at 6:24 a.m. by idbirds:

Image 144699

There were a number of other shots, including several even tighter close-ups; click through to the dashboard to check them out. Congratulations to everyone who got a shot of this very special bird.

Favorite Recent Photos

March 1st, 2009 by elanus

I’ve been out of town for a while, and was being kind of neglectful of the blog before that while I focused on the dashboard, so a lot of interesting photos have stacked up without my mentioning them here. I thought I’d do a quick roundup of some of the highlights from the last few weeks.

The Red-winged Blackbirds have been hanging around in their big winter flocks; it makes for a quick emptying of the feeders. As loughman1 and Dr. Glasscock’s correspondence indicates, the lack of personnel at Welder has meant that feeders sometimes take a while to be refilled.

This shot, taken by idbirds early on February 17, doesn’t have as many blackbirds in it as some shots I’ve seen, but it’s a really neat action photo:

Image 138760

On February 21, Zhang Yan was doing some work on the camera in connection with the conetester robot, in the course of which we temporarily got some views that we’re normally prevented from seeing by the game’s limits on movement. You can click through to the dashboard page to see some more (I’m now linking to the dashboard from the photos I post here), but here are a few interesting ones.

This shot of the area beyond the storage bin was taken by ottavia:

Image 140674

This closeup of the pole the camera is mounted on was also taken by ottavia:

Image 140683

Later on February 21, rafa got this shot of a bag of sunflower seeds:

Image 140757

The Blue Jay on the package was potentially identifiable in the game’s species list, and I added an ID for it, but apparently too many users were of a less-whimsical frame of mind, so “No Classifiable Species” won out in the ID. It made me chuckle, though, and reminded me of the Bald Eagle ID we temporarily had with CONE Sutro.

The following amazing sequence of a Cooper’s Hawk was photographed on February 23 by vanilla, vanilla, and robin54 (respectively):

Image 141578

Image 141582

Image 141583

This cool shot of a ladybird beetle on the camera’s housing was taken by rafa on February 24:

Image 142211

With all the Red-winged Blackbirds we’ve had lately, users have been getting really neat shots of the males flashing their epaulettes at each other. Here’s a shot that achadamaia took on February 25:

Image 142569

This pensive shot by rafa of a male Brown-headed Cowbird has a certain classical composition that I really like. The site’s users apparently agreed; it got 36 favorites points, making it the top shot of the day for February 28:

Image 144155

rafa’s cowbird shot got just one favorite point more than this shot by budgieface, one of several that showed not one, but two Great Kiskadees on the fountain. Given CONE Welder’s focus on documenting breeding-range changes by species like the kiskadee, it’s pretty exciting to see these shots. Is this pair of birds an actual pair? I’m looking forward to seeing if they show up together again in the future.

Image 144146

Overall, a really great batch of photos. Congratulations to everyone who took them!

Maintenance at Welder

February 25th, 2009 by loughman1

Earlier this month I contacted Selma Glasscock at Welder. The correspondence follows.

Date: 2/09/2009 9:24am PST
From: Kay Loughman
To: Selma Glasscock
Cc: John Rappole
Subject: Welder Feeder contact person?

Hello Selma (and John),

Is there a way the CONE Welder observers can contact directly the person who is now taking care of the feeders for the project? I am asking because

1. sometime after 4pm yesterday, the green metal hopper feeder was “vandalized,” possibly by people, more likely by squirrels or raccoons. So the seed ports are now totally closed. That feeder was the only “hope” for the birds when the other feeders were not being filled.

2. the orange plastic feeder has come adrift from its mooring and appears to be banging against the fountain

3. the seed tray is empty, thanks to the attentions of a zillion Red-winged Blackbirds.

I know you are busy, so I hate to bother you. But if we could e-mail directly or even telephone the person doing the work, we wouldn’t have to disturb you with these little maintenance issues.

Thanks,

Kay Loughman

******

Date: 2/24/2009 6:41am PST
From: Selma Glasscock
To: Kay Loughman
Cc: John Rappole
Subject: Welder Feeder contact person?

Kay

I know such things are frustrating for CONE viewers, so you must ask them to be patient. It is important for all of you to understand that we (the Welder Foundation) DOES NOT have any staff person directly responsible for this project and WWF DOES NOT get paid to do this project. We are already over-burdened with our job responsibilities because of downsizing of staff over the past year. I know the CONE tasks may seem minimal to you, but they take valuable time out of our responsibilities to the Foundation and jobs during the workday and work week. My work day often begins about 5:30 a.m. and does not end usually until 7 p.m. – this may be 6-7 days a week.

We will do our best to keep them up and I am trying to find volunteers to assist, but since we are approximately 15 miles from the nearest community it is difficult. As a matter of fact, most of our volunteers live approximately 1 hour from the refuge. The CONE folks have found some funding to help us pay travel costs for volunteers, but that does not mean they will want to travel this far multiple days a week.

We will do the best we can to keep the project going.
Selma

Selma Glasscock, Ph.D., C.W.B.
Assistant Director, Welder Wildlife Foundation
P.O. Box 1400
Sinton, Texas 78387
361-364-2643
sglasscock@welderwildlife.org
www.welderwildlife.org

******

Date: 2/25/2009 8:38am PST
From: Kay Loughman
To: Selma Glasscock
Cc: John Rappole
Subject: Welder Feeder contact person?

Dear Selma,

Thank you for your message, which was informative if disheartening.

I hope you will understand the CONE viewers are all volunteers. We are not privy to detailed information (grants, memos of understanding, or protocols) about how the whole project works. So, although we read that the project is “collaborative,” we do not know the levels of committment or investment by each of the collaborators. We may not need to know those details; but our lack of knowledge could partly explain our concern when one part of the program doesn’t seem to be working. When the birds are not coming in because the feeders are empty or the fountain dirty, we cannot take photographs for John Rappole’s part of the project. [Of course, we do not know any more about Dr. Rappole’s investment in the project than we know about yours!]

From your note I infer that this project has become something of a hardship for Welder. If that is the case, your continuing efforts to support the project with bird food, volunteers, maintenance and oversight are an enormous contribution.

I sure all the CONE viewers join me in wishing you well,

Kay
******

Warning: Robots Merging Ahead

February 20th, 2009 by elanus

I got the following email last night from Siamak Faridani, one of the programmers on the CONE team. I’m passing it on, per Siamak’s request:

From: [Siamak Faridani]
Subject: [CONE] Autonomous Code
Date: February 19, 2009 8:50:35 PM PST
To: [me]

Hi John,

I am a PhD student at Berkeley and I work for professor Goldberg, I have developed a code that controls the camera and brows the scene automatically, every 10 minutes it will kick in and will run the camera for around 60 sec and will release the camera afterward, I need to test this code on the website for 4 days, starting Friday morning
until Monday night.

It should only take 10% of the camera time and users are welcome to request frames from the system while the code is running.

I was wondering if you could please post a quick note on the website to mention this, the username for the program is “conetester” and as I said it will log in every 10 minutes and will log out when it is done.

Best wishes,

Siamak

PS. Hopefully it will not run other users crazy 🙂

Yes, well, we can always hope for that. I’d say the chances of CDS (CONE derangement syndrome) will increase sharply if the system decides to take control of the camera at a time when something really rare and/or interesting is in the field of view.

But it should be interesting, in any event.

“Dashboard” Feature

February 15th, 2009 by elanus

I’ve completed enough of the “dashboard” page I spoke about earlier to go ahead and post the URL to it, if you want to check it out. It’s at:

http://www.elanus.net/cone/

Currently it has the following:

  • Thumbnails of the last five photos taken today.
  • Thumbnails of the top five photos taken today (judged by the number of “favorites” stars assigned to it by users other than the person who took the photo).
  • A table ranking the top players today.

The player rankings are being done by a different system than the official CONE Welder scoring (though it probably has some elements in common). For the purposes of the dashboard page’s player rankings, I do the following: For each player, I compute a raw score, and a ranking against the other players based on that score, in each of three categories: correct IDs assigned today (with “correct” being in terms of CONE Welder’s idea of a correct ID, which I believe is that at least 2/3 of the people entering an ID have to agree), species photographed today, and favorite points (the stars) assigned to that user’s photos taken today. For each of those three categories, a higher raw score is better, for ranking purposes.

I also compute a combined score, which is the sum of the player’s rankings in the other three categories. I then rank the players based on their combined scores, with that ranking being what determines the overall order in the table. Note that for the combined category, you want to have the lowest raw score in order to rank highly.

The data is refreshed every 15 minutes during the daylight hours, and every hour at night. The actual times of the daytime updates are 5, 20, 35, and 50 minutes past the hour.

I have a bunch of ideas for things I’d like to add, including:

  • The ability to view results for any day, not just the current day.
  • The ability to view a similar page where the computation is based on all-time data, not just a single day’s data.
  • Pages for each user in the game, with that user’s most-recent photos, top-rated photos, and a list of species photographed.
  • Pages for each species in the game, with (again) that species’ most-recent and top-rated photos, as well as a graph showing number of identifications of that species per day.

In general, I want everything to be clickable, so it’s easy to navigate your way around and drill down to look at interesting data.

Please take a look, and let me know what you think. In particular, if you have problems or questions, or if you have suggestions about which features you’d most like to see added, please let me know. Thanks!

Red-shouldered Hawk!

February 14th, 2009 by elanus

Always exciting when the Red-shouldered Hawk puts in an appearance! Congratulations to rafa and blether, who combined for 10 shots of this beautiful bird today. It looks like it may have caught a small rodent, though you can’t see the prey.

Here are some of my favorite shots:

Image 137094

Image 137097

Image 137104

And here’s an animated GIF I stitched together from all 10 frames:

Idea for a New Scoring System

February 8th, 2009 by elanus

One of the people on the team at CONE, Zhang Yan, has been kind enough to work with me recently on setting up an interface that allows realtime querying of game data. My plan is to use this to build a “dashboard” page of sorts that ranks players according to a different system than the one the game currently uses.

I hoped to get the initial version of that up and running today, but unfortunately I’ve had other commitments that have kept me from working on it. As a result, I think it’s probably going to be another week or so before I’ll have the initial version of that ready.

In the meantime, though, I wanted to give an idea of how it would work.

Basically, I’m thinking of displaying a table that ranks the players that have been active in a given day according to three different criteria:

  • number of species that player has correctly identified in photos taken that day
  • number of favorites points (the stars, I mean) that have been assigned by other players to that player’s photos taken that day
  • number of identified species in photos taken by that player that day

In each of these categories, each player would be ranked relative to all the other players who had received a ranking that day, and would get an ordinal score (first, second, third, etc.) based on that. The three different ordinal rankings would be combined to give an overall ranking for each player.

My hope is that this will allow players to pursue different strategies in a way that will be fun. A player could use his or her 10 shots to try to photograph as many species as possible. Or to take the most interesting or artistic images possible, in an effort to win the favorites points ranking.

Yan has set up the interface to return the necessary data. I just need to build the pieces on my side that query that data and display the results on a web page.