I think both the technology and the organizations will not last long.
On the other hand I have been reading perfectly usable field notes written by
hand in 1914.
Alan Contreras
Eugene, Oregon
acontrer56@xxxxxxxxx
www.alanlcontreras.com
From December 15-January 15, responses may be slow and irregular owing to
deadlines and workload.
On Dec 21, 2019, at 8:09 PM, Jack Williamson <jack.williamson.jr@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Ownership (control over content and distribution rights) of projects created
on this platform including embedded images can be transferred to whomever the
author chooses.
Imagine the possibilities to contribute content to trusted long-lived
organizations.
Having said that, a question in my mind remains. Should we trust Google Earth
to curate our contributions the way we trust Macaulay library?
I am inclined, at the moment, to answer yes - but then again I am obviously
quite smitten with the tech. . . .
Jack Williamson
West Linn, Oregon
On Sat, Dec 21, 2019 at 7:26 PM Jack Williamson
<jack.williamson.jr@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
The history of observations of one of my top nemesis species.
Select present with your browser in full-screen mode - then click through
the slides. Kind of cool that you can zoom in and actually see the
high-voltage wires.
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1oyCPV6kXWygdREBP-Z7lelO5IWOEbLE0&usp=sharing
<image.png>
Jack Williamson
West Linn, Oregon
On Sat, Dec 21, 2019 at 1:57 PM Nolan Clements <nolanclements@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Hi all,
My parents and I just had a beautiful GYRFALCON up Elk Mountain Rd. just
past where the high voltage wires intersect the road perpendicularly. Exact
coordinates: 45.4555109, -117.2080332. This is essentially the same
location as 2 years ago.
Happy winter birding,
Nolan Clements