General Electric

Source code from an active volcano

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The Digital Volcano from GE gallery image
The Digital Volcano from GE gallery image
The Digital Volcano from GE gallery image
The Digital Volcano from GE gallery image
The Digital Volcano from GE gallery image
The Digital Volcano from GE gallery image
The Digital Volcano from GE gallery image
The Digital Volcano from GE gallery image
Launch tags:
Web Appβ€’APIβ€’Marketing
Launch Team

What do you think? …

Ryan Hoover
This is cool. What's the most surprising thing you've learned so far, @jaysondelancey?
Jayson DeLancey (j12y)
@rrhoover I think the number of active volcanoes around the world and many in close proximity to cities without much in the way of monitoring hadn't occurred to me before this project began: https://www.wired.com/2017/02/us... The sensors were eventually destroyed from the heat and corrosive elements, that was not surprising at all.
Jayson DeLancey (j12y)
I’m a developer evangelist at GE Digital working on world-changing code for our software platform, Predix. We work on the Internet of really really BIG Things – jet engines, wind turbines, intelligent cities, water treatment systems, etc. Last year, GE sent explorer Sam Cossman and a team of science experts to the Masaya Volcano in Nicaragua. The goal was to travel to level 0 (previously untouched by humans) and bring the volcano β€˜online’ using sensors and software like Predix. We wanted to create a proof of concept that could be brought to other countries and potentially disastrous environments. Over the past few months a team and I have been working with the data collected from the Masaya Volcano in Nicaragua as a proof of concept that we can share with the developer and tech community. As you scroll through https://www.ge.com/digitalvolcano/ you’ll be able to read a bit about the expedition and find links to our GitHub repository with source code and data set.
Chris Carpentier
Fascinating piece, Jayson! At Telit we work with Libelium, the provider of those sensors. Very impressed they could withstand that environment! Those are some tough boxes and probes.
Jayson DeLancey (j12y)
@chris_carpentier Thanks Chris, Libelium wrote up a nice piece as well on the physical equipment used for the deployment: http://www.libelium.com/predicti...