It wants my location, is throwing an alert error regarding an object file, and the companies page breaks. Also, grumble grumble information architecture in the "Hire a GISPro" page.
Neat idea. Part of the look-and-feel is that, if you're going to make a site shiny and new, it needs to meet the usability and polish of its visually similar competitors. A (perhaps accidental) benefit of the other site is that the average visitor isn't likely to compare it, too deeply, with other leading jobs sites.
for digital-geography.com we thought it would be a benefit to zoom to your current location so you might see new jobs around your area easier.
The only earror I can see in the console is this "TypeError: sidebaroffset is undefined" which is not "problematic".
Do you get the "cannot access JSONP file" error? This is caused by your firewall, not the site as some jobs we show on digital-geography.com are stored in a google spreadsheet.
Reminds me of a german startup that designs a vertical takeoff and landing, two seated electric plane with an interesting form factor: http://lilium-aviation.com/
[Edit: no affiliation]
Hi, my name is Daniel and I developed Stratigy as prototype for storing and exchanging stratigraphic data as part of my masters thesis in Geography. Stratigraphic data are an important source of information in geoscientific disciplines such as geology, physical geography, archeology and beyond. Most scientists still store these kind of data in spreadsheets, with all its shortcomings (data exchange, versioning, schema definitions). In the private sector (ressource industries), central databases are well in use, but proprietary solutions mostly don't fit the needs of geoscientific researchers. This is where I want to fill the gap by outlining an open source data exchange format based on GeoJSON, enabling client applications to build upon a standardized format. For avoiding schema problems with the endless possible attributes in use for stratigraphic data, the prototype stores the attributes for stratigraphic records in a document storage column of PostgreSQL, using the newly available JSONB datatype. Furthermore, PostgreSQL allows the use of PostGIS for spatial operations on the data, such as finding stratigraphic data by location.
One important thing that nobody thinks about when discussing nuclear fission/fusion as energy source of the future, is that it is not climate neutral at all. Popular science tends to forget about that. In fact, nearly all of the energy budget on earth comes from the sun. There is natural fission and energy emission on earth, but you can see that as a background constant and the climate system on earth has adapted to it.
Fossil energies are just a very large chemical sink for the energy of the sun, and we just burnt it away at once in geological scales. If humanity now starts to deploy nuclear fission or fusion, it will heat the earth even more. Because that energy was basically trapped inside the atomic core, where it didn't play a significant role for the global climate. With more and more atomic energy usage, the energy will finally end as heat somewhere and increase global temperatures even more (not in the way that fossil energies do with emitted greenhouse gases, but still).
Yes, there will be waste heat and that will add to the Earth's energy budget. But that's a tiny fraction of the heat trapped by excess greenhouse gases.
Deploying a bunch of black solar panels will also increase the Earth's energy budget, by absorbing more sunlight. But that's another insignificant effect.
It is using the Indeed API, which might get blocked by your adblocker.