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Linux

Google Earth

December 19, 2013 by clas-web
Categories: Analysis & ModelingDesign & Visualization

2413511031_e5c3931b58

Availability: Labs | Free Download
Comparable:  ESRI Arc GIS

Google Earth is a virtual globe, geographical program created by Google. The program uses digital elevation model (DEM) data collected by a NASA space shuttle to create the 3D map.  With Google Earth, viewers can view satellite imagery of large portions of the globe.  Users can also explore ocean topography, and switch to street view which enables someone to explore roads as if they were in a car.  New features of Google Earth allow a user to explore regions of the moon, Mars, and constellations in the sky.  New features are being added and existing features enhanced frequently.

Google Earth is available for free download here.  A Professional version with enhanced geo-coding, map-making, and GIS features is available as well.

Tags: trm

IDV

December 19, 2013 by clas-web
Categories: Analysis & ModelingDesign & Visualization

idv-50x50

Availability: Labs  |  Free Download
Comparable: 

The Integrated Data Viewer (IDV) is a Java-based software framework for analyzing and visualizing geoscience data.  IDV is developed at the Unidata Program Center (UPC), part of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR), Boulder, Colorado, which is funded by the National Science Foundation.  The IDV “reference application” is a geoscience display and analysis software system with many of the standard data displays that other Unidata software (e.g. GEMPAK and McIDAS) provide. It brings together the ability to display and work with satellite imagery, gridded data (for example, numerical weather prediction model output), surface observations, balloon soundings, NWS WSR-88D Level II and Level III RADAR data, and NOAA National Profiler Network data, all within a unified interface. It also provides 3-D views of the earth system and allows users to interactively slice, dice, and probe the data, creating cross-sections, profiles, animations and value read-outs of multi-dimensional data sets. The IDV can display any Earth-located data if it is provided in a known format.

A training guide is available here.

Tags: GIS

MAGIC

December 19, 2013 by clas-web
Categories: Design & Visualization
Availability: Free Download
Comparable: 

Magic is a very large scale integration layout tool.  The main difference between Magic and other VLSI design tools is its use of “corner-stitched” geometry, in which all layout is represented as a stack of planes, and each plane consists entirely of “tiles” (rectangles). The tiles must cover the entire plane. Each tile consists of an (X, Y) coordinate of its lower left-hand corner, and links to four tiles: the right-most neighbor on the top, the top-most neighbor on the right, the bottom-most neighbor on the left, and the left-most neighbor on the bottom. With the addition of the type of material represented by the tile, the layout geometry in the plane is exactly specified. The corner-stitched geometry representation leads to the concept of layout as “paint” to be applied to, or erased from, a canvas. This is considerably different from other tools that use the concept of layout as “objects” to be placed and manipulated separately from one another. Each concept has its own strengths and weaknesses in terms of both practical use and speed of computation. The corner-stitched representation is particularly well suited to searches within a single plane, for which it excels in speed. It is not particularly well suited to extremely large databases: The need to maintain four pointers for each tile, as well as the need to store tiles representing the space between areas of material on a layout, makes it more memory-intensive than object-based representations.

Magic currently runs under Linux, although versions exist for DOS, OS/2, and other operating systems. Magic is frequently used in conjunction with IRSIM and other simulation programs.

Tags: layoutVLSI
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