June 5-7, 2023
We encouraged participants to focus especially on Artificial Intelligence, Webservices and modern computer infrastructure (cloud based computing, containers, SOH monitoring)
The official meeting web site is here.
Selected talks from the meeting:
June 5
The first day focused on software developents
Location: GeoSphere Austria, Meeting-Room
- Yan Jia: The Seismologial Service at the GeoSphere Austria
- Kent Lindquist: Antelope Environmental Monitoring System – Overview
- Kent Lindquist: Latest Advances in the Antelope Environmental Monitoring System: Antelope 5.13
- Rohan Ambli: Antelope Ahoy!
- Jennifer Eakins: Getting the most out of a BRTT support request
- Niko Horn: Antelope at the Geosphere Austria
- Laura Cataldi: Webservices from a user perspective
- Stefan Weginger: Shakemap and Bighorn
- Jennifer Eakins: Updated db2kml_py – contrib code to produce kml/kmz for sites/origins
- Simone Fornasari: The Road to Realtime Shakemaps…
June 6
The second day was focused on network and data center management
Location: GeoSphere Austria, Meeting-Room
- Frank Vernon: Designing the Rupture and Fault Zone Observatory
- Niko Horn: The Virtual Datacenter at the GeoSphere Austria
- Stefan Radman: HCI-HA Cluster for Antelope with Proxmox VE and Ceph
- Mathias Franke: Q8 – Live Demo
- Stefan Radman, Mathias Franke: MBB-2 Sensor Production Pfungen
- Adrián Michálek: Czech Regional Seismic Network
- Ines Ivančić: Croatian Seismological Survey
- Tomislav Fiket: Croatian Seismological Survey, past, present and future
- Niko Horn: Expanding the Austrian Seismic Network
- Jurij Pahor: Slovenian seismic network and cooperation
- Paolo Comelli: OGS Seismic Network
- Christian Neagoe: Romanian Seismic Network
- Tanja Fromm: Antelope in Antarctica
- Laura Cataldi: The regional accelerometric network in Veneto (Italy)
- Majid Al-Saifi: Oman National Network
Events
The third day began with a wrap-up of the meeting at the GeoSphere, followed by a guided tour – “Christa Hammerl: City Tour in Vienna”. During our tour, our group jumped in unison on the sidewalk outside a building holding one of the GeoSphere seismic stations. The spikes shown in the data are those jumps.
We visited the historical instrument collection of the Faculty for Physics at the University of Vienna. Here’s some background information in German.