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Paul October 19th 06 05:56 AM

AIS 2006 Conference Presentations on the Web
 
The presentations from the AIS'06 conference have been put on the web:
http://www.rhppublishing.com/AIS06Presentations.html

These are mostly powerpoint, and one pdf presentation. I've only looked at
some of them, but so far they are pretty interesting.

(Thanks to www.panbo.com for the heads-up)



Jack Erbes October 19th 06 08:17 PM

AIS 2006 Conference Presentations on the Web
 
Paul wrote:
The presentations from the AIS'06 conference have been put on the web:
http://www.rhppublishing.com/AIS06Presentations.html

These are mostly powerpoint, and one pdf presentation. I've only looked at
some of them, but so far they are pretty interesting.

(Thanks to www.panbo.com for the heads-up)


If you 're looking for a good application for viewing the PowerPoint
*.ppt and *.pps files consider openoffice 2.0.4 from
http://www.openoffice.org/ - it is a free, works great, and is like
getting almost every major office suite software in the history of
computing for free.

I think you can even capture and edit some of the images from the slide
show with it.

Jack

--
Jack Erbes in Ellsworth, Maine, USA (jackerbes at adelphia dot net)
(also receiving email at jacker at midmaine dot com)

b393capt October 23rd 06 06:56 PM

AIS 2006 Conference Presentations on the Web
 

In refering to the AIS 2006 Presentations, someone at Pambo wrote
"There's a lot of interesting material there, which I've only
skipped through, but of particular note is the first day presentation
by Dr. Andy Norris. One of his conclusions is that "Class B users
must not assume that their AIS signal will be visible on any ship."

After reading thru the presentation from Dr. Andy Norris, I very much
lowered my priority in obtaining AIS for my 39 foot sail boat. Seems it
might be a good tool for me to see other boats, but it sure doesn't
give me any confidence my boat will be visable. For example, Dr. Norris
points out that many boats display their AIS information in a target
list form, e.g. not on a chartplotter or radar screen, that makes the
information much less usable.


David Rinnan October 25th 06 11:12 PM

AIS 2006 Conference Presentations on the Web
 
b393capt wrote:
In refering to the AIS 2006 Presentations, someone at Pambo wrote
"There's a lot of interesting material there, which I've only
skipped through, but of particular note is the first day presentation
by Dr. Andy Norris. One of his conclusions is that "Class B users
must not assume that their AIS signal will be visible on any ship."

After reading thru the presentation from Dr. Andy Norris, I very much
lowered my priority in obtaining AIS for my 39 foot sail boat. Seems it
might be a good tool for me to see other boats, but it sure doesn't
give me any confidence my boat will be visable. For example, Dr. Norris
points out that many boats display their AIS information in a target
list form, e.g. not on a chartplotter or radar screen, that makes the
information much less usable.

Surely its better to exist in a list than not at all. An active radar
reflector might be a good thing to add.

AIS is great indeed but it adds to the things that make us feel safe -
instead of being on the look-out with our eyes.

I know ppl who feel safe just because they have a radar, even though
then dont understand how to use it.

I must say that I really like AIS, and class b, regardless of the above
mentioned problems.

cheers
david


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