Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
exclude conference from ref
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
  • Loading branch information
nilshempelmann committed Sep 7, 2018
1 parent 20c8202 commit 4329d99
Show file tree
Hide file tree
Showing 2 changed files with 30 additions and 30 deletions.
30 changes: 0 additions & 30 deletions docs/source/birdhouse_publications.bib
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1,33 +1,3 @@

@CONFERENCE{HEMPELMANN2014,
author = {Hempelmann, N. and Ehbrecht, C.},
title = {Web Processing Services for Climate Data - with Examples for Impact
Modelers},
booktitle = {EGI Community Forum 2014},
year = {2014},
abstract = {Impact modeling forced by climate data is often connected with big
data processing. But impact modelers are often not equipped with
appropriate hardware (computing and storage facilities) or appropriate
programming experience. Web Processing Service (WPS) is an open standard
defined by the Open Spatial Consortium (OGC). It is an interface
to perform processes over the HTTP network protocol. This tutorial
in an introduction to an early stage of the ClimDaPs project. ClimDaPs
is using WPS for climate data processing. It is based on the PyWPS
implementation of WPS and provides additionally a simple web-based
user-interface to access and combine climate data processes. It provides
access to the climate data archive of the Earth System Grid Federation
(ESGF) for CMIP5 and CORDEX data. Performing simple processes of
climate data up to complex impact models are already available within
ClimDaPs. One can also visualize climate data and processed results.
Besides the introduction of existing processing possibilities, we
will show how you can add your own climate data processes to ClimDaPs
and other WPS services.},
owner = {nils},
timestamp = {2016.06.07},
url = {https://indico.egi.eu/indico/event/1994/session/47/timetable.pdf}
}


@article{hempelmann2018,
title = {Web processing service for climate impact and extreme weather event analyses. Flyingpigeon (Version 1.0)},
journal = {Computers \& Geosciences},
Expand Down
30 changes: 30 additions & 0 deletions docs/source/references.bib
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -523,6 +523,36 @@ @article{VandalKGMNG17

%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% flyingpigeon paper %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
@CONFERENCE{HEMPELMANN2014,
author = {Hempelmann, N. and Ehbrecht, C.},
title = {Web Processing Services for Climate Data - with Examples for Impact
Modelers},
booktitle = {EGI Community Forum 2014},
year = {2014},
abstract = {Impact modeling forced by climate data is often connected with big
data processing. But impact modelers are often not equipped with
appropriate hardware (computing and storage facilities) or appropriate
programming experience. Web Processing Service (WPS) is an open standard
defined by the Open Spatial Consortium (OGC). It is an interface
to perform processes over the HTTP network protocol. This tutorial
in an introduction to an early stage of the ClimDaPs project. ClimDaPs
is using WPS for climate data processing. It is based on the PyWPS
implementation of WPS and provides additionally a simple web-based
user-interface to access and combine climate data processes. It provides
access to the climate data archive of the Earth System Grid Federation
(ESGF) for CMIP5 and CORDEX data. Performing simple processes of
climate data up to complex impact models are already available within
ClimDaPs. One can also visualize climate data and processed results.
Besides the introduction of existing processing possibilities, we
will show how you can add your own climate data processes to ClimDaPs
and other WPS services.},
owner = {nils},
timestamp = {2016.06.07},
url = {https://indico.egi.eu/indico/event/1994/session/47/timetable.pdf}
}


@ELECTRONIC{GeorgBrandl2016,
author = {G. Brandl and {Sphinx team}},
year = {2016},
Expand Down

0 comments on commit 4329d99

Please sign in to comment.