Archive for the ‘new features’ Category

Location fields on your profile

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

At the request of several Birdstack members, we have updated the location fields on member profiles. You can now select the country where you live (or with which you identify most closely) from a dropdown list, and then you can search for Birdstack members from the same country. But until more people fill in their countries, the searches will come up empty or yield minimal results. So, we hope you’ll add your country today.

In addition, we’ve made the “Location” field clickable and searchable so you can find other Birdstack members near you.

You can access a search page through the main “People” page, and you can edit your own profile through the link on your Dashboard.

You asked for it … you got it!

eBird Export Tool Now Available

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

Birdstack users can now export qualifying North American observations to eBird, a scientific database that collects observational data from the Western Hemisphere. Learn more about eBird.

The process is straightforward. From any of your lists, click the “Export” link and then follow the instructions for downloading an eBird export file. Then you can log in to eBird (you will need to create an account if you don’t already have one) and upload your file through the “Submit Observations” link. To learn more about the process and the requirements for observations submitted to eBird, you can read the eBird export documentation.

Currently, you can export records from North America (Canada, Mexico, the US, and the Caribbean) from Birdstack to eBird. eBird has recently expanded its scope to include the entire Western Hemisphere, and we are working with the eBird team to enable exports for Central and South America as well. We’ll make an announcement as soon as that is completed.

Data sharing and collaboration is important to us here at Birdstack, so where thrilled to be making this step. Please give it a try and let us know how it’s working for you.

Birdstack is born

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

About two hours ago, we (Curtis Hawthorne and David Ringer) launched Birdstack, a free, online world bird listing service. We’ve been working on Birdstack since June 2007, when we were in Yaounde, Cameroon. We’d been discussing it for even longer than that, since sometime back in 2005. We are relieved, thrilled, and excited to see it come alive at last.

Birdstack is for everyone who cares about birds. Whether you stay at home and watch the familiar birds at your feeder, or whether you slough through swamps in distant corners of the world, you can use Birdstack.

Birdstack lets you record observations of birds seen anywhere on the planet. You can plot your observations with startling accuracy on interactive maps and group the observations into trips. You can use Birdstack’s powerful query builder to create almost any kind of list you can imagine. And once you have a list, you can publish it as an Atom feed, grab a Stack (a special widget) and stick in on your own blog or website, or download your data for customized queries and analysis.

Birdstack uses the IOC (Gill and Wright) list for taxonomy and nomenclature, and whenever there are updates, they will be automatically integrated with your observations. A full suite of tools, from a simple spell check to user-generated alternate name suggestions, will help you find the birds you’re looking for.

Birdstack includes a variety of community-building features, including comments, forums, rankings, and a “recent observations” board. If you like, you can use Birdstack as your own personal listing software, keeping everything private, but it’s going to be much more fun to participate in the community.

Finally, we are working with the great folks at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology to develop a way for Birdstack users to submit their North American data to eBird. We expect to launch the first phase of this feature sometime in the next month, so stay tuned.

For more information, you can go through the Birdstack tour and documentation.

Before we close (we’re sure you’re anxious to go sign up), we want to thank all the people around the world (on four continents!) who helped us beta-test Birdstack. Without their patience and attention to detail, Birdstack wouldn’t be what it is today. So thank you, John Beetham, Patrick Belardo, Lisa Berger, Mike Bergin, Rasmus Bøgh, Brent Bradbury, Charley Burwick, Sally Conyne, Geoff Darling, Tobias DiGennaro, David Donsker, Duncan Fraser, Brent Garber, Frank Gill, Eng-Li Green, Dave and Melanie Hawthorne, Sarah Hess, Marshall Iliff, Dan Jones, Josh Jones, Craig Miller, Jason Pike, David and Kathy Ringer, Kristel Ringer, Frew Schmidt, Claudia Staab, Jason Steele, Greg Swick, Nathan Swick, Brian Taylor, Forrest and Nancy Van Cott, Sara Van Cott, Jan Hein van Steenis, YC Wee, Anders Weijnitz, Charles Wesley, and Chris Wood.

Thanks to all, and good birding. Now, go try out Birdstack!

David and Curtis