UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Amy Farley grew up in a small Texas town around a farming family, and she’s seen the increasing presence of technology in the agriculture industry yield a new crop — data.
“They have drones they fly over their crops and rigs that have GPS sensors, but they don’t always have the knowledge to bring all it together and visualize it and find the useful story,” said Farley, a Penn State World Campus master’s student in geographic information systems. “They are generating tons of geographic information through their businesses that they don’t necessarily know how to use.”
Farley, a software developer in Austin, Texas, combined her professional experience and the knowledge she’s learned at Penn State to build an open-source, serverless web-mapping tool that could have implications for agriculture and beyond.
Farley recently presented her work on the project at the 36th annual Graduate Exhibition and received first place in the engineering category. She is one of five students in the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences who placed in the awards, including two who won their categories.
Her project involves using cloud computing platforms and open-source libraries and code frameworks to develop affordable, simple-to-use tools that allow users to manage large amounts of geographic data and visualize it on maps.
“The research exhibition itself actually made me rethink how to communicate what it is I’m trying to do,” said Farley, whose adviser is Ryan Baxter, associate teaching professor of geography. “It was an incredible experience that made me rethink the audience and forced me to figure out how to simplify what it is I’m trying to convey to reach a broader audience.”
A complete list of EMS winners is available below.
Prakash Purswani: Second place in engineering