 OK, so moving on, Q&A we will not have. 520, it was Q&A. So we'll just go on to the next session. Maybe what we'll do is we will prepare a Q&A webinar session just for Q&A after we post this video. So we'll give them one week or something. Let them look at the videos. If they have some burning questions, we'll have a webinar, like an interaction. So submission and evaluation methods, let me go through it quickly now and present my screen. So this is for all the participants. There are a lot of questions regarding the submission and evaluation methods. So we are going to present what is being evaluated and how the submission should happen. The contents for this presentation will be what are available resources. All the experts, these experts have gone through before me. Please look at the videos, what are the resources, and how you could use that for solving the problems. Please also note that there is one problem that is your own choice. So for that choice, also only ISRO data should be used. So please don't use any other data because it is a different problem statement. Use only the ISRO data and an open source software. What is required in submission phase we'll go through and key points to remember while submitting, especially the map details. Mr. Nile had gone through how to add each part of the map, legends, north arrow, all those are important. Please take note. What is the evaluation criteria we have set as a team? We will go through that. And so the available resources, QGS tutorials for the software is available online and also with our own partners spoken to Toria and Fossi. All the ISRO data links are shared in the home page of the Mapathon. Please refer to the data links. If there's any question regarding any data, please put it on the forum or on this YouTube comments section. We will address it shortly. Some people would have difficulty in our planning boundary of district, state, or India. So I've added a section on data available with shapefiles of all the districts in India and states and national boundaries. Feel free to use it for this research purpose. There was some questions regarding what, for a particular problem statement, what is the scale of analysis? That is also the freedoms given to the participant. Please pick a scale that is relevant for your problem statement. For example, if you're looking at Locust movement, you can take a particular district movement. You can take a state movement or also across India how it moved, because it came through Rajasthan and then moved up to UP and also in the South. So you can take any scale, any boundaries you feel comfortable. Again, the evaluation criteria will go through what we'll actually look for evaluating your product. So please look at all these above links in the resource page. ISRO links, the boundary data tutorials, everything is given in detail in the resource page. Any questions, please put it on the YouTube link. Submission phase, the submission for this mapathon is a two-phase system. First, after the registration is closed, every single participant will be given a model link. A model is a software that we use to collate all the entries and update it on our database. So instead of having you submit through an email, we will ask you to submit through a model link. We will give you instructions on how to use the link and submit your entries. Email us if you don't get your link to the registration by 20th December, because there is a registration until 18. We will take two to three days' time to update all the participants their submission links. So just give us two days, which is 20th December. If you don't get it after 20th, let us know by email. We will arrange it for you. You can submit up to 100 MB of outputs. So some people were asking, some participants were asking, how many maps are you requesting? If you could explain your problem within one map, that is good. And you can take any number of maps that you want to explain your problem statement. Again, your problem statement is the code. Using ISRO data is the code. How many maps you make is your creativity and problem-solving skills. So please use as much as possible. But due to a shortage of storage and managing this database, we require each submission to be not more than 100 megabytes. So please keep it within 100 MB. So you know that one JPEG could anywhere be around 5 to 10. So that gives you still that flexibility of 10 images if needed. Can be edited multiple times. So suppose you finish your submission by 20th December, you submit it. And somehow you think that, no, you could have done better. You have more time. You can always come back to your model link and resubmit. You can download your previous submission deleted or add it or update it. For example, if you submitted one map by 20th and you want to add two, three more maps, that is also possible. So please don't be shy on adding or deleting or editing your entries. And that can be done until December 31st, midnight. Submission is a two-stage process, which means two outputs we would require from you. One is a map submission. It should be a map. Could be an image like how you export your map from QGIS or any other format, PDF, JPEG, anything is OK. But it has to be a map submission. One is a map, and the second part of the submission is a document, a document on what you did, how does it relate to the problem statement that you chose, and what are the applications? Applications are very important for selling your product. First step, map submission. Access, first step, what you do as expected is access relevant ISRO data. All the ISRO links are given and the tutorials are given in this YouTube. Use an open-source software, example QGIS, make the map, learn the software or the data, using the resources link we have given and for CNST. Do the map. So do the map, add a title. So when you do the map or develop the map, please add a title and also legends and not arrow. A legend is what are you trying to map and what are the categories in your map. That is very important. I'll show you an example. Otherwise, we will not be able to read your map. Your north arrow is very important for us to align your map. So and it is a very important commodity of a map. Your details and scale. Scale is also important. Please add it and your details. Your details as in what you would like to be shared in public domain. Please don't think that we are asking for details to be published. It is only what you feel comfortable, your name, your email or something like that. Why? Because if someone is interested in your map, they can contact you. You could also leave it. It is not compulsion. It is optional. So you can put your details or not. That is purely your optional. Submit any number of maps as long as within 100 MB for each. There are around 3,000 teams. So please submit 100 MB each team. Let's take an example. A very, very simple map that has been made. Using QGIS, ISRO boundaries that we used to demarcate the Western Guards. The Western Guards is one of the most hot spots of biodiversity. According to UNESCO, it is called Hottest. So we never see that term. So it is one of a very fragile ecosystem in the world. And we would like to know the boundaries and how it changed. So that was our problem statement. And so we used the different products of ISRO to demarcate the Western Guards, which is purely a forested biodiversity system. And it spans across states. So we've done that map. And we have the map of the boundary and which states are sharing the boundary on the right side you see. And it's India side. So I've added a scale to let you know what the size of the boundary is. And some legend, a legend which shows the India boundary, state boundary, and the Western Guard boundary, which is a great one. This is a very, very simple map. Those who have limited computing power, this is that kind of a map. So you don't have to exert or too much pressure on the map. There's not much calculations or something. But it still is a very, very important map. We don't have this boundary. I'll tell you, you cannot get this boundary just from online. You'll have to make this boundary. So that is what we have done. So the example 2 is a map on. So you could see the title, what I've requested. In the previous also, the title was below. Here, the title is up on the top. And we will be sharing this template. So those who like to have this template, like a very professional one, you could use it. It's still on the resource page. Go to the resource page and submission. You'll get this template. So what do you see here is a map of a regional transport network in Pune. So now I know that this is Pune. And you could see that I've added multiple data layers. It's not only water bodies. I could see roads. I could see urbanization, which is being calculated by different ISRO products and other things. So I've also added my own data. So sometimes, like an airport. An airport, you have data. You know where it is. So you create the data in QGIS and you put a legend. If you see the planes, the two planes, and that is where the airports and proposed airport is coming, we could put that as a new thing. So for example, a proposed airport, you cannot get that from a remote sensing image because it's still not there. But you know that that is the area that has been demarcated for, an airport that is going to come. So you can go ahead, mark it, and then say this is the proposed airport map. So you could clearly see how the road networks are connected to this proposed map. And that is your map description and analysis on the right side. So a small documentation that goes along with your map. So when we promote this map, all this comes as a one-fold picture. You have your introduction, a small details about the maps, and what you try to map. So all this has been beautifully covered on the right side, very less number of wordings. And on the bottom is very important. Let's go one by one. So legend is very important so that I know what the different colorings are, what is blue, what is yellow, and stuff. The north arrow to show me which side my hash should be oriented and the scale. And the map description and analysis, what analysis was done, and something very important things about the map. The last item is about you. So the details that I've asked so that when we promote this map on a sharing basis, on an open access basis, the participants can be contacted using this details map. So here I have a logo. It's IITB student who did it. So let's have a logo. And a team name has been given. The team name is what you gave in your registration. Your topic that you chose, the problem statement, or your own topic. Team member lead, you can put the name, organization, and contact email. So you can put your email, your phone number, your web page, anything that you feel comfortable. There is no, it is purely optional. It is for your map to get recognized. So document submission is the second part of your submission. What you would need to do is you need to add a paragraph on the methodology, which can include but not limited to. Mention the ISRO data use. This is very, very important. So for example, when I go to my previous map, I told you that I use ISRO data. But unless I particularly tell you which data I used, there are multiple ISRO data that could have been used. So don't give us that question. Please let us know which ISRO data was used so that we know if it is a good data that you used for the particular problem statement. Because there could have been another better ISRO data that you should have been using. Or are you using the highest resolution data, those kind of things. Specific steps that you did in QGIS. What steps did you incorporate to get from ISRO data to that map? Complexities, if any, involved. You would have come through some issues. This is very important for us also so that we make sure that the next products in ISRO or QGIS, we can write to the forum, are more friendly for the users. So also, the complexities in your map itself, like how many layers, how many layers did you have to take to make that one single map? What are the different calculations you did? So in one paragraph, we would like to see on the application. What do you propose as the application and use of the map? So you have a methodology on how to address the problem statement. What are the data you used and methods and techniques? And then a paragraph on the application and use of the map. So based on this, the evaluation team which would comprise of IIT Bombay, ISRO, and Rudra people would look at 100 marks evaluation per map. This is also a graph. We can still update it if there are different categories of maps. So right now, this is the evaluation pattern. The methodology, ISRO data used and GIS steps would take 40% of the marks. You would be assessed and given marks up to 40 for your methodology, which should include your ISRO data, details, GIS, et cetera. Your complexity, what different things you did or what are the different complex tools you used would take 20 marks. Your potential and application of the map, this is very important, that would take 40 marks. So you have addressed your question and what are the uses? That is the last part of potential application. For example, if you say, I mapped the road network in my village. So now we have given me the road network. What are the uses of that? From your angle, because you know the data, you did the work, you should know how it could be used. If I see it, I would say, oh, good. I could know where the roads are cutting your water resources or encroaching into the map. But you would have a different application. So we would like to see your application. So based on this evaluation criteria, we will shortlist participants for the finals, which will happen from Jan 4 to Jan 10, 2021. What would happen in that week or so finals is that you would be asked to present. So make presentations and show us how you did it very quickly. It would be like a 10-minute presentation where you would show the data you used, what are the critical steps that you did to come at those maps. Participation certificates will be given to all submitted teams and participants. So this question is very important. A lot of people have been asking me. The certificate will be given to each and every person in the team, not for one team, one leader will get. If the team is four, all the four will get. So you will get a participation certificate with all these important personal signing. Winners will get special prizes. So all the shortlisted and the winners will get a special prize or certificate, which is different from a participation certificate. We'll also get an opportunity to do an internship at IIT Bombay for the QGIS team. So if it is very good and like every year, we do incorporate students for a paid internship. We do a full paid internship. And depending on the work and the potential, we would see if there's any opportunity for such kind of internship. This I'd like to thank you because of the technical issues. We were not able to do this as a live webinar. Please put your questions in the comments section in the YouTube link. We will get back to you. Oh, please soon. Thank you.