The audience of the Multitemp blog pathetically drops: -9%

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In this period of festivities, feasts, gifts and good resolutions, the contrast is strong with the gloomy balance sheet of the year 2019 for our blog, which for the first time shows a pathetic drop in traffic: -9%.

Faced with such a worsening situation, the editorial board must react and take remedial action, and is expected to point fingers and knock heads. Our investigation quickly revealed the name of the culprit; a few years ago, in order to boost our publication and increase its support, we hired a social networking star, a first of its kind in communications, Simon Gascoin. But is it a drop in motivation ? a small stroke of fatigue? Simon did not perform as well as expected in 2019. Disasters, fires, floods, avalanches have occurred that have not been mentioned in this blog, and we have not renewed the previous year’s BUZZ and its 11,371 visits (18% of the 2018 visits). However, Simon noticed the problem at the end of the year and managed to bring up our statistics at the end of 2019 with another flood, in the South West of France.

 

Comparison of the number of visits to our blog in 2019 and 2018

But in these times of Darwinism in the research community, where researchers are selected for their « excellence » with a short-term vision and where « losers » are left without a budget, some people might have thought that we would give in to the trend. That’s knowing us badly! This blog is interested in the whole time series, and not a couple of isolated dates, so we decided to continue our efforts without knocking heads, but hoping that many other contributors will want to join us, and, who knows, make the buzz. This blog is open, writing an article doesn’t take a lot of time (especially the second, and the third…), so we’re waiting for you, whether you’re CESBIO members or not.

We also have a little excuse, the blog had to move (from the university servers to the Observatoire Midi Pyrénées servers), and if it has been renovated and has an up-to-date interface, the move may have caused some loss of links from other sites… In short, we should start again from better in 2020.

So here is the list of the most read pages this year, after having removed the lists of articles, like of course the home page, the Sentinel-2 or Landsat pages, the authors’ names (I’m still ahead of Simon, but it won’t last… )

Mapping flooded areas using Sentinel-1 in Google Earth Engine5141
Radiometric quantities : irradiance, radiance, reflectance4457
A python module for batch download of Sentinel data from ESA3723
MACCS/MAJA, how it works3130
Les séries temporelles de niveau 3A de Sentinel-22043
Sentinel-2 + OpenStreetMap = ♡1954
Les inondations dans le Sud-Ouest vues par satellite1950
The product level names, how they work ?1848
The Sentinel-2 tiles, how they work ?1734
S1-Tiling, on demand ortho-rectification of Sentinel-1 images on Sentinel-2 grid1695
THEIA’s L2A product format1678
How to automatically download Sentinel data from PEPS collaborative ground segment1589
La première carte d’occupation des sols 2016 de la France avec Sentinel-21557
S2 Tile Viewer/ Voir les tuiles Sentinel-21299
Khumbu icefall in 4D1073

So what may we conclude ?

  • the distribution of small free software is at the top of the list (and we get several questions a week…)
  • Simon’s geophysics articles (with the associated ad on social networks) attract crowds
  • the description of the MAJA channel is nice, but half of my articles point to this page
  • the example on how to use Google Earth Online attracts much more than the articles that denounce its dangers (it’s sad)
  • the « How It Works » series continues to be a success…
  • Level 3A products were very popular (whether in France, Spain or Italy, Maghreb or Sahel).
  • the news of Theia’s production and product formats are well tracked
  • two articles on Sentinel-1 ranked in the top 15 (and a third on deforestation ranked in the top 30)
  • for the first time, a series of VENµS images enters the top 15, with the magnificent video on the Everest glacier created by Simon

     

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