241115 15Nov24 Gullies, public maps and legends, Parish Online on tablets
Last updated
Last updated
Video Timeline (min:sec):
00:00 - 29:00 Gullies - data extract, assign gully monitoring to areas in a new layer
29:00 - 38:06 Public Maps - enabling Legends
38:06 - 42:35 Gullies revisited
42:35 -43:35 parish online on tablets - no scrolling
43:35 - 45.31 Public Maps - legends revisited
45:31 - 51:05 (end) PO on tablets - scrolling solved: two fingers!
00:42:48 Bob Grainger: Apologies, I have to leave now. See you all again next week !
00:48:23 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Parish Online Training details: https://chagosconsulting.com
WEBVTT
1 00:00:09.240 --> 00:00:10.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hey! John!
2 00:00:12.110 --> 00:00:13.250 John Roberts: Hi Graham!
3 00:00:13.650 --> 00:00:14.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Marco.
4 00:00:14.050 --> 00:00:14.750 John Roberts: Hello, Malcolm.
5 00:00:14.750 --> 00:00:15.085 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You.
6 00:00:15.420 --> 00:00:17.190 Malcolm Daniels: Boom no problem.
7 00:00:17.190 --> 00:00:18.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nice to see you.
8 00:00:19.866 --> 00:00:22.140 Malcolm Daniels: Thank you.
9 00:00:23.060 --> 00:00:26.039 Malcolm Daniels: When competing in a 3 day event. Competitors.
10 00:00:26.040 --> 00:00:29.600 John Roberts: Was a bit taken aback by your comment about the training. <snip>
11 00:00:29.600 --> 00:00:30.370 Malcolm Daniels: Correct.
25 00:00:55.140 --> 00:00:56.998 John Roberts: He was okay with me.
26 00:00:57.430 --> 00:01:00.141 John Roberts: But there again, I didn't mention your name.
27 00:01:01.546 --> 00:01:03.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Pretty, wise.
28 00:01:03.680 --> 00:01:09.140 John Roberts: I was gonna go back and see him again. But he'd gone by time I I'd finished doing what I was doing.
29 00:01:10.220 --> 00:01:11.109 John Roberts: and then.
30 00:01:11.580 --> 00:01:16.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Was it a good session, I mean? I'm not quite sure what the occasion was. Why was he there.
31 00:01:16.540 --> 00:01:20.110 John Roberts: It was the towns and parishes conference
32 00:01:20.590 --> 00:01:21.710 John Roberts: to Somerset.
33 00:01:21.900 --> 00:01:22.370 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Don't worry.
34 00:01:22.370 --> 00:01:23.050 John Roberts: In the
35 00:01:23.888 --> 00:01:31.000 John Roberts: organized by Somerset Council. It was a conference of all the towns and parishes within Somerset.
36 00:01:31.540 --> 00:01:32.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh!
37 00:01:32.020 --> 00:01:36.269 John Roberts: Those that wanted to attend there was. There was well, over a hundred people there.
38 00:01:37.990 --> 00:01:41.420 John Roberts: And there was various workshops we had to do or you could do.
39 00:01:41.920 --> 00:01:42.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
40 00:01:42.762 --> 00:01:46.458 John Roberts: And then one room was given over to
41 00:01:48.040 --> 00:01:50.473 John Roberts: people people selling things, really.
42 00:01:51.040 --> 00:01:53.489 John Roberts: and Chris had quite a big table.
43 00:01:53.610 --> 00:01:54.950 John Roberts: It's all set up.
44 00:01:55.100 --> 00:01:58.980 John Roberts: And yeah, he had quite a few people going up and down to him.
45 00:01:59.340 --> 00:02:00.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
46 00:02:00.370 --> 00:02:00.810 John Roberts: And
47 00:02:02.610 --> 00:02:07.800 John Roberts: but yeah, and then the end of it was the annual general meeting for South, anyway. So.
48 00:02:08.759 --> 00:02:11.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right. Your friend Mr. Edwards was there, was he?
49 00:02:13.030 --> 00:02:14.650 John Roberts: No, I didn't see him.
50 00:02:14.650 --> 00:02:15.490 chris edwards: No!
51 00:02:15.840 --> 00:02:18.090 chris edwards: What! What bit are you talking about, John?
52 00:02:18.470 --> 00:02:22.200 John Roberts: The towns and Parishes Conference Canal side.
53 00:02:22.490 --> 00:02:25.729 John Roberts: Okay. I dare say I'll meet Chris next week.
54 00:02:26.380 --> 00:02:29.669 John Roberts: because there's a meeting at Ansford Village Hall.
55 00:02:31.930 --> 00:02:32.340 chris edwards: What?
56 00:02:32.340 --> 00:02:34.699 Graham Stoddart-Stones: With with Chris. Oh, that that Chris.
57 00:02:34.700 --> 00:02:35.640 John Roberts: No, no.
58 00:02:36.373 --> 00:02:36.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Got it.
59 00:02:36.900 --> 00:02:37.540 John Roberts: Krish.
60 00:02:37.540 --> 00:02:38.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That Chris. Yes.
61 00:02:39.950 --> 00:02:42.119 chris edwards: Ansford village, Hall.
62 00:02:42.950 --> 00:02:45.420 John Roberts: You mean you don't know about it.
63 00:02:46.770 --> 00:02:49.196 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You know, Ransford, Chris, it's quite close to
64 00:02:50.150 --> 00:02:52.530 chris edwards: I live 5 min, walk away.
65 00:02:55.400 --> 00:02:59.309 chris edwards: So so what's what's the what's the title of the meeting?
66 00:03:00.482 --> 00:03:02.394 John Roberts: I can't tell you now.
67 00:03:04.130 --> 00:03:06.409 John Roberts: it's to do with climate change.
68 00:03:08.250 --> 00:03:09.020 chris edwards: Goodness.
69 00:03:10.030 --> 00:03:11.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good afternoon, Lisa.
70 00:03:11.610 --> 00:03:13.720 Lisa Newby: Hello, Graham! How are you? Hello, everybody!
71 00:03:13.720 --> 00:03:19.685 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm stanger that as you've obviously halved your workload, you've now got time to come to these wild sessions.
72 00:03:20.000 --> 00:03:26.700 Lisa Newby: I do have a particular purpose. It's going to be talking about gullies growing, which is one of my favorite topics at the moment.
73 00:03:26.700 --> 00:03:29.419 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, well, you're not not alone.
74 00:03:29.420 --> 00:03:31.974 Lisa Newby: I use the word favourite quite
75 00:03:33.510 --> 00:03:34.849 Lisa Newby: tongue in cheek.
76 00:03:35.250 --> 00:03:35.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
77 00:03:36.370 --> 00:03:38.620 Lisa Newby: How's things with you on the Islewise, anyway?
78 00:03:38.990 --> 00:03:41.369 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They are spiffing.
79 00:03:42.040 --> 00:03:42.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The
80 00:03:43.930 --> 00:03:49.569 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The great event of the moment is that there's a piece of land that has been
81 00:03:50.680 --> 00:03:59.280 Graham Stoddart-Stones: worked on, let's say, by the lady whom I have characterized as the rudest shopkeeper in the Isle of Wight.
82 00:03:59.280 --> 00:04:04.549 Lisa Newby: Oh, okay, that's like you to be quite so explicit with that really.
83 00:04:04.550 --> 00:04:21.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: As a result of her husband messing around with his bulldozer. There's a tree that's now endangering the main road, and they say they have to take the tree down, and all the neighbors are saying that was deliberate. You just didn't want that tree, and every tree in Bembridge is protected by a tree preservation.
84 00:04:21.440 --> 00:04:21.820 Lisa Newby: What is he?
85 00:04:21.829 --> 00:04:24.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Have to be very, very specific to get trees down.
86 00:04:24.829 --> 00:04:28.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but the beauty of it was was that it? It cut off
87 00:04:29.129 --> 00:04:32.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: one of the only 2 roads into Bembridge.
88 00:04:32.909 --> 00:04:39.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then the other road got cut off because there was some other accident, so we were back to being an island.
89 00:04:39.550 --> 00:04:40.260 Lisa Newby: Oh, okay.
90 00:04:40.260 --> 00:04:46.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There's a road that goes up past our house, which is a no through road, and it's got big
91 00:04:47.280 --> 00:05:03.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: pylon studs, whatever you want to call them to stop people breaking through. But unfortunately, the house that's right by it has got a driveway that curves around and has, you know, 2 ends. And so people come up this road and drive through this lady's driveway.
92 00:05:03.260 --> 00:05:04.200 Lisa Newby: Oh dear!
93 00:05:04.200 --> 00:05:06.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: He's 94 years old.
94 00:05:08.040 --> 00:05:08.620 Lisa Newby: Stressful.
95 00:05:09.285 --> 00:05:13.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's kept the whole village alive
96 00:05:14.230 --> 00:05:17.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: with all the the ongoings and goings on.
97 00:05:17.240 --> 00:05:18.879 Lisa Newby: Sounds like a lot of drama.
98 00:05:18.880 --> 00:05:24.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, even more exciting, just for those people who get onto planning committees. The
99 00:05:24.880 --> 00:05:44.559 Graham Stoddart-Stones: because she complained bitterly to the Parish Council. The Parish council chairman came down to see her, and as she walked down the road she said, oh, she said, I've seen that planning application for this particular house and the planning application did not have anything on it about a wall, and they've now got a 6 foot high wall around it.
100 00:05:44.990 --> 00:05:45.620 Lisa Newby: So.
101 00:05:45.620 --> 00:05:55.280 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's going to come down, or it's certainly going to be put up to the Enforcement people. We'll see whether they actually ever do anything so very exciting? Is the answer to your question.
102 00:05:55.280 --> 00:05:56.319 Lisa Newby: Very exciting.
103 00:05:57.150 --> 00:05:58.669 Lisa Newby: Has there been a lot of sailing.
104 00:05:59.524 --> 00:06:02.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There has been a fair amount. Thank you.
105 00:06:02.040 --> 00:06:02.380 Lisa Newby: -
106 00:06:02.380 --> 00:06:09.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, in fact, we had people over for dinner on Wednesday, and they were saying the man was saying, it must get sailing this winter.
107 00:06:10.420 --> 00:06:17.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and I was just thinking, having read the weather forecast. It's all going to get cold next week, and it sounds like an ideal time to go out and freeze one's fingers off.
108 00:06:18.090 --> 00:06:24.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Monday, Ray. Good afternoon. And how is the fine village of is it, Picton? You're in.
109 00:06:24.790 --> 00:06:25.870 Ray Toomer: Pitney Pitney.
110 00:06:25.870 --> 00:06:27.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sydney. That's right. Yes.
111 00:06:27.620 --> 00:06:29.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, Lisa knows all about Pitney.
112 00:06:29.750 --> 00:06:31.349 Lisa Newby: Well, you know relatively soon.
113 00:06:31.350 --> 00:06:34.569 Ray Toomer: For a short while at the moment. So
114 00:06:34.690 --> 00:06:36.140 Ray Toomer: good. Thank you.
115 00:06:37.200 --> 00:06:45.599 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, Lisa has arrived. Probably the only person with a specific question in mind. So you get pride of place, Lisa.
116 00:06:45.910 --> 00:06:58.069 Lisa Newby: I'm highly honored. So after you shared with us where the Gully layer is in parish line, is it possible to extract that data on a spreadsheet.
117 00:06:58.070 --> 00:06:58.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
118 00:06:59.430 --> 00:07:02.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it is, thanks to a complaint by Mr. Roberts
119 00:07:03.160 --> 00:07:08.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: successfully. So if you would, can you share your screen with us and we'll walk, you walk, you through it.
120 00:07:08.390 --> 00:07:11.839 Lisa Newby: Okey-okey? I think maybe I can.
121 00:07:15.340 --> 00:07:17.899 Lisa Newby: I want to share that one, don't I?
122 00:07:17.900 --> 00:07:20.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The green button. Yeah. And then, oh.
123 00:07:22.980 --> 00:07:24.180 Lisa Newby: You see that? Okay.
124 00:07:24.180 --> 00:07:25.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Absolutely brilliant.
125 00:07:27.770 --> 00:07:31.459 Lisa Newby: So that is the so I'm on the gully layer almost.
126 00:07:31.460 --> 00:07:32.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
127 00:07:32.770 --> 00:07:35.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you just turn it on, there we go.
128 00:07:36.030 --> 00:07:41.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you can now go to the cogwheel on that by your mouse.
129 00:07:41.330 --> 00:07:41.720 Lisa Newby: Yeah,
130 00:07:42.110 --> 00:07:43.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just click on that
131 00:07:43.750 --> 00:07:46.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and go into what's called Table view.
132 00:07:46.010 --> 00:07:46.870 Lisa Newby: Okay.
133 00:07:48.670 --> 00:07:51.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then those are all the gullies.
134 00:07:51.680 --> 00:07:57.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now you have the ability to filter them if you need to. If you want to say only the ones are in Bruton, for instance.
135 00:07:57.060 --> 00:08:00.480 Lisa Newby: Okey dokey, and which one would that be?
136 00:08:00.480 --> 00:08:03.379 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Strict, probably, wouldn't it? So just click on there.
137 00:08:03.980 --> 00:08:06.799 Graham Stoddart-Stones: click on column until you get the choice of district.
138 00:08:07.410 --> 00:08:10.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can just scroll down a bit to find there.
139 00:08:10.350 --> 00:08:12.159 Lisa Newby: Oh, parish! I guess you're parish. That'd be.
140 00:08:12.160 --> 00:08:19.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, that's okay, and then go on to the next box and and contains is fine. Just choose what you want.
141 00:08:19.760 --> 00:08:21.359 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What contains is good.
142 00:08:21.500 --> 00:08:25.169 Lisa Newby: So do I. Just so contains. And then what? Just.
143 00:08:25.170 --> 00:08:25.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yep.
144 00:08:28.460 --> 00:08:31.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and there you can see you've come down to.
145 00:08:31.130 --> 00:08:32.520 Lisa Newby: Oh, export. Okay.
146 00:08:32.520 --> 00:08:35.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you've only got 763 gullies in Bruton.
147 00:08:36.130 --> 00:08:37.789 Lisa Newby: Well, who knew that.
148 00:08:37.799 --> 00:08:38.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Isn't that exciting?
149 00:08:39.000 --> 00:08:48.369 Lisa Newby: That is very, I think, just we were talking to. So we managed to get the enhanced highways maintenance person to come in on
150 00:08:49.960 --> 00:09:00.169 Lisa Newby: Tuesday. So we sat and talked gullies for quite some time. You would think that that was still, but I can assure you it wasn't. I like quite a lot, and he had his
151 00:09:00.850 --> 00:09:10.079 Lisa Newby: his little spreadsheety thing is, they're they're on some carbon tech or something. So we were comparing parish online with carbon tech
152 00:09:10.120 --> 00:09:26.699 Lisa Newby: and trying to extract some information to where our sort of hot potato gullies are that seem to be at the bed of some of the flooding that we've had in Bruton. And we were looking at this. And we think we're just basically going to have to
153 00:09:26.810 --> 00:09:30.100 Lisa Newby: divide the area up into reasonable.
154 00:09:32.160 --> 00:09:32.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Next.
155 00:09:32.550 --> 00:09:44.797 Lisa Newby: Reasonable bits, and and then get counselors to go out and put big, massive red crosses on the ones that are completely blocked in the 1st instance, so we can look at those and see when they are
156 00:09:45.200 --> 00:09:50.884 Lisa Newby: being done by Somerset. So Somerset don't rip us off essentially, or said that out loud, didn't I?
157 00:09:51.920 --> 00:09:57.859 Lisa Newby: so yeah. So it's going to be a massive job. But Gully seems to be the hot topic at the moment.
158 00:09:58.160 --> 00:10:01.250 Lisa Newby: What about you, Ray and Pitney. Have you got a lot going on with gullies?
159 00:10:02.770 --> 00:10:05.130 Ray Toomer: I've got no idea.
160 00:10:05.720 --> 00:10:07.109 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Raising to buy. Okay?
161 00:10:07.880 --> 00:10:08.670 Ray Toomer: Yeah.
162 00:10:08.670 --> 00:10:09.325 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So.
163 00:10:10.240 --> 00:10:14.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Lisa, if you click on the export, button down the bottom right.
164 00:10:15.360 --> 00:10:18.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It will export it to a spreadsheet for you.
165 00:10:18.170 --> 00:10:21.640 Lisa Newby: Okay, 763. Who knew? Yeah.
166 00:10:22.690 --> 00:10:23.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then.
167 00:10:23.110 --> 00:10:23.870 Lisa Newby: Download it.
168 00:10:23.870 --> 00:10:25.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Leave it somewhere. Yes.
169 00:10:25.950 --> 00:10:26.980 Lisa Newby: Wonderful.
170 00:10:27.430 --> 00:10:31.610 Lisa Newby: So that was in Table view. So can you do that on
171 00:10:31.680 --> 00:10:33.659 Lisa Newby: if that table view is
172 00:10:33.920 --> 00:10:39.020 Lisa Newby: an option on any of the layers. Then you can just go ahead and do that with the data that's in there.
173 00:10:39.020 --> 00:10:46.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, you can. And there is another way of getting data out as well. If you want to be confused with too much information.
174 00:10:46.890 --> 00:10:50.259 Lisa Newby: I'm just gonna write this down 1st continuous
175 00:10:51.960 --> 00:10:53.030 Lisa Newby: on that.
176 00:10:53.480 --> 00:10:57.584 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In in the previous discussions we've had about gullies.
177 00:10:58.150 --> 00:11:03.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: people have demonstrated it's really really helpful to call up Google Maps and look at their street view.
178 00:11:03.960 --> 00:11:06.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then you can actually see the gullies.
179 00:11:06.520 --> 00:11:07.989 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Have you tried doing that?
180 00:11:07.990 --> 00:11:09.530 Lisa Newby: No, I haven't tried doing that.
181 00:11:09.530 --> 00:11:14.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I I strongly commend that to you, and again, by all means feel free to do it. Now, if you want to.
182 00:11:14.790 --> 00:11:17.139 Lisa Newby: Yeah, can we do it now, please? That would be really helpful.
183 00:11:17.140 --> 00:11:18.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Call up Google Maps.
184 00:11:19.070 --> 00:11:21.983 Lisa Newby: So just do that in a normal
185 00:11:28.820 --> 00:11:33.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then when you get there. Yes, just type in Bruton, Uk, or something like that.
186 00:11:41.340 --> 00:11:42.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.
187 00:11:42.560 --> 00:11:47.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then zoom in a bit. So you start getting streets and so forth, and then you can click on the
188 00:11:48.120 --> 00:11:51.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: little yellow man down in the bottom right corner.
189 00:11:51.240 --> 00:11:51.840 Lisa Newby: Yeah.
190 00:11:51.840 --> 00:11:55.809 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Move him up to any old street where, you know there are gullies.
191 00:11:56.380 --> 00:11:59.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so any of the streets will do just.
192 00:11:59.720 --> 00:12:03.420 Lisa Newby: Okay, so where's where's so? I know there's a hot potato one just here.
193 00:12:03.420 --> 00:12:05.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so just stick in there.
194 00:12:06.040 --> 00:12:09.279 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now you can probably look for the.
195 00:12:10.900 --> 00:12:13.539 Lisa Newby: So I think that they are down this way.
196 00:12:15.880 --> 00:12:21.199 Lisa Newby: So I know that there are some here on this corner that routinely get blocked. That is one of our.
197 00:12:21.200 --> 00:12:25.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you click on that little arrow there, so it'll take you closer to that corner.
198 00:12:26.240 --> 00:12:26.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.
199 00:12:26.920 --> 00:12:27.920 Lisa Newby: Okay.
200 00:12:28.120 --> 00:12:30.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you. There's his colleague right there. Look.
201 00:12:30.393 --> 00:12:34.870 Lisa Newby: Yeah. And there's 1 there that blocks up as well. And then I've got a series down the bottom here.
202 00:12:35.330 --> 00:12:36.600 Lisa Newby: Okay.
203 00:12:36.960 --> 00:12:43.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then the other thing, if it was any interest to you, wanted to mention breaking up the area into districts.
204 00:12:44.350 --> 00:12:47.099 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that you could assign counselors to each area.
205 00:12:47.100 --> 00:12:47.960 Lisa Newby: Yes.
206 00:12:47.960 --> 00:12:49.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you happen to have
207 00:12:49.650 --> 00:12:53.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: oh, the world's leading expert has just disappeared. Where's John gone.
208 00:12:53.550 --> 00:12:54.700 John Roberts: No, I'm back again.
209 00:12:54.700 --> 00:13:02.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, John, is the area on dividing up your parish into districts, so I'd very happily turn it over to him to show you
210 00:13:02.960 --> 00:13:04.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: how to do that.
211 00:13:05.130 --> 00:13:06.330 Lisa Newby: Yes, please.
212 00:13:06.330 --> 00:13:08.239 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you stop sharing your screen.
213 00:13:08.240 --> 00:13:10.024 Lisa Newby: Share my screen. Okay,
214 00:13:13.370 --> 00:13:14.060 Lisa Newby: right?
215 00:13:14.440 --> 00:13:16.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I'll say good afternoon to Bob.
216 00:13:16.480 --> 00:13:17.909 Bob Grainger: Hello! Good afternoon, Graham.
217 00:13:17.910 --> 00:13:20.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And Stuart nice to see you both.
218 00:13:20.660 --> 00:13:21.793 Bob Grainger: Hello! All.
219 00:13:24.650 --> 00:13:28.129 John Roberts: Now, I presume you are now looking at my parish online screen.
220 00:13:28.765 --> 00:13:29.400 Lisa Newby: Yes.
221 00:13:31.340 --> 00:13:35.450 John Roberts: What we had? A. Because we're a small village and
222 00:13:36.340 --> 00:13:38.140 John Roberts: a lot of the properties.
223 00:13:38.340 --> 00:13:39.769 John Roberts: How can I put it?
224 00:13:40.040 --> 00:13:41.900 John Roberts: Interlocate with each other?
225 00:13:42.340 --> 00:13:43.470 John Roberts: Have problems
226 00:13:43.850 --> 00:13:46.459 John Roberts: actually working out who belonged to whom.
227 00:13:47.260 --> 00:13:49.240 John Roberts: So basically.
228 00:13:49.320 --> 00:13:52.170 John Roberts: street by street. If I pick
229 00:13:52.260 --> 00:13:53.410 John Roberts: Lime Street.
230 00:13:58.850 --> 00:14:00.399 John Roberts: that one's not so bad.
231 00:14:01.310 --> 00:14:04.430 John Roberts: then you've got the other side of Line 3. As you can see
232 00:14:04.720 --> 00:14:08.849 John Roberts: the gardens from this road end up with the gardens, with that road.
233 00:14:08.850 --> 00:14:09.703 Lisa Newby: My time,
234 00:14:10.130 --> 00:14:12.530 John Roberts: Basically.
235 00:14:12.860 --> 00:14:14.820 John Roberts: all we all I did was
236 00:14:15.780 --> 00:14:18.139 John Roberts: go through the whole village
237 00:14:22.300 --> 00:14:23.700 John Roberts: different polygons.
238 00:14:24.410 --> 00:14:29.169 John Roberts: And by using the different polygons, I could see where these interacted.
239 00:14:31.560 --> 00:14:33.280 John Roberts: But it also gave me
240 00:14:34.890 --> 00:14:36.710 John Roberts: click on that one
241 00:14:37.350 --> 00:14:38.720 John Roberts: live street upper.
242 00:14:41.610 --> 00:14:43.449 John Roberts: I can do a data extract.
243 00:14:52.340 --> 00:14:54.069 John Roberts: And this isn't gonna work today.
244 00:14:54.070 --> 00:14:56.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I think we will. If you just say, Run.
245 00:14:57.170 --> 00:14:57.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: yeah.
246 00:14:59.290 --> 00:15:01.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it should just run on the area you've selected.
247 00:15:01.790 --> 00:15:02.670 John Roberts: There you go. Okay.
248 00:15:02.670 --> 00:15:03.100 Lisa Newby: Okay.
249 00:15:03.100 --> 00:15:06.930 John Roberts: So. So that, then, is all the houses within that street.
250 00:15:08.550 --> 00:15:12.189 John Roberts: And like you did just now. I can then export that out
251 00:15:12.550 --> 00:15:16.549 John Roberts: and filter it as an normally as an excel spreadsheet.
252 00:15:17.470 --> 00:15:17.960 Lisa Newby: I see.
253 00:15:17.960 --> 00:15:23.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I can't remember. Are you familiar with creating polygons and drawing around things.
254 00:15:23.330 --> 00:15:27.630 Lisa Newby: Is that the one where you use the tools? And you you do the clicking around the edge.
255 00:15:27.790 --> 00:15:28.849 John Roberts: Yeah. Hang on a minute.
256 00:15:29.267 --> 00:15:32.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's John Strong point this. So I'd rather.
257 00:15:35.310 --> 00:15:36.859 John Roberts: Let me turn all these off.
258 00:15:38.390 --> 00:15:39.970 John Roberts: or most of them, anyway.
259 00:15:42.760 --> 00:15:43.670 John Roberts: Okay.
260 00:15:43.860 --> 00:15:44.700 John Roberts: so
261 00:15:45.600 --> 00:15:46.819 John Roberts: add a feature.
262 00:15:47.400 --> 00:15:50.569 John Roberts: Basically, if we were looking at Polygon in this area here.
263 00:15:57.530 --> 00:15:59.340 John Roberts: I would do it fairly quickly.
264 00:16:04.100 --> 00:16:05.619 John Roberts: It doesn't help when you.
265 00:16:06.430 --> 00:16:08.300 John Roberts: Your screen doesn't keep up with it.
266 00:16:14.150 --> 00:16:17.009 John Roberts: so that I've got my polygon. I would then save it.
267 00:16:17.310 --> 00:16:18.230 Lisa Newby: Okay.
268 00:16:18.230 --> 00:16:19.280 John Roberts: We'll give it a name.
269 00:16:21.440 --> 00:16:22.699 John Roberts: Now I can go back.
270 00:16:24.130 --> 00:16:25.969 John Roberts: I can go back to that Polygon.
271 00:16:26.780 --> 00:16:27.830 John Roberts: edit it.
272 00:16:29.680 --> 00:16:30.630 John Roberts: and then
273 00:16:31.060 --> 00:16:32.170 John Roberts: zoom in
274 00:16:32.640 --> 00:16:34.210 John Roberts: and tidy it up.
275 00:16:34.730 --> 00:16:35.740 Lisa Newby: Right? Okay.
276 00:16:38.450 --> 00:16:41.399 John Roberts: And every time I do that I'll create a point.
277 00:16:44.790 --> 00:16:47.210 John Roberts: Basically, I would go around then the whole polygon.
278 00:16:48.990 --> 00:16:51.260 John Roberts: reshaping it to what it should have been.
279 00:16:52.750 --> 00:16:54.099 John Roberts: And then save it again.
280 00:16:56.510 --> 00:17:08.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then the point for you, Lisa, is that once you've drawn your polygon and you click on it now and do data, extract it'll and choose gullies. It'll extract all the gullies in that particular.
281 00:17:08.089 --> 00:17:09.239 Lisa Newby: That's okay.
282 00:17:09.240 --> 00:17:20.399 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Which makes it very simple for you and your counselors, and you say you're doing the green bit, and you're doing the yellow bit. Oh, perhaps you could mention style, John, and just show how you can follow the Polygons differently.
283 00:17:20.400 --> 00:17:22.209 John Roberts: Hang on a minute. I'll go back in it.
284 00:17:24.730 --> 00:17:26.219 John Roberts: basically. But
285 00:17:26.390 --> 00:17:30.449 John Roberts: what you'd have to remember, Lisa, is you would have to include the roads.
286 00:17:31.280 --> 00:17:33.459 John Roberts: whereas I've just gone rent buildings.
287 00:17:34.180 --> 00:17:38.039 John Roberts: If you, if you want your gullies, you're gonna have to include the road because
288 00:17:38.110 --> 00:17:39.680 John Roberts: the gullies are in the road.
289 00:17:39.840 --> 00:17:40.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
290 00:17:40.470 --> 00:17:43.099 Lisa Newby: So would you? Then? So
291 00:17:43.370 --> 00:17:55.050 Lisa Newby: just for argument's sake, because there's going to be, say, one gully pertaining to that polygon that you've you've drawn in there. Say so. You would do almost like riparian rights, and do half a roadway in a way.
292 00:17:55.050 --> 00:17:56.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Exactly. Yeah.
293 00:17:56.500 --> 00:17:57.350 John Roberts: More or less. Yeah.
294 00:17:57.350 --> 00:18:02.209 Lisa Newby: So you know that it's kind of pertaining to that area where there's a sort of crossover. Okay.
295 00:18:02.210 --> 00:18:09.549 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Helps to drive the lesson home. Very happy to do it with you right now, for a section of Bruton.
296 00:18:10.250 --> 00:18:11.209 John Roberts: If you go
297 00:18:11.420 --> 00:18:13.459 John Roberts: hang on. If you go into style.
298 00:18:15.130 --> 00:18:18.899 John Roberts: then obviously I've colored the polygons, I can color them. What I want.
299 00:18:19.080 --> 00:18:20.159 Lisa Newby: Right, okay,
300 00:18:21.330 --> 00:18:24.689 John Roberts: So that's how we ideally initiated between each of the streets.
301 00:18:24.690 --> 00:18:25.089 Lisa Newby: I just.
302 00:18:25.090 --> 00:18:26.470 John Roberts: Gave them different colours.
303 00:18:27.236 --> 00:18:28.470 John Roberts: Which is
304 00:18:29.300 --> 00:18:32.350 John Roberts: quite funny in regards to the fact, I'm colorblind.
305 00:18:32.500 --> 00:18:33.410 Lisa Newby: Okay.
306 00:18:34.620 --> 00:18:40.355 Lisa Newby: so how do you see that, then, John? Do you see varying? Do you see some color, or is it? Is it red and green that you have
307 00:18:40.560 --> 00:18:48.329 John Roberts: Yeah, I I just had to make sure with our clock that I had actually gone far enough away from each color that everybody else could see it.
308 00:18:48.330 --> 00:18:49.550 Lisa Newby: So it was, yeah, good luck.
309 00:18:49.840 --> 00:18:51.750 John Roberts: And then I would then say.
310 00:18:52.180 --> 00:19:02.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There is once you're on that page, John. Lisa, facility for changing the pattern. So if you can't see colors, you may be able to see stripes or diagonal.
311 00:19:02.730 --> 00:19:04.889 Lisa Newby: It's okay.
312 00:19:04.890 --> 00:19:07.600 John Roberts: If you have a look, some some of mine have got.
313 00:19:07.600 --> 00:19:09.550 Lisa Newby: They had lines on the line.
314 00:19:09.550 --> 00:19:12.280 John Roberts: They've got lines on them, so I can do all sorts.
315 00:19:12.280 --> 00:19:13.240 Lisa Newby: Okay.
316 00:19:13.480 --> 00:19:15.320 John Roberts: And again.
317 00:19:15.360 --> 00:19:17.300 John Roberts: line, color, pattern color.
318 00:19:17.400 --> 00:19:18.639 John Roberts: There you go, plus
319 00:19:18.840 --> 00:19:20.059 John Roberts: that would give me that
320 00:19:23.230 --> 00:19:24.120 Lisa Newby: Okay.
321 00:19:24.560 --> 00:19:28.410 John Roberts: Vertical lines, and that's why some of mine have got lines off.
322 00:19:28.600 --> 00:19:30.390 Lisa Newby: Okay. Okay. Brilliant.
323 00:19:30.390 --> 00:19:31.770 John Roberts: And you would just say
324 00:19:33.980 --> 00:19:35.369 John Roberts: you can label them.
325 00:19:36.430 --> 00:19:37.270 John Roberts: There you go.
326 00:19:38.280 --> 00:19:40.670 John Roberts: Does that help any any any better.
327 00:19:41.030 --> 00:19:42.339 Lisa Newby: Yeah, no, that's brilliant.
328 00:19:42.670 --> 00:19:43.480 John Roberts: Okay.
329 00:19:43.480 --> 00:19:45.480 Lisa Newby: That's really helpful. So I.
330 00:19:45.480 --> 00:19:47.000 John Roberts: Stop, sharing, sharing.
331 00:19:47.000 --> 00:19:53.850 Lisa Newby: Thank you. No, that's really helpful. So I could do. From a gully point of view. I could go back to my gully map, and then I could actually
332 00:19:53.900 --> 00:19:57.430 Lisa Newby: do that and incorporate particular gullies in a particular area.
333 00:19:58.440 --> 00:20:00.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do that right now. Lisa.
334 00:20:00.330 --> 00:20:03.760 Lisa Newby: Okay, let's do that right now, Graham, that's a very good idea. Let me just find it.
335 00:20:04.610 --> 00:20:09.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because nobody else is shrieking that they they got a question. I don't see them jumping up and down, saying.
336 00:20:09.040 --> 00:20:12.719 Ray Toomer: One small question, but I can. It's I can wait. Yeah.
337 00:20:14.100 --> 00:20:17.506 Bob Grainger: And if you want somebody to jump up and down I could do that.
338 00:20:17.750 --> 00:20:18.859 Lisa Newby: I'm baking.
339 00:20:18.860 --> 00:20:26.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Your leg has improved to that level. Your health is now somewhat restored.
340 00:20:26.940 --> 00:20:29.040 Bob Grainger: It's about as good as it's going to get. Graham.
341 00:20:29.240 --> 00:20:29.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So
342 00:20:30.070 --> 00:20:32.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you can make a film with a name like that, you know.
343 00:20:32.460 --> 00:20:35.419 Bob Grainger: Yeah, no, it's it's about as good as it's gonna get.
344 00:20:36.560 --> 00:20:41.149 Lisa Newby: Okay, so shall I share this again? And we could have a look and see what it's
345 00:20:41.420 --> 00:20:42.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: These 2.
346 00:20:42.510 --> 00:20:45.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now, who's going to advise you? Is anyone else going to pick up the
347 00:20:46.340 --> 00:20:47.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: banter here?
348 00:20:48.770 --> 00:20:53.624 Lisa Newby: So if I went into a particularly high traffic area. So if I took, say toll free, for instance.
349 00:20:53.880 --> 00:21:01.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's really good. So you need to probably create a new layer which is going to be a polygon layer.
350 00:21:01.120 --> 00:21:03.629 Lisa Newby: Okay, so where would I create that.
351 00:21:03.630 --> 00:21:08.932 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, if you go up into the create at the top right.
352 00:21:09.530 --> 00:21:10.750 Lisa Newby: So create a new.
353 00:21:10.750 --> 00:21:11.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's right.
354 00:21:11.780 --> 00:21:16.479 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and give it a name, saying gullies, or whatever gully delineation! Who knows.
355 00:21:17.675 --> 00:21:18.870 chris edwards: Poly.
356 00:21:18.870 --> 00:21:20.620 Lisa Newby: 3 polygons.
357 00:21:20.620 --> 00:21:21.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, there you go!
358 00:21:22.260 --> 00:21:24.060 Lisa Newby: Polygons are like that.
359 00:21:24.060 --> 00:21:25.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So next.
360 00:21:26.340 --> 00:21:30.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then select in the geometry type. Select a polygon.
361 00:21:33.270 --> 00:21:38.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. And you can give a description if you want to, but to save time. We can just race on.
362 00:21:41.680 --> 00:21:42.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go
363 00:21:43.230 --> 00:21:44.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: next.
364 00:21:45.720 --> 00:22:00.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then you're gonna create at least one column here with a way of identifying each area, so you may need a name, or and you can have other columns as well, so to create the 1st column click on the plus sign on the top right of that little.
365 00:22:00.790 --> 00:22:02.300 Lisa Newby: Okay. Okay.
366 00:22:02.740 --> 00:22:13.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And just leave it as name, and then you might want to say, Who's who is responsible for that division, or something like that. Will you have somebody in charge of each one.
367 00:22:13.975 --> 00:22:17.110 Lisa Newby: I I don't know yet. This is, I'm still kind of
368 00:22:18.310 --> 00:22:20.719 Lisa Newby: going through the best way to
369 00:22:20.990 --> 00:22:23.970 Lisa Newby: look at it, and what we're trying to do.
370 00:22:24.207 --> 00:22:31.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Set up another row and just call it status. So if you could click on the plus sign again. Not that one. The other one at the top, right.
371 00:22:31.090 --> 00:22:31.840 Lisa Newby: That one there.
372 00:22:31.840 --> 00:22:32.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
373 00:22:32.680 --> 00:22:35.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: change the word name to status.
374 00:22:35.230 --> 00:22:35.963 Lisa Newby: Here, okay.
375 00:22:38.740 --> 00:22:39.710 Lisa Newby: Okay.
376 00:22:39.710 --> 00:22:41.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That'll that'll do. Fine.
377 00:22:41.890 --> 00:22:46.259 Lisa Newby: So if it decides that I needed more columns in that, I can go back in and change that at some point.
378 00:22:46.260 --> 00:22:48.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And just just for fun. Lisa.
379 00:22:48.410 --> 00:22:49.350 Lisa Newby: Just confirm.
380 00:22:49.350 --> 00:22:55.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: To give you some dropdown values in status. So if you go, add plus on the status row.
381 00:22:55.310 --> 00:22:56.200 Lisa Newby: Okay.
382 00:22:56.480 --> 00:22:59.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you might say one is blocked.
383 00:22:59.660 --> 00:23:00.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: totally blocked.
384 00:23:01.200 --> 00:23:02.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: For instance, just
385 00:23:02.860 --> 00:23:03.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: yeah.
386 00:23:04.450 --> 00:23:10.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then click on the add word to the right. Add, add, add, that's delete. Okay.
387 00:23:11.460 --> 00:23:12.300 Lisa Newby: Pass.
388 00:23:12.300 --> 00:23:14.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, so totally blocked.
389 00:23:19.410 --> 00:23:21.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, and add this time
390 00:23:22.860 --> 00:23:24.379 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and put clear
391 00:23:26.010 --> 00:23:36.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just as the 2 different statuses, you know, just so that you know whether to cause you said you had a red, a Red Gully area. So how do you make it? Red is? Can you need it? So that's confirmed. That's good. Yeah.
392 00:23:36.940 --> 00:23:38.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you're finished.
393 00:23:43.440 --> 00:23:44.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, if you
394 00:23:46.890 --> 00:23:52.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: yes, you didn't. You. Oh, doesn't like your signs. I thought you had columns in there. That's
395 00:23:53.100 --> 00:23:55.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: save, anyway, and see where we end up.
396 00:23:57.910 --> 00:23:59.277 Lisa Newby: But doesn't like it.
397 00:23:59.740 --> 00:24:02.509 Lisa Newby: Shall I go back and have a look at what I've done?
398 00:24:03.000 --> 00:24:04.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, sure.
399 00:24:04.050 --> 00:24:06.920 Lisa Newby: Right, let's start again. So I went into create.
400 00:24:06.920 --> 00:24:08.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, new. There.
401 00:24:08.130 --> 00:24:09.150 Lisa Newby: You liar
402 00:24:09.250 --> 00:24:10.400 Lisa Newby: gullies?
403 00:24:15.590 --> 00:24:17.130 Lisa Newby: No, it was a polygon, wasn't it?
404 00:24:17.130 --> 00:24:18.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It is no.
405 00:24:21.720 --> 00:24:32.149 chris edwards: I think you'd be better off actually putting the word Tolbury there so that you could have one as Tolbury, the second one, another area, the 3rd one, yet another area.
406 00:24:32.590 --> 00:24:35.989 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But you wouldn't have separate layers for those Chris.
407 00:24:35.990 --> 00:24:37.140 chris edwards: Oh, right? Okay.
408 00:24:37.580 --> 00:24:41.529 Lisa Newby: So I'd have. So I'm gonna have different areas within this one particular layer.
409 00:24:42.150 --> 00:24:47.430 Lisa Newby: Mulberry is quite a small area. I was thinking because of the size of Bruton, and we've got 700 now gullies
410 00:24:47.490 --> 00:24:56.249 Lisa Newby: it's going to ultimately tie in with a a wider maintenance issue. So the theory is is that maybe once every 6 months
411 00:24:56.890 --> 00:25:02.040 Lisa Newby: whoever was delegated to that sort of area would maybe do a pass on
412 00:25:02.210 --> 00:25:10.909 Lisa Newby: what the benches look like in that area, or if there was anything our grounds mates have missed in that area and that sort of thing.
413 00:25:11.410 --> 00:25:14.619 Lisa Newby: So we're sort of using the gullies as a
414 00:25:15.210 --> 00:25:19.430 Lisa Newby: kind of starting to define the area. But I don't know how big that area needs to be.
415 00:25:20.160 --> 00:25:23.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you play around with it to see how it is.
416 00:25:23.020 --> 00:25:27.074 Lisa Newby: Yeah. So I wanted I wanted to do an ad here, didn't I? So it was gonna be
417 00:25:27.300 --> 00:25:29.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We'll leave that as it is, and just do another ad.
418 00:25:29.710 --> 00:25:32.150 Lisa Newby: Doing do another ad. That was that one there wasn't it.
419 00:25:32.150 --> 00:25:36.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, and change the name of the second one to well, right? That's the first.st
420 00:25:36.090 --> 00:25:37.250 Lisa Newby: This one, yeah.
421 00:25:37.530 --> 00:25:38.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Change that to status
422 00:25:40.450 --> 00:25:41.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and.
423 00:25:41.040 --> 00:25:41.830 Lisa Newby: Okay.
424 00:25:41.830 --> 00:25:43.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then just leave it at that for the.
425 00:25:43.990 --> 00:25:45.640 Lisa Newby: Can I just leave it at that and finish.
426 00:25:47.890 --> 00:25:49.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Did it finish? Yes.
427 00:25:49.440 --> 00:25:50.629 Lisa Newby: I think you're stood on. Yeah.
428 00:25:50.630 --> 00:25:53.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now, if you go into your parish layers
429 00:25:54.820 --> 00:25:57.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the bottom one should be your new gullies. One.
430 00:26:05.020 --> 00:26:06.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So there it is.
431 00:26:06.240 --> 00:26:07.370 Lisa Newby: Please. Polygon.
432 00:26:07.720 --> 00:26:11.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well done you! You've done it twice. So.
433 00:26:11.920 --> 00:26:12.740 Lisa Newby: Oh, I can always get back.
434 00:26:12.740 --> 00:26:17.309 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You want to add a feature, so go on onto the little cogwheel on the right hand end of that.
435 00:26:18.050 --> 00:26:19.739 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And click on, add feature.
436 00:26:20.890 --> 00:26:25.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then this is where you're going to draw your polygon, Lisa.
437 00:26:25.760 --> 00:26:26.789 Lisa Newby: Okay. So I would.
438 00:26:26.790 --> 00:26:28.829 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So just choose your area
439 00:26:30.090 --> 00:26:33.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so that you click once and then drag the mouse
440 00:26:34.220 --> 00:26:39.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so click once and then drag there you go and then click again to change direction. Yeah, you got the hang of this all right.
441 00:26:39.870 --> 00:26:47.529 Lisa Newby: So I'd go, and I'd go. So, going by John's suggestion, we go around the back of all houses, and I think that Tollbury goes.
442 00:26:47.690 --> 00:26:48.270 Lisa Newby: Say, Hey.
443 00:26:48.270 --> 00:26:51.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, yes, it's more the road you're after, isn't it? But.
444 00:26:51.790 --> 00:26:56.564 Lisa Newby: But I think we'd want to include the houses as well at some point with a view to
445 00:26:57.940 --> 00:27:03.239 Lisa Newby: So I'd want to do this as a whole area, as have somebody just doing Tollbury itself.
446 00:27:03.240 --> 00:27:04.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
447 00:27:04.060 --> 00:27:05.000 Lisa Newby: But whereas if you've
448 00:27:05.590 --> 00:27:07.640 Lisa Newby: like, down here, for instance.
449 00:27:08.000 --> 00:27:09.659 Lisa Newby: this area here
450 00:27:11.400 --> 00:27:12.760 Lisa Newby: that would be
451 00:27:12.910 --> 00:27:22.499 Lisa Newby: half would be this side. Yeah, and then half will be this side. So I would draw a line right down the center, almost because I'd get somebody doing this area.
452 00:27:22.690 --> 00:27:28.035 Lisa Newby: And then somebody, because if I just move out a little bit. It's almost like a
453 00:27:29.710 --> 00:27:34.979 Lisa Newby: There's like a natural break. So Tolbury would, in fact, be this entire area here.
454 00:27:35.180 --> 00:27:35.880 Lisa Newby: Yeah.
455 00:27:35.880 --> 00:27:42.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And would you actually say to one person, you're doing the left hand side, but somebody else is doing the right hand side of the.
456 00:27:42.070 --> 00:27:45.820 Lisa Newby: I don't know. I think that would be a thing that would kind of come out in the wash. Really.
457 00:27:45.820 --> 00:28:01.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, so this is interesting. Now that the reason that John said, you do a sort of a quick and dirty around the perimeter so that you don't stop halfway and lose everything, and you've stopped halfway. So if you click on, save now
458 00:28:01.880 --> 00:28:05.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: bottom left, wait. Wait. Sorry. Yeah, we need it
459 00:28:05.980 --> 00:28:07.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: click on the red thing.
460 00:28:07.550 --> 00:28:09.120 Lisa Newby: Click on the right thing. Okay.
461 00:28:09.600 --> 00:28:12.029 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I beg your pardon. You need to shut down the left hand corner.
462 00:28:12.030 --> 00:28:12.590 John Roberts: Shut.
463 00:28:12.590 --> 00:28:14.700 Lisa Newby: It's on the left side. Okay?
464 00:28:14.860 --> 00:28:17.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now now click on the red
465 00:28:18.750 --> 00:28:25.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and go into gully polygons. That's right. The 1st thing click on the pencil, Lisa, because you're going to edit it.
466 00:28:25.180 --> 00:28:25.630 Lisa Newby: Okay.
467 00:28:25.630 --> 00:28:29.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I suggest you put a name on it. Give it a name of some sort. Are you gonna call.
468 00:28:29.690 --> 00:28:32.780 Lisa Newby: Okay, let's call it toll free for now.
469 00:28:32.780 --> 00:28:33.440 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
470 00:28:34.280 --> 00:28:40.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then don't save. What you can do now is is straighten out the mess of that Pentagon. So if you.
471 00:28:40.530 --> 00:28:42.400 Lisa Newby: So I can just take that.
472 00:28:42.400 --> 00:28:43.840 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Down. Yeah, there you go
473 00:28:44.900 --> 00:28:45.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and
474 00:28:46.340 --> 00:28:49.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: go to the middle of that long line and pull that way down.
475 00:28:49.180 --> 00:28:52.629 Lisa Newby: And then I can pull that down to say, for instance.
476 00:28:54.140 --> 00:28:58.739 Lisa Newby: I think it covers there as well, and then I can pull this out over to.
477 00:28:58.740 --> 00:29:00.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You got the hang of this. This is good.
478 00:29:02.230 --> 00:29:03.249 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.
479 00:29:10.950 --> 00:29:12.000 Lisa Newby: Okay.
480 00:29:12.520 --> 00:29:13.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good.
481 00:29:13.140 --> 00:29:16.070 Lisa Newby: So it's really just going to be playing about with this, isn't it?
482 00:29:16.070 --> 00:29:20.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, so just just so we can show you how you use this. Now.
483 00:29:21.110 --> 00:29:22.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you click on, save.
484 00:29:23.050 --> 00:29:25.539 Lisa Newby: Yeah. Which is done. Okay.
485 00:29:27.190 --> 00:29:28.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right? And that
486 00:29:28.620 --> 00:29:29.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: well, that's interesting.
487 00:29:30.830 --> 00:29:33.309 John Roberts: That'll correct itself in a minute. Yeah, okay.
488 00:29:33.310 --> 00:29:35.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So now if you
489 00:29:35.770 --> 00:29:39.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: close down that left-hand column again.
490 00:29:39.000 --> 00:29:39.940 Lisa Newby: Okay.
491 00:29:40.160 --> 00:29:42.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just click once inside. Oh.
492 00:29:43.780 --> 00:29:45.989 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and wanted to do that. That's interesting.
493 00:29:46.750 --> 00:29:47.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I wonder why?
494 00:29:48.070 --> 00:29:49.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Lost that area for you?
495 00:29:51.040 --> 00:29:53.170 John Roberts: But if you, if you zoom in and out.
496 00:29:54.380 --> 00:29:55.636 Lisa Newby: Zoom in and out
497 00:29:55.950 --> 00:29:58.129 John Roberts: Yes, sometimes it will come back.
498 00:29:58.540 --> 00:30:01.380 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Really, no, you're absolutely right. Look at that. Okay.
499 00:30:01.380 --> 00:30:02.559 Lisa Newby: Today's top tip.
500 00:30:02.560 --> 00:30:05.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So what I was going to say, Lisa, is if you
501 00:30:05.600 --> 00:30:07.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: click on the red area.
502 00:30:08.240 --> 00:30:09.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just once.
503 00:30:10.260 --> 00:30:13.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now go up to your gully. Polygons on the left.
504 00:30:13.850 --> 00:30:17.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And click on that little down arrow which is data extract.
505 00:30:17.120 --> 00:30:18.659 Lisa Newby: This one here? Okay, yeah.
506 00:30:19.360 --> 00:30:21.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then extract from.
507 00:30:21.340 --> 00:30:23.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: are you going to choose gullies?
508 00:30:24.320 --> 00:30:27.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can just type in G, if you want to get there in a hurry.
509 00:30:27.690 --> 00:30:30.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, there you go. Well, maybe you don't.
510 00:30:31.790 --> 00:30:32.900 Lisa Newby: Polygons.
511 00:30:32.900 --> 00:30:33.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no, no, no, no.
512 00:30:33.990 --> 00:30:35.950 John Roberts: No no no just gullies.
513 00:30:35.950 --> 00:30:37.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: To go up
514 00:30:38.990 --> 00:30:44.280 Graham Stoddart-Stones: a bit further. Gullies it was. There you go. Just click on gullies. That's right.
515 00:30:44.330 --> 00:30:46.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now just click on, run.
516 00:30:50.590 --> 00:30:53.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And so that's the 13 gullies in that particular area.
517 00:30:53.750 --> 00:30:56.139 Lisa Newby: Okay. Okay. Brilliant.
518 00:30:56.140 --> 00:30:57.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Convenient. That's handy.
519 00:30:57.820 --> 00:30:58.910 Lisa Newby: That's brilliant.
520 00:30:59.571 --> 00:31:09.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then the last thing you want to do is, let's suppose that the person you're going to give this to is not colorblind, and you want to tell him that he's in the blue area.
521 00:31:10.340 --> 00:31:15.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you close down this table view with the X in the top right corner.
522 00:31:16.950 --> 00:31:19.280 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you close down the left hand column.
523 00:31:20.880 --> 00:31:28.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now you're going to go down to your gullies layer, which is all the way down the bottom of the parish layers. Yeah, just scroll down.
524 00:31:28.830 --> 00:31:34.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go. Oops, yeah, and click on the cog the cogwheel at the end of that line.
525 00:31:35.640 --> 00:31:37.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And go into style.
526 00:31:37.430 --> 00:31:38.450 Lisa Newby: Okay.
527 00:31:40.820 --> 00:31:48.469 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then on the 1st column. The top row is called style type, and it says, single at the moment, can you change that? To read class.
528 00:31:48.990 --> 00:31:52.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So just click on the down arrow, change it to class based.
529 00:31:52.350 --> 00:31:54.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Then in the
530 00:31:55.150 --> 00:31:59.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: past columnist, let's call it status. It'll it'll do fine.
531 00:31:59.990 --> 00:32:02.959 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if everything in there is totally blocked.
532 00:32:03.190 --> 00:32:11.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: there's going to be a red area. But if you wanted it to be nice and green for a clear area. You can change the color in that 3rd column.
533 00:32:11.830 --> 00:32:13.550 Graham Stoddart-Stones: See where it says, clear.
534 00:32:13.880 --> 00:32:14.970 Lisa Newby: Okay.
535 00:32:14.970 --> 00:32:17.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Go wrong to the right and just click on that.
536 00:32:17.570 --> 00:32:18.439 Lisa Newby: On that one there.
537 00:32:18.440 --> 00:32:19.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
538 00:32:19.390 --> 00:32:21.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now choose a nice bright green or something.
539 00:32:21.820 --> 00:32:24.320 Lisa Newby: She was agreeing. Oh, can't like that one.
540 00:32:24.320 --> 00:32:26.399 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, there you go and save save it.
541 00:32:27.150 --> 00:32:34.849 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And so now, if you go back to your diagram by clicking on, save you'll discover your area is now green.
542 00:32:36.400 --> 00:32:42.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, it actually probably isn't because we didn't actually put any data in. Well, we didn't put any data in for blocked.
543 00:32:42.990 --> 00:32:44.629 Lisa Newby: No, so it's.
544 00:32:44.630 --> 00:32:46.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on your area there
545 00:32:47.730 --> 00:32:49.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and go into gully polycoms
546 00:32:51.060 --> 00:32:53.529 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and pencil to edit it.
547 00:32:55.130 --> 00:32:59.249 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now put something into status like totally blocked, or whatever.
548 00:32:59.530 --> 00:33:00.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, there you go
549 00:33:01.180 --> 00:33:04.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: now, you can save that, and it'll change color. Accordingly.
550 00:33:05.510 --> 00:33:06.223 Lisa Newby: Cool. Okay.
551 00:33:06.960 --> 00:33:12.309 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And if you change the status to clear, then it will change color to green.
552 00:33:12.890 --> 00:33:14.480 Lisa Newby: So I need to do the pencil again.
553 00:33:14.480 --> 00:33:16.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, just
554 00:33:16.290 --> 00:33:17.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just change it to clear.
555 00:33:19.710 --> 00:33:20.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now.
556 00:33:20.720 --> 00:33:22.512 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the last thing is
557 00:33:23.460 --> 00:33:33.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that you're you're you're making this color code based upon the status, and probably in the case of dividing this up for people, you'd actually base it on name.
558 00:33:34.310 --> 00:33:40.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And this. So if you did another block that would say, say, This is Tolbury one and the other one is Tolbury, 2.
559 00:33:40.980 --> 00:33:41.610 Lisa Newby: Yeah.
560 00:33:41.820 --> 00:33:45.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Name Tolbury, one would be one color, and Tolbury 2 would be a different color.
561 00:33:45.790 --> 00:33:46.500 Lisa Newby: Okay.
562 00:33:46.500 --> 00:33:47.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All right.
563 00:33:47.290 --> 00:33:48.550 Lisa Newby: Yeah, brilliant.
564 00:33:48.550 --> 00:33:49.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay. I hope that was.
565 00:33:49.740 --> 00:33:52.699 Lisa Newby: Lovely. Thank you. It was very helpful. Thank you very much.
566 00:33:52.700 --> 00:33:55.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good, and then we can go over to Ray for his question.
567 00:33:56.390 --> 00:34:16.570 Ray Toomer: Yeah, when we spoke last week you showed me how to do a thing on public maps, which is good, fine. The only question I've got is somebody else had a legend on their public maps, and although I can get my layer on the public maps, I don't know how to get the legend
568 00:34:16.600 --> 00:34:17.810 Ray Toomer: displayed.
569 00:34:19.860 --> 00:34:20.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
570 00:34:20.190 --> 00:34:20.920 Ray Toomer: Sensible.
571 00:34:21.110 --> 00:34:22.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But oh, yeah, very much. So.
572 00:34:25.739 --> 00:34:27.229 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let me just pause.
573 00:34:27.760 --> 00:34:32.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let you chat amongst yourselves whilst they play at my end to remind myself how I did that.
574 00:34:33.320 --> 00:34:38.210 Ray Toomer: I've just got a Mickey Mouse example up. Shall I share my screen? And you.
575 00:34:38.219 --> 00:34:39.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Please please do, Ray. Yes.
576 00:34:39.679 --> 00:34:41.029 Ray Toomer: Say, I've tried this.
577 00:34:46.480 --> 00:34:54.119 Graham Stoddart-Stones: John, whilst we're waiting, do you want to make your announcement about your answer from Somerset Council about the
578 00:34:54.190 --> 00:34:56.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Jpgs in
579 00:34:56.110 --> 00:34:57.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Table View?
580 00:34:57.900 --> 00:34:59.440 John Roberts: The gullies. Yeah.
581 00:34:59.440 --> 00:35:00.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, yes.
582 00:35:00.830 --> 00:35:05.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: cause we. We noticed that we someone pointed out that there were pictures attached to everyone.
583 00:35:07.270 --> 00:35:13.749 John Roberts: we. I spoke to Alice and Ned regarding the pictures that are indicated on
584 00:35:14.080 --> 00:35:15.209 John Roberts: on the gullies
585 00:35:15.480 --> 00:35:17.080 John Roberts: as attachments.
586 00:35:17.590 --> 00:35:19.430 John Roberts: These, apparently, were
587 00:35:20.090 --> 00:35:25.360 John Roberts: the photographs taken by the contractors to prove that they've done the work. Basically.
588 00:35:25.790 --> 00:35:31.939 John Roberts: they no longer exist, and that option shouldn't have actually been included when it was passed over.
589 00:35:32.430 --> 00:35:33.360 John Roberts: So
590 00:35:34.860 --> 00:35:38.720 John Roberts: basic answer is, don't go looking for the photographs because they're not there.
591 00:35:39.160 --> 00:35:40.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's that's good.
592 00:35:43.630 --> 00:35:44.495 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Alright!
593 00:35:45.360 --> 00:35:59.671 Ray Toomer: So I've got a public view here, and I've got these data points. And what I'd like to do is to have a legend that tells me what each of these different colors means.
594 00:36:01.670 --> 00:36:06.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think, as I recall, the way to do this is to go ahead and edit this.
595 00:36:07.224 --> 00:36:11.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you go back into your parish online, that left hand tab.
596 00:36:12.660 --> 00:36:14.420 Ray Toomer: Yeah. So we've got if.
597 00:36:14.420 --> 00:36:18.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Public maps. Yep, and then click on the example map
598 00:36:19.000 --> 00:36:20.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and now click on the pencil.
599 00:36:22.690 --> 00:36:23.310 Ray Toomer: Yeah.
600 00:36:23.770 --> 00:36:28.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then you can go through the fact. Always just click on next, because you're not changing anything here.
601 00:36:28.500 --> 00:36:30.930 Ray Toomer: Next, next.
602 00:36:31.520 --> 00:36:34.459 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Next yeah. Next again. Next again.
603 00:36:34.460 --> 00:36:35.320 Ray Toomer: Same, yet.
604 00:36:35.490 --> 00:36:36.650 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then stop.
605 00:36:37.110 --> 00:36:40.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And why don't we see it
606 00:36:40.930 --> 00:36:42.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: there?
607 00:36:47.540 --> 00:36:50.280 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think we need to go back to the
608 00:36:50.780 --> 00:36:57.799 Graham Stoddart-Stones: layer itself that you're showing here. So if you come out of here with just you can click on cancel or save Ray doesn't matter which.
609 00:36:58.070 --> 00:37:02.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and go back. Go back to the maps with clicking on the globe.
610 00:37:03.260 --> 00:37:06.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, you could do this. Which layer are you using? Yeah, that's.
611 00:37:06.560 --> 00:37:09.409 Ray Toomer: So if I come here I kinda.
612 00:37:09.590 --> 00:37:12.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can do it under layers if you go and click on my layer.
613 00:37:14.240 --> 00:37:16.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Was it the butterflies that you were showing.
614 00:37:16.240 --> 00:37:18.150 Ray Toomer: Yeah. Actually, should I go?
615 00:37:18.710 --> 00:37:20.529 Ray Toomer: Is it the globe up at the top right.
616 00:37:20.530 --> 00:37:22.009 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We? Yes, that one. Yeah.
617 00:37:22.010 --> 00:37:22.780 Ray Toomer: Okay.
618 00:37:27.430 --> 00:37:30.010 Ray Toomer: okay, so it should be in here.
619 00:37:32.780 --> 00:37:34.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, but you need you. Hmm.
620 00:37:35.360 --> 00:37:37.909 Ray Toomer: So if I just zoom in a bit.
621 00:37:40.445 --> 00:37:41.300 Ray Toomer: Yeah.
622 00:37:41.300 --> 00:37:50.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you click on style there, so go along to the tick at the end of your parish layer and change it to a cogwheel there, and you go into style.
623 00:37:53.990 --> 00:37:58.559 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm trying to remember if there's a choice for legend there. No, I don't see that.
624 00:38:00.670 --> 00:38:02.189 John Roberts: Would it be under the column.
625 00:38:03.770 --> 00:38:09.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Underwear. It might be, John. I'm just actually stuck for remembering this.
626 00:38:09.730 --> 00:38:12.620 John Roberts: So am I, while I'm desperately trying to find it while you're talking.
627 00:38:14.180 --> 00:38:22.070 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I was hoping that you were going to talk, and I if you come out of here again, click on cancel.
628 00:38:22.070 --> 00:38:23.300 Ray Toomer: Yeah.
629 00:38:24.730 --> 00:38:25.465 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And
630 00:38:26.750 --> 00:38:30.819 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just out of interest. Could you go out and click on print.
631 00:38:31.680 --> 00:38:32.590 Ray Toomer: Yep.
632 00:38:32.820 --> 00:38:33.770 Ray Toomer: Print.
633 00:38:33.770 --> 00:38:35.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then see the choice.
634 00:38:36.082 --> 00:38:36.660 Ray Toomer: Way to go.
635 00:38:36.660 --> 00:38:37.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You've got legend.
636 00:38:38.250 --> 00:38:38.820 Ray Toomer: Interesting.
637 00:38:38.820 --> 00:38:39.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And
638 00:38:40.290 --> 00:38:42.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if you now print that
639 00:38:47.460 --> 00:38:54.019 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and bear with it because it's just doing all this up in the cloud, there you go! Click on the Little Arrow Square.
640 00:38:54.760 --> 00:38:55.559 Ray Toomer: This one here.
641 00:38:55.560 --> 00:38:56.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
642 00:38:57.960 --> 00:39:00.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So there's your legend on the right hand side.
643 00:39:00.670 --> 00:39:03.279 Ray Toomer: That's right. So that's on a.
644 00:39:03.610 --> 00:39:08.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's not a printout. I'm just trying to see whether it does anything for the the
645 00:39:09.470 --> 00:39:13.539 Graham Stoddart-Stones: public map as well, because I do know there is choice of putting legends on there.
646 00:39:14.563 --> 00:39:17.249 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if we go back now to
647 00:39:17.560 --> 00:39:18.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: your
648 00:39:19.460 --> 00:39:22.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: left hand choice. Yeah. Parish online.
649 00:39:22.690 --> 00:39:24.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: come out of come out of print.
650 00:39:24.890 --> 00:39:27.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on the X at the top. Yeah.
651 00:39:28.530 --> 00:39:35.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and go into your public map on the X cogwheel in the top right corner and select administration.
652 00:39:43.050 --> 00:39:44.510 Ray Toomer: Doesn't seem to.
653 00:39:44.510 --> 00:39:48.279 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click it. Oh, you've probably got the. You've got our photographs in the way.
654 00:39:48.280 --> 00:39:49.250 Ray Toomer: That's right. Yeah.
655 00:39:49.250 --> 00:39:50.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, there you go. Yeah.
656 00:39:53.160 --> 00:39:54.700 Ray Toomer: So public maps.
657 00:39:54.700 --> 00:39:56.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, complement.
658 00:39:56.980 --> 00:39:58.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just click on that.
659 00:39:59.770 --> 00:40:01.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And.
660 00:40:02.170 --> 00:40:02.819 chris edwards: Please don't.
661 00:40:03.100 --> 00:40:04.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Give you.
662 00:40:08.680 --> 00:40:11.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and if you click on the
663 00:40:12.260 --> 00:40:15.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Pitney parish butterflies, legend does that.
664 00:40:16.252 --> 00:40:17.579 Ray Toomer: On this one here.
665 00:40:17.580 --> 00:40:19.289 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, yeah, does it do anything?
666 00:40:19.520 --> 00:40:20.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, just.
667 00:40:20.310 --> 00:40:23.149 Ray Toomer: Just switches them off and on, which is fine.
668 00:40:23.150 --> 00:40:25.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But were, but not the legend itself.
669 00:40:25.240 --> 00:40:30.329 Ray Toomer: I've yeah. It seems like the legend should be an additional.
670 00:40:30.330 --> 00:40:31.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
671 00:40:33.040 --> 00:40:37.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: well, let's see if we can find someone who can chat cheerfully whilst I help
672 00:40:37.590 --> 00:40:39.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: work with John to find this.
673 00:40:40.900 --> 00:40:42.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I really got to remember. But
674 00:40:42.960 --> 00:40:47.549 Graham Stoddart-Stones: let's just do an interesting example. Test Ray with you.
675 00:40:47.610 --> 00:40:50.576 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you click on the
676 00:40:54.700 --> 00:40:58.230 Graham Stoddart-Stones: click on the map symbol, the global symbol. In the middle of the 3 icons.
677 00:40:59.770 --> 00:41:00.530 Ray Toomer: Top. Here, yeah.
678 00:41:00.530 --> 00:41:01.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
679 00:41:01.060 --> 00:41:02.129 Ray Toomer: Back to maps.
680 00:41:02.130 --> 00:41:03.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup go back to maps.
681 00:41:08.940 --> 00:41:11.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now I just forgot what I was going to do. What was it going to do?
682 00:41:12.310 --> 00:41:16.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yes, sorry. Go click on the cogwiggle at the top. Right
683 00:41:18.710 --> 00:41:20.659 Graham Stoddart-Stones: go into help and support.
684 00:41:23.110 --> 00:41:25.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And in the search box
685 00:41:25.640 --> 00:41:27.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: type legend.
686 00:41:29.770 --> 00:41:31.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: there you go. So
687 00:41:32.450 --> 00:41:33.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: click on that. Yeah.
688 00:41:33.860 --> 00:41:35.349 Ray Toomer: Which one, this one here.
689 00:41:35.350 --> 00:41:36.879 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The green, the green one. Yeah. The first.st
690 00:41:36.880 --> 00:41:38.042 Ray Toomer: Yeah. 1st one.
691 00:41:40.750 --> 00:41:43.479 Ray Toomer: Yeah, I think I did
692 00:41:43.910 --> 00:41:46.000 Ray Toomer: try this.
693 00:41:46.080 --> 00:41:50.729 Ray Toomer: and of course it brings the legend up whilst you're viewing and mapping your layers.
694 00:41:51.600 --> 00:41:54.780 Ray Toomer: but it was specifically to do with the
695 00:41:55.600 --> 00:41:58.449 Ray Toomer: the public maps. I couldn't seem to find any.
696 00:41:58.450 --> 00:42:03.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, that's what I was hoping you would tell us something. In the meantime, legend in your printouts. Yep.
697 00:42:07.600 --> 00:42:10.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and if you go into public map.
698 00:42:10.190 --> 00:42:14.149 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just click on the search article at the top and type public map
699 00:42:15.310 --> 00:42:17.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: box at the top right?
700 00:42:17.600 --> 00:42:20.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Or maybe you've got the.
701 00:42:21.570 --> 00:42:25.039 Stuart Bacon: Go back to the top and type in legend again.
702 00:42:27.160 --> 00:42:30.796 Graham Stoddart-Stones: See, there's a box marked Search Article Ray, or is is your
703 00:42:32.100 --> 00:42:34.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: zoom tool in the way there
704 00:42:37.560 --> 00:42:39.359 Graham Stoddart-Stones: arrays frozen? I think
705 00:42:39.510 --> 00:42:40.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: we lost him.
706 00:42:40.980 --> 00:42:42.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, we've lost Ray.
707 00:42:49.200 --> 00:42:51.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nope. Oh, Bob, it was nice to see you.
708 00:42:51.400 --> 00:42:54.560 Bob Grainger: Yeah, sorry I have to leave at this time.
709 00:42:54.560 --> 00:42:56.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You have to go and get the fruitcake out of the oven.
710 00:42:56.610 --> 00:43:04.129 Bob Grainger: I've just eaten the fruitcake while I turn my camera off to eat the fruitcake. Cheerio! People.
711 00:43:04.130 --> 00:43:05.090 chris edwards: They gave up.
712 00:43:06.070 --> 00:43:06.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Have.
713 00:43:08.270 --> 00:43:10.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, John, we haven't found anything yet.
714 00:43:11.590 --> 00:43:14.309 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I do think I have either see what I can do.
715 00:43:30.240 --> 00:43:30.920 John Roberts: Nope.
716 00:43:32.630 --> 00:43:34.149 John Roberts: I've forgotten how to do it.
717 00:43:35.160 --> 00:43:38.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There is a way, isn't there? I'm pretty sure that
718 00:43:39.900 --> 00:43:40.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: right.
719 00:43:40.750 --> 00:43:41.819 John Roberts: Yeah, hang on
720 00:43:58.630 --> 00:43:59.999 John Roberts: when you go.
721 00:44:11.670 --> 00:44:17.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I was sure I've seen a under the Layers column. It tells you what the legend is.
722 00:44:22.940 --> 00:44:31.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, whilst we're just checking this, let me ask if anybody else has got any questions that can occupy us whilst we're ferreting out the answer to this one.
723 00:44:36.650 --> 00:44:40.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So the onus is really on your shoulders, Lisa, as the newcomer you have.
724 00:44:40.670 --> 00:44:41.000 Lisa Newby: You go.
725 00:44:41.000 --> 00:44:42.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Up with all the questions today.
726 00:44:45.920 --> 00:44:47.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nothing else puzzling you.
727 00:44:48.340 --> 00:44:52.769 Lisa Newby: So just thinking about this gullies map in these areas. How
728 00:44:52.870 --> 00:44:54.849 Lisa Newby: big an area.
729 00:44:55.610 --> 00:45:00.340 Lisa Newby: do you think would be appropriate for one councillor to have a little look at.
730 00:45:00.670 --> 00:45:02.429 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I would do it on a gully, count.
731 00:45:02.650 --> 00:45:06.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You say each councillor can look after what 50 gullies say.
732 00:45:06.980 --> 00:45:07.690 Lisa Newby: Time.
733 00:45:07.690 --> 00:45:08.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Break the- the map.
734 00:45:08.940 --> 00:45:14.530 Lisa Newby: I've got 700, and was it 793 or 783. And I've got 13 counselors
735 00:45:14.620 --> 00:45:21.339 Lisa Newby: bearing in mind as a rule of thumb. You've probably got a 3, rd maybe a quarter of which won't want to do that
736 00:45:21.530 --> 00:45:27.719 Lisa Newby: because their area of interest lies elsewhere. So I'm potentially divising it between 8
737 00:45:28.230 --> 00:45:31.100 Lisa Newby: could probably rope in some members of the public as well.
738 00:45:31.330 --> 00:45:33.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, if you make it simple, and and call it 10.
739 00:45:33.890 --> 00:45:34.400 Lisa Newby: And.
740 00:45:34.400 --> 00:45:36.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Say we need 78 gullies per.
741 00:45:36.870 --> 00:45:43.160 Lisa Newby: Per person. Yeah. And in the 1st instance, it's really only reporting the blocked ones. So we can.
742 00:45:43.730 --> 00:45:46.999 Lisa Newby: So I think I'm using that as a test, really, because
743 00:45:48.220 --> 00:45:53.389 Lisa Newby: I want to find out from the enhanced highways maintenance scheme
744 00:45:53.630 --> 00:45:54.600 Lisa Newby: who
745 00:45:55.610 --> 00:45:59.070 Lisa Newby: have got this other system. I want to find out when
746 00:45:59.240 --> 00:46:03.449 Lisa Newby: Somerset are next due to do some of those gullies, because we're not paying for those.
747 00:46:03.720 --> 00:46:07.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you know what might be very helpful to your people is.
748 00:46:08.200 --> 00:46:08.779 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you know.
749 00:46:08.920 --> 00:46:13.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: teach them that they can bring up parish online on their phones.
750 00:46:13.550 --> 00:46:27.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then they can walk around with the gullies layer turned on, and they'll know the identity of each gully as they're looking at it, because one of your questions is going to be from people is to which gully is blocked and which one is unblocked. How do you know?
751 00:46:28.400 --> 00:46:30.939 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And if they have the map in front of them.
752 00:46:31.700 --> 00:46:37.679 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then they can actually pick out zoom in exactly on the one that they're looking at and ask for its id number.
753 00:46:39.900 --> 00:46:41.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: because if you give them the map
754 00:46:42.110 --> 00:46:47.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't think it'll it'll have the id number visible. You didn't have enough room to put the Id numbers on there.
755 00:46:47.720 --> 00:46:48.460 Lisa Newby: No.
756 00:46:49.180 --> 00:46:51.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But if they have the map on their phones.
757 00:46:51.880 --> 00:46:55.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then they can just very easily identify which one they're looking at, and they can see.
758 00:46:55.740 --> 00:46:59.850 Lisa Newby: So they would just have it open in a browser. There's no parish online app, is there?
759 00:46:59.850 --> 00:47:00.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Correct.
760 00:47:00.190 --> 00:47:00.650 Lisa Newby: Exactly.
761 00:47:00.650 --> 00:47:01.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Zoom in a browser.
762 00:47:02.540 --> 00:47:04.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And then there's the option
763 00:47:05.120 --> 00:47:11.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that that whole exercise is called geolocation, as far as parish online is concerned.
764 00:47:11.920 --> 00:47:17.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But one of the things you have to do is turn on the GPS in geolocation.
765 00:47:17.980 --> 00:47:18.400 Lisa Newby: One g.
766 00:47:18.400 --> 00:47:24.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And that means that as they move around so the parish online map will move with them, just like Google Maps does.
767 00:47:24.860 --> 00:47:28.920 Lisa Newby: Is that something that they need to do individually on their phone? Or is it something I do like.
768 00:47:28.920 --> 00:47:30.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, it's just a choice.
769 00:47:30.880 --> 00:47:31.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But
770 00:47:33.660 --> 00:47:38.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: you won't be aware of this, Lisa. But there is the most fantastic training program open to people.
771 00:47:40.306 --> 00:47:46.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Where we. We do one entirely based on geolocation, because it's a fun exercise to do if you like.
772 00:47:49.380 --> 00:47:51.870 Lisa Newby: And where's that online? Is it all
773 00:47:52.080 --> 00:47:52.700 Lisa Newby: is that.
774 00:47:52.700 --> 00:47:56.573 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'll I'll send you the address. I'll put it in the chat. In fact.
775 00:47:59.910 --> 00:48:04.559 chris edwards: This will probably not answer the question, Lisa, but if I can share
776 00:48:04.740 --> 00:48:09.390 chris edwards: my screen just just for a brief moment.
777 00:48:12.320 --> 00:48:15.290 chris edwards: If you come down to
778 00:48:15.480 --> 00:48:17.509 chris edwards: the bottom of all the layers.
779 00:48:17.940 --> 00:48:19.320 chris edwards: Towards the bottom
780 00:48:19.340 --> 00:48:22.819 chris edwards: group. Osgb.
781 00:48:22.820 --> 00:48:23.160 Lisa Newby: Yeah.
782 00:48:23.160 --> 00:48:26.700 chris edwards: Go down to the bottom. I know this is a bigger area than you would want.
783 00:48:29.540 --> 00:48:34.319 chris edwards: You can divide up into these one kilometre squares.
784 00:48:34.320 --> 00:48:35.500 Lisa Newby: Okay. Yeah.
785 00:48:35.500 --> 00:48:38.800 chris edwards: There's that possibility. I mean, it would be great if they did.
786 00:48:38.860 --> 00:48:42.199 chris edwards: Half half a kilometer squared. Yeah.
787 00:48:42.200 --> 00:48:44.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Very simple for Lisa to add
788 00:48:44.840 --> 00:48:48.399 Graham Stoddart-Stones: a straight line that just divides each of these up into 10.
789 00:48:48.400 --> 00:48:49.150 Lisa Newby: So we know that.
790 00:48:49.150 --> 00:48:49.870 chris edwards: Yeah.
791 00:48:50.710 --> 00:48:52.429 chris edwards: Anyway, just an idea.
792 00:48:52.430 --> 00:48:54.280 Lisa Newby: Okay, no, that's brilliant, thank you.
793 00:48:55.320 --> 00:49:00.288 Lisa Newby: Every day is a school day, isn't it? With Paris online.
794 00:49:02.300 --> 00:49:03.220 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yeah.
795 00:49:03.220 --> 00:49:07.400 Lisa Newby: It is, it is very much so. Yeah, no, that's really helpful. Thank you.
796 00:49:08.340 --> 00:49:08.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right
797 00:49:11.050 --> 00:49:12.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: your turn, Chris.
798 00:49:13.480 --> 00:49:15.929 chris edwards: Well, now, I've got a query which
799 00:49:16.000 --> 00:49:20.269 chris edwards: I don't think you might be able to help. But let me just explain.
800 00:49:20.738 --> 00:49:23.320 chris edwards: I use my tablet quite a lot.
801 00:49:24.020 --> 00:49:26.719 chris edwards: When I turn on parish online.
802 00:49:27.554 --> 00:49:30.019 chris edwards: I can zoom in and out of the map.
803 00:49:30.150 --> 00:49:34.399 chris edwards: but I can't pan left or right, or up or down.
804 00:49:34.860 --> 00:49:35.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Really.
805 00:49:35.860 --> 00:49:37.989 chris edwards: I don't know how to correct this.
806 00:49:39.576 --> 00:49:44.979 chris edwards: only it only involves my tablet, which is a almost a brand new one.
807 00:49:45.800 --> 00:49:48.590 chris edwards: Any any offers of help.
808 00:49:49.220 --> 00:49:52.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm just turning on my tablet now to see if I can.
809 00:49:52.500 --> 00:49:54.000 chris edwards: Oh, good! Thank you!
810 00:49:54.380 --> 00:49:55.460 chris edwards: With the.
811 00:49:57.690 --> 00:50:05.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It'll take a while. So by all means come up with something else. If anyone else got a point or a question or a matter of interest, Stewart, you've been remarkably silent this week.
812 00:50:08.960 --> 00:50:17.091 Stuart Bacon: No? Well, say, I was trying to say something earlier on the the layers stuff
813 00:50:18.825 --> 00:50:19.529 Stuart Bacon: which
814 00:50:19.730 --> 00:50:20.850 Stuart Bacon: come back
815 00:50:21.530 --> 00:50:25.030 Stuart Bacon: show you in terms of what I've got.
816 00:50:26.510 --> 00:50:29.381 Stuart Bacon: We'd let the layers
817 00:50:30.580 --> 00:50:32.490 Stuart Bacon: in my public maps.
818 00:50:32.550 --> 00:50:35.689 Stuart Bacon: I've just turned click on the the preview.
819 00:50:37.695 --> 00:50:39.289 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's got the legend down there.
820 00:50:39.290 --> 00:50:41.390 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, the legend appears. Then
821 00:50:41.430 --> 00:50:43.889 Stuart Bacon: on the left hand, side by clicking the
822 00:50:44.050 --> 00:50:44.980 Stuart Bacon: the little.
823 00:50:46.190 --> 00:50:56.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you if you scroll down, Stuart, because it's not clear that there you go so people can see. So I think the answer is, you'll get the legend if you've got
824 00:50:57.022 --> 00:51:00.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: different items in the layers that you selected
825 00:51:01.770 --> 00:51:03.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so for Ray.
826 00:51:04.330 --> 00:51:07.539 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, Ray, we've lost. Ray hasn't come back yet, is he?
827 00:51:09.180 --> 00:51:16.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I wonder whether his layer doesn't contain anything that that's icons, isn't it? You've got there.
828 00:51:16.330 --> 00:51:16.960 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
829 00:51:16.960 --> 00:51:19.559 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I wonder if it's Icon based? If it's
830 00:51:19.780 --> 00:51:25.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: do you have another layer that you could try this on, Stuart? That doesn't use icons that uses just.
831 00:51:26.330 --> 00:51:26.970 Stuart Bacon: Oh!
832 00:51:26.970 --> 00:51:28.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Class map or something.
833 00:51:29.200 --> 00:51:30.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, that's good!
834 00:51:31.340 --> 00:51:33.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's again icons, though, isn't it?
835 00:51:33.730 --> 00:51:36.769 Stuart Bacon: That's all icons. Yeah, I'm just trying to think if there was anything
836 00:51:39.250 --> 00:51:40.639 Stuart Bacon: land ownership
837 00:51:41.690 --> 00:51:42.780 Stuart Bacon: just that.
838 00:51:42.780 --> 00:51:44.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, I can't say woo!
839 00:51:45.150 --> 00:51:46.170 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That was good.
840 00:51:48.330 --> 00:51:49.120 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, so.
841 00:51:49.120 --> 00:51:51.689 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The legend is very nice. There, that's great.
842 00:51:53.650 --> 00:51:54.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think
843 00:51:55.360 --> 00:52:00.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm gonna have to go back to Ray when he comes back on, or if he comes back on, and just
844 00:52:01.110 --> 00:52:03.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: see how he's got his colours coded.
845 00:52:05.113 --> 00:52:06.096 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
846 00:52:07.380 --> 00:52:09.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that's very useful, Stuart. Thank you.
847 00:52:10.319 --> 00:52:14.109 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Sorry, John Chris. I was just. I lost track of.
848 00:52:14.110 --> 00:52:15.070 chris edwards: That's all. Good.
849 00:52:15.070 --> 00:52:17.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Time in my excitement. Let's see if we can come up with this.
850 00:52:46.390 --> 00:52:48.280 John Roberts: Trying what Stuart was doing.
851 00:52:48.560 --> 00:52:55.730 John Roberts: If I've got more than one category, or whatever I can get a legend, if it's a single entity. No, I can't.
852 00:52:55.730 --> 00:52:58.600 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, that's what it. I think it's automatic. Once you've got the.
853 00:52:58.600 --> 00:52:59.240 John Roberts: Yeah.
854 00:53:02.040 --> 00:53:04.210 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Everyone got a
855 00:53:05.030 --> 00:53:06.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Paris online at the moment. What's the.
856 00:53:06.620 --> 00:53:08.040 chris edwards: I've got. I've got.
857 00:53:08.040 --> 00:53:08.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Address.
858 00:53:09.480 --> 00:53:11.239 chris edwards: I don't know whether you can see this.
859 00:53:11.240 --> 00:53:14.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The cloud dot x mount dot, whatever it is.
860 00:53:14.570 --> 00:53:16.809 Stuart Bacon: Irishonline, dot, Xmark, dot, cloud.
861 00:53:16.810 --> 00:53:18.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Thank you. That's what I'm looking for.
862 00:53:22.750 --> 00:53:23.510 chris edwards: No
863 00:53:23.820 --> 00:53:25.340 chris edwards: too much reflections.
864 00:53:45.150 --> 00:53:46.470 John Roberts: The only other way.
865 00:53:46.780 --> 00:53:47.750 John Roberts: Oh.
866 00:53:48.890 --> 00:53:52.149 John Roberts: if he wants, if he got a single entity he wants. A legend
867 00:53:52.690 --> 00:53:57.490 John Roberts: is to create another layer just for that legend like we did once before.
868 00:54:20.570 --> 00:54:21.689 John Roberts: It's all gone quiet.
869 00:54:22.160 --> 00:54:26.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I'm sorry. I'm just flashing up my cloud machine to see if I can get
870 00:55:18.240 --> 00:55:21.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so, Chris, what was your question when you were doing.
871 00:55:21.760 --> 00:55:24.665 chris edwards: Well, I'm using a tablet with
872 00:55:25.270 --> 00:55:31.369 chris edwards: parish online. I can zoom in and out, but I can't pan to the left or right, or up or down.
873 00:55:44.100 --> 00:55:47.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, mine, I'm afraid, which is an android tablet.
874 00:55:48.550 --> 00:55:49.500 chris edwards: So is mine.
875 00:55:49.500 --> 00:55:55.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It works exactly as you'd expect. You move your finger, and it'll go to the right and you move your finger. It'll go to the left.
876 00:55:55.290 --> 00:55:56.180 chris edwards: Okay.
877 00:55:56.630 --> 00:56:01.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And are you using a mouse on your tablet, or you're using your hand.
878 00:56:01.450 --> 00:56:04.190 chris edwards: Using my fingers.
879 00:56:04.190 --> 00:56:07.749 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What happens if you hold your finger and just slide it sideways
880 00:56:08.160 --> 00:56:08.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: on the map.
881 00:56:08.720 --> 00:56:10.400 chris edwards: The map does not move.
882 00:56:11.530 --> 00:56:14.210 Malcolm Daniels: Try using 2 fingers.
883 00:56:15.190 --> 00:56:17.564 chris edwards: I'll try that. Thank you.
884 00:56:18.550 --> 00:56:19.439 chris edwards: for today.
885 00:56:20.570 --> 00:56:22.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Did you say it does zoom in.
886 00:56:23.340 --> 00:56:25.059 chris edwards: Zooms in and out.
887 00:56:25.240 --> 00:56:25.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
888 00:56:26.260 --> 00:56:26.880 chris edwards: Oh.
889 00:56:27.550 --> 00:56:29.130 chris edwards: that has helped.
890 00:56:29.990 --> 00:56:30.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Great.
891 00:56:30.350 --> 00:56:32.539 chris edwards: Is that Malcolm, who suggested that.
892 00:56:32.540 --> 00:56:32.920 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
893 00:56:33.300 --> 00:56:34.420 chris edwards: Fantastic.
894 00:56:34.740 --> 00:56:37.649 chris edwards: I can now move left, right up, down.
895 00:56:38.500 --> 00:56:39.693 chris edwards: Oh, wonderful!
896 00:56:40.290 --> 00:56:41.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hold on, Malcolm.
897 00:56:41.490 --> 00:56:42.220 chris edwards: Yeah.
898 00:56:42.760 --> 00:56:48.406 chris edwards: so here's my, here's my 2 fingers, Malcolm. So thank you very much.
899 00:56:48.810 --> 00:56:50.439 Malcolm Daniels: I am of some use, son.
900 00:56:50.740 --> 00:56:51.640 chris edwards: Yes, of course.
901 00:56:51.640 --> 00:56:52.849 John Roberts: You always were.
902 00:56:54.220 --> 00:56:55.190 chris edwards: Brilliant.
903 00:56:56.750 --> 00:56:58.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Experience, shows.
904 00:56:58.690 --> 00:56:59.440 chris edwards: Yeah.
905 00:56:59.740 --> 00:57:00.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good
906 00:57:01.136 --> 00:57:07.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so we've answered all the questions we've lost, Ray. But I'll send him an email afterwards, explaining what he needs to do
907 00:57:08.471 --> 00:57:14.049 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and does anybody else have any more questions or points you'd like to raise? Please.
908 00:57:14.420 --> 00:57:15.500 John Roberts: Not today, sir.
909 00:57:15.720 --> 00:57:16.589 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All right. Well.
910 00:57:16.590 --> 00:57:25.190 chris edwards: Can I just say to John? Thank you very much for reminding me about the meeting, answered, it's a Careford community hall.
911 00:57:25.800 --> 00:57:27.200 John Roberts: Right, yeah.
912 00:57:27.380 --> 00:57:28.620 chris edwards: That's great. Thank you.
913 00:57:29.160 --> 00:57:30.040 John Roberts: All right. Cheers.
914 00:57:30.640 --> 00:57:33.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, thank you all for joining us, Lisa. I hope we see you again.
915 00:57:33.940 --> 00:57:40.390 Lisa Newby: Yeah, thank you very much. And thanks for sending through that link. Graham. That's really really helpful. No, thank you all very much. It's been good.
916 00:57:40.390 --> 00:57:40.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All have.
917 00:57:40.950 --> 00:57:41.320 John Roberts: Bye, bye.
918 00:57:41.610 --> 00:57:42.480 chris edwards: Okay? Bye.
919 00:57:42.480 --> 00:57:43.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Take care!