26 de agosto de 2020

A review on iNaturalist's Seek

I found this app after I decided to join iNaturalist a few months ago. It's an app that lets one identify a species by snapping pictures of it. Be it an animal, plant, fungi, you name it.

I found Seek quite useful, and to be honest, I'm surprised that by this app, most of the organisms I often see in my neighbourhood are way more diverse than I previously thought. This is especially true for plants (as this journal is written, I've identified approximately 190 species of plants). And thanks to Seek's identification, it's easier to find how to grow and care for plants now, although whenever it got stuck, Google Lens will do the job.

At the first months of using Seek, the app had few features: one of the most notable features that's missing is a search bar in 'My Observations'. The lack of this feature forced me to scroll for a long time to review some of my observations. It might not be a nuisance for some of you, but speaking of UX (user experience), it is.

Seek also has issues regarding identifying several species. At one occasion, it mistook a guppy as a Siamese fighting fish/betta. It also mistook a couple more, but since it was too much, I'd rather not list 'em here. You get the idea.

I wrote some criticism and suggestions on a Seek-related forum, which include inclusion of a search bar in 'My Observations' and improvement in identifying. It seems (IDK whether this is true or just pure coincidence) the dev heard me; now there is a search bar in 'My Observations'. Also, in 'Challenges', the app lets you know which species you've identified that matches the badge's requirements, so you don't have to ID the same species more than once (with observation list as long as a playlist, it'll be hard to keep on track in which species that have been ID'd). Oh, I also wrote something about 'replacing photos of a species', since I found it annoying to capture a photo of a species, and the photo ended up looking like 'an accidental selfie' and it takes long to replace the photo. If you capture a quick-moving species, well, best of luck with this nuisance. But now, 'Replace Old Photo' has become my best companion.

While it seems to keep struggling to identify a couple of species, there are lots of improvements in Seek. I highly appreciate the efforts the dev took to improve the UX of the app. Just don't stop being awesome. There are lots of similar apps like this (esp. the aforementioned Google Lens or PictureThis), but I'll stick to Seek. It brings the same joy naturalists in Victorian era also experienced - collecting and curating them.

Here are some observations I did with Seek's help:

Publicado el agosto 26, 2020 04:15 MAÑANA por vagabond46 vagabond46 | 6 observaciones | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

15 de julio de 2020

A bit about Lissachatina fulica

It turns out that Lissachatina fulica, the snail species I always encounter in fields, gardens, and even roadsides, is an African animal. True to its name, African giant snail become the only land snail species I often encounter, mostly on areas with high humidity level and lush vegetation. When I was little, I remember I took one home and fed it fish pellets. Crunch, crunch...

The species is widespread, as I saw them in areas outside Jakarta's urban area - Bogor, Legian, Yogyakarta, etc. They are so abundant that apparently, I mistook a native species (Amphidromus sp.) as a 'leucitic' variant of African giant snail.

This large snail is voracious, as I fed some of them quite recently with fresh salads, and breed like crazy (lots of hatchlings in my garden that I had to control their population to prevent them eating seedlings). But I think regardless what species, land snails remain a mild threat to my garden.

Publicado el julio 15, 2020 11:37 MAÑANA por vagabond46 vagabond46 | 3 observaciones | 0 comentarios | Deja un comentario

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