This only covers container ships btw. For full coverage of all vessels, try the 'vessel presence' layer in Global Fishing Watch's interactive map, based on a feed from Spire: https://globalfishingwatch.org/map/
It almost seems like I could have lived life as a trader and traveled the seas. Don’t know the type of money involved, and I guess I wouldn’t even know where to begin doing that in real life. So much easier in video games.
I’d just be a simple TEMU hauler, no fuss, simple life. Travel the world, catch some fish.
Years ago I used to subscribe to a service that did this for oil tankers and tried to estimate oil to each route, they wrote a weekly summary. Eventually they decided they only wanted enterprise clients and not people like me who, working in devops, had no need for this service at all and only paid the $20 a month out of some weird fascination
I once worked on a problem: GPS tracking shipping containers, since one company had almost 1% lost/stolen each year. I had an idea of using AIS with Si4362 to get positioning data from the container ship itself, but it was nearly impossible to get access to reefer monitoring systems. We ended up just using 4G NB-IoT for coastal tracking and it did solve the problem
Seems regionally biased. This map makes it look like the Americas barely see any ship traffic, while the South China Sea is paved with ships from shore to shore.
Interesting, a cool resource for an API endpoint for AIS data so aisstream.io. Seems quite solid. Any one any idea of a good resource for satellite AIS data - I feel like the EU probably funded it and I can’t find anything on capricious etc.
Military ships don't run their radio beacons in combat zones. (There was an incident last year where the USS Theodore Roosevelt collided with a civilian cargo ship at night at least partially because it tried to approach the Suez canal with it's beacon off.)
Off topic, but I hope the UX improves. It's almost unusable.
Clicking on anything is an error-prone mess and then it hijacks the back button by changing the URL. That would be better off as a simple "share" link somewhere in the popup.
This seems useful speculating on short term oil prices. I believe the straight of hormuz may be closed or rumor of closing. Every expert seems to think that will spike oil prices.
These tools went mainstream when the Houthis started hitting container ships. Watching AIS transponders go dark or vessels suddenly diverting around the Cape was something you just couldn't get from news coverage. And with Hormuz tensions right now, the real-time value is even higher.
ltrg|5 hours ago
joezydeco|1 hour ago
cess11|4 hours ago
https://www.vesselfinder.com/
general_reveal|29 minutes ago
I’d just be a simple TEMU hauler, no fuss, simple life. Travel the world, catch some fish.
dwedge|2 hours ago
urba_|1 hour ago
throw0101c|6 hours ago
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercator_projection
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gall–Peters_projection
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cylindrical_equal-area_project...
twocommits|1 hour ago
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victorbjorklund|7 hours ago
unknown|7 hours ago
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n2j3|7 hours ago
wodenokoto|7 hours ago
sgt|9 hours ago
jameshart|6 hours ago
Levitating|6 hours ago
I'll prefer vesselfinder for marinetraffic.
gehsty|5 hours ago
dmarinus|5 hours ago
gerry_shaw|5 hours ago
amelius|3 hours ago
appointment|56 minutes ago
sublinear|1 hour ago
Clicking on anything is an error-prone mess and then it hijacks the back button by changing the URL. That would be better off as a simple "share" link somewhere in the popup.
nodesocket|3 hours ago
newzino|5 hours ago
ConanRus|2 hours ago
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aaron695|7 hours ago
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vldszn|6 hours ago