We use Keepthescore.com to keep track of class points throughout the year. Classes can earn points for a variety of activities/behaviors. The class with the most points receives a pizza party. The kids enjoy the friendly competition and it motivates them to make good choices. Thanks for providing a fun, easy way to track and display points!
I use Keepthescore.com for an online Twitch event twice a year with roughly 300 players and it never lets me down! Scores are super easy to add or remove, the designs are very clean and other features such as adding images and easily being able to share a public link is what made me a loyal user of Keepthescore.com, truly nothing does it better!
The scoreboard works amazingly well with OBS. Our scorekeeper has been very happy with how simple it is to operate and keep track. We have the output ran to a large TV and the audience is able to easily see the team names and score throughout our game.
I am SUCH a fan of Keepthescore.com! I use it to keep the real-time participation score for my students in my Spanish classes. I found it back when we had the COVID-19 restrictions in classrooms. I went back to using Keepthescore.com with my classes last year, and they loved it! It was VERY motivational.
KPPj8 is using Keepthescore.com to rank members club and participated players based on their ping pong playing performance calculated by KPPj8's Modified ELO Rating Points System. Keepthescore.com is easy to manage and perfectly to showcase players' ranking in style with photos.
As an educator I really appreciate how easy it is to update a points system in the middle of class, and I can embed the scoreboard into my school's LMS so all the students know where to go check their point totals.
We are very happy that we found keepthescore.com. As a recreational Baseball & Softball Team we were looking for an affordable digital Scoreboard for our games. The digital board makes it so much easier for our spectators and players to keep track of the action on the field.
Take advantage of one of the point packages below for incredible savings and use them at any of our 6 Locations. The Track does not take reservations, so head to the park to let the fun begin!
Want to make a quick stop at The Track for a ride or two? Buy your points here and skip the line by picking up your points card at our will call window or desk. Want more points? Take advantage of our bundle pricing and pick a package that fits you or your family!
Groups of all ages have a blast at The Track! Take advantage of the largest point package to entertain your group. You can divide the points evenly onto any number of cards, just ask a cashier (team member) for assistance. On average, we recommend 40 - 50 points per guest when calculating how many points you need. For example, if you have 10 guests in your party, then buy 2 of the 250 point packages to have a total of 500 points or 50 points per guest.
Yesterday and today when I have tried to delete track points in ArcGIS Pro connecting to the tracks service. This is something I have done before and not too long ago. Currently when I delete selected track records in ArcGIS Pro, the records disappear, I save the edits, and right after that the track points reappear? I have tried this is several times yesterday and already today.
It looks like ArcGIS Pro is using the applyEdits REST API to attempt to delete track points via the GlobalID field. This has never been supported for the location tracking service in ArcGIS Online. I can reproduce this issue and I'll open a bug internally for the feature service to consider supporting this (it's likely not going to be supported for a while FYI).
Thanks for the response. Its been probably 5 weeks since I've updated ArcGIS Pro, but currently I'm using 2.7.0. I know I have never used the API for deleting tracks before, but I will look into it. It would be much easier to be able to delete tracks in Pro.
My instance yesterday is folks are still learning to use the apps and a user yesterday forgot to disable tracks after they completed their survey and did not want the tracks after that to show up or be recorded. We are currently downloading the track points from surveys and appending each day's tracks to a public view so we can provide the public where the aerial surveys are occurring each day. In the case yesterday the user didn't want the extra tracks to show on the public view nor are they needed to be kept in the tracks service.
I have had a lot of errors including today unrelated to tracks that I'm starting what used to work and what didn't. I will look into the API, but its so nice in Pro to simply select the tracks I want to delete and then delete versus having to look up which IDs they are seems way more tedious.
Thanks for the additional info. I suspected it was a scenario like you described. I agree that doing this in Pro would be easier. We do provide a related script that can delete tracks that fall within or outside a polygon.
Apparently I forgot to turn off my tracking after long hike in Zion National Park and my Garmin Mini captured our shuttle ride after our hike. I would like to delete the unwanted tracking points on my track. Is this possible? If so, how do I edit my track? Thank you
I don't think you can do this within the Explore system. Your best bet is to export the track (from the Map tab) as a .gpx. Then edit the .gpx (with something like Notepad) to remove the points you do not want. Probably based on the timestamp. Alternatively, you can do this with your favorite mapping/track management software. Probably even with BaseCamp if that's your tool of choice.
This fails on my PC at office (QGIS code revision d94c044). Sometimes QGIS stalls with high CPU usage, but most times I get an error "The layer C:/Daten/CurrT.gpx?type=waypoint is not a valid layer and can not be added to the map".
Have a look at the GPX file (in a plain text editor) to make sure wpt all have tags. It can happen that some don't. My case was GPX originating from a small Garmin where a single "saved track" amidst the active log resulted in the problem.
If you still would like to change SPs, those changes are fixed in the issue history. My team has developed an add-on that might be helpful to see changes for the list of issues. You can filter by project, sprint, assignees, label, date range, etc.
Instead consider a retrospective every couple of weeks and review the completed items to learn what was different/special for items that did not match the team's understanding of the work. Ask "why" and consider how to experiment to improve sizing in the future.
Rather than tracking an "actual" story points value I would recommend using the native time tracking features to have the assigned developer add a Time Estimate to the issue, and then also track actual time spent working on the issue using the native Log Work feature.
If you want to get better at estimating story points you could then examine the original time estimate and actual time spent and consider factors that impacted the time spent, like the experience level of the person doing the work, the complexity of the work, etc.
The annoying thing is, is that I have done this before but as its been a few months since I have had to do any motion tracking my mind has gone blank and I can not for the life of me remember how to do this.
I have completed my motion track but need to shift all the tracker point across slightly, when I try and drag the object I have linked the tracking data to it only pulls out that one point depending on what frame im on, then will quickly snap back to its original position once the animation has started again.
Animating in Earth Studio is incredibly powerful, but it's only the beginning. With the ability to export camera data and tracking markers to post-production software, it's possible to seamlessly composite 2D and 3D elements into Earth Studio imagery.
3D Camera Export, currently compatible with Adobe After Effects, makes this process incredibly straightforward. By natively exporting camera data from Earth Studio, you can be sure that composited elements will perfectly line up with your footage.
You can also create and export Track Points along with a project's camera data. Track Points are represented as null objects in After Effects, and are helpful for positioning elements in your scene. Set a Track Point anywhere you plan to place an element in post-production, or set a few to use as reference.
All existing Track Points are listed in the Track Point panel, which appears in the viewport whenever a new Track Point is created. From the panel, you can edit a Track Point's name, display colour or exact coordinates. Use the bin icon to delete a Track Point.
To get tracking data when you render, select the desired format under 3D Tracking Data in the Advanced Settings. The tracking data script will be included with your image sequence and project file in the resulting zip.
At any time, you can use File > Export > 3D Tracking Data... to export tracking data without re-rendering. Select which tracking elements you need (3D Camera and/or Track Points), and Earth Studio will begin downloading your tracking data as a .jsx file.
Ensure that there are no differences between the camera in your tracking data and the camera motion from your rendered footage. If there are, you'll need to re-render your project. Otherwise, composited elements will not line up with your Earth Studio footage.
To use your tracking data in After Effects, simply run the tracking data script. In a new or existing project, go to File > Scripts > Run Script File... and navigate to the .jsx file exported from Earth Studio.