Tag Archives: OSGeo

Batch Geonews: Debacle over OGC and the GeoServices REST API Standard, OpenLayers vs Leaflet, More Geo from Google I/O, and much more

The recent geonews in batch mode, covering a larger timespan than usual.

On the open source front:

  • The OSGeo presented an Open Letter to OGC on the GeoServices REST API standard, and it's pretty well documented and informative
  • Here's an interesting entry on comparing OpenLayers and Leaflet
  • The schedule for FOSS4G-CEE is now known
  • Sean pointed me to  Tom MacWright's online GeoJSON editor
  • In releases, there was GeoServer 2.3.2 released and GeoTools 9.2 Released
  • Getting closer to QGIS 2.0, here's nice examples of the alpha channel in QGIS color ramps
  • If you did not see the press release, OpenGeo is not non-profit anymore

On the Google front:

  • The influx of Google Glass stories continues, now Facial Recognition Comes to Google Glass
  • Here's Kurt's list of maps-related videos from the Google I/O conference

On the Esri front:

  • ABP reminds us of Esri's Severe Weather Map, including tornadoes...
  • An entry on why Esri is excited about the Android Location APIs
  • Data updates, World Topographic Map updated with content for the Middle East, North Africa, and the United States
  • along with other updates, including Additional DigitalGlobe and community imagery added to the World Imagery map
  • Also updated, ArcGIS for Windows Phone and ArcGIS API for JavaScript v3.5 Released

In the everything-else category:

  • MapBox tells us they got a huge satellite update, now cloudless and with aerial imagery, but also interesting are the OpenStreetMap updates making they way to MapBox maps in only 5 minutes
  • Here's a Make article on mapping buildings with a Kinect
  • Some of you might be interested by the GiT4NMD conference, Geo-information Technologies for Natural Disaster Management
  • Space Daily share an article named World's major development banks look closer at Earth observation
  • Here's links regarding the history of apostrophes in place names
  • Via SL, an article named China's Drone Program Appears To Be Moving Into Overdrive
  • Those interested in the exciting MapBox work may also want to read about vector tiles of MapBox Streets
  • While CAD and GIS have come closer, they remain distinct, here's an entry named Integrating geospatial into construction: the challenge
  • Geoff also shares two other interesting entries, one named Economic value of big geospatial data could reach $700 billion/yr by and the other Estimating the economic and financial impact of poor data quality

Slashdot discussed a few minor geo-related stories:

  • One involving GPS named Researchers Are Developing Ad Hoc Networks For Car-To-Car Data Exchange
  • Privacy stories goes on, UK's 4G Network Selling Subscriber Tracking Data To Police, Private Parties and this one Congress Demands Answers From Google Over Google Glass Privacy Concerns
  • Along with new challenges to locating North itself, Global Warming Shifts the Earth's Poles

In the maps category:

  • Here's The Best Geographic Visualization I’ve Seen In Ages according to VerySpatial, basically a circle centered in Asia where over half of the world's population resides
  • In Paris? Apple Maps for iOS Adds 3D Flyover Coverage in Paris
  • MapBox shares a Q&A of the City Guides by National Geographic mobile app
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Open Source Geospatial Laboratory established at the University of Southampton, UK

We are pleased to announce the establishment of the Open Source Geospatial Laboratory at the University of Southampton, United Kingdom. The laboratory is one of the members of a worldwide network developed under the auspices of the ICA-OSGeo Memorandum of Understanding (MoU).

In, the International Cartographic Association (ICA) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo) with the aim to develop global collaboration opportunities for academia, industry and government organisations in the field of open source GIS software and data. The MoU aims to provide expertise and support for the establishment of Open Source Geospatial Laboratories and Research Centres across the world and will support the development of open source geospatial software technologies, training and expertise.

The University of Southampton is one of the top research universities in the UK and has strong research in geospatial science. The University of Southampton Open Source Geospatial Laboratory (OSGL) has been established by the GeoData Institute and Geography and Environment AU in collaboration with other initiatives in the UK and further afield. The initiative brings together staff from various disciplines (Engineering, Geography, Electronics and Computer Science) across the university.

The current members of the lab are Prof.Pete Atkinson, Prof. David Martin, Jason Sadler, Chris Hill, Julia Branson, Craig Hutton, Andrew Murdock, Duncan Hornby, Andrew Harfoot, Gemma Gubbins, Homme Zwaagstra, Jeremy Austin, Ian Waldock, Oles Kit, Mike Clark, Samantha Cockings, Robin Wilson, Kirk Martinez, Kate Parks, Simon Blainey and Richard Treves.

The Laboratory will engage in open source research for geospatial software and data, using open source geospatial software and data as tools and contributing to the development of tools, standards and data through research. The lab will seek to exploit new opportunities for research, often in partnership with other OSGLs and members of the ICA-OSGeo initiative. The Laboratory will also deliver open source geospatial training and CPD programs.

OSGeo is a not-for-profit organisation founded in whose mission is to support and promote the collaborative development of open source geospatial technologies and data.

ICA is the world authoritative body for cartography, the discipline dealing with the conception, production, dissemination and study of maps.

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pycsw enters OSGeo Incubation

The OSGeo Board is pleased to announce that it has approved the application by the pycsw project to enter the incubation process. Incubation is a stepping stone to becoming a full fledged OSGeo project.

pycsw is an OGC CSW server implementation written in Python.

pycsw fully implements the OpenGIS Catalogue Service Implementation Specification [Catalogue Service for the Web]. Initial development started in (more formally announced). The project is certified OGC Compliant, and is an OGC Reference Implementation.

pycsw allows for the publishing and discovery of geospatial metadata. Existing repositories of geospatial metadata can also be exposed via OGC:CSW 2.0.2, providing a standards-based metadata and catalogue component of spatial data infrastructures.

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GeoServer 2.3.0 Released, First Official OSGeo Release

[this story was submitted by a user as a press release (thanks!), I'm republishing it as a story too since it's a pertinent major release]

The GeoServer team is happy to announce the release of GeoServer 2.3.0, available for download.

This release contains six months worth of improvements and fixes to the GeoServer code base. Including several important new features and improvements such as:

  • A pluggable configuration subsystem (for the catalog and service configuration)
  • GeoWebCache clustering and disk quota improvements
  • More powerful layer groups and better control of the WMS capabilities layer tree
  • Several security subsystem improvements
  • WPS process whitelist (control which processes your WPS is exposing)
  • WMS dimensions support improvements (units, custom dimensions)
  • JSON and JSONP output format support in many OGC operations
  • The monitoring module finally graduating to official extension
  • Raster re-projection quality improvements and speedups
  • INSPIRE module improvements for the WFS protocol
  • A newfound ability to catalogue all components of GeoServer via a REST API

For those daring enough to try out nightly builds the 2.3.x series also offers a new scripting extension allowing you to write WPS processes and small applications in your preferred scripting language. Also included as a nightly community module available is a complete WCS 2.0 service implementation.

More information about the new features of the 2.3.x stream can be found in the  GeoServer 2.3-beta release announcement.

The good news do not stop there. GeoServer has finally completed the OSGeo incubation and it’s now an official OSGeo project. Many thanks to all that participated, in particular Jody Garnett for constantly pushing forward, Landon Blake for mentoring us, and all the people that participated to the FOSS4G-AU code sprint in which all of the grunt work of provenance review was done. We want to thank in particular Jody Garnett, Adam Brown, Karin Stronkhorst, Luca Morandini and Joshua Vote for the hard work.

OSGeo Project

And last but not least there have been some bug fixes since the RC1 release, you can find a full list in the GeoServer 2.3.0 changelog. Included in this list, for those willing to try out nightly builds, is a new fast WMS JPEG encoder based on libjpeg-turbo which should give a nice boost to your raster data serving.

Download GeoServer 2.3, try it out, and provide feedback on the GeoServer mailing list.  As with any new version, be sure to backup your data directory before upgrading.

Thanks again for using GeoServer!

Download GeoServer 2.3

 

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GeoServer 2.3.0 released, first official OSGeo release

The GeoServer team is happy to announce the release of GeoServer 2.3.0, available for download.

This release contains six months worth of improvements and fixes to the GeoServer code base. Including several important new features and improvements such as:

  • A pluggable configuration subsystem (for the catalog and service configuration)
  • GeoWebCache clustering and disk quota improvements
  • More powerful layer groups and better control of the WMS capabilities layer tree
  • Several security subsystem improvements
  • WPS process whitelist (control which processes your WPS is exposing)
  • WMS dimensions support improvements (units, custom dimensions)
  • JSON and JSONP output format support in many OGC operations
  • The monitoring module finally graduating to official extension
  • Raster re-projection quality improvements and speedups
  • INSPIRE module improvements for the WFS protocol
  • A newfound ability to catalogue all components of GeoServer via a REST API

For those daring enough to try out nightly builds the 2.3.x series also offers a new scripting extension allowing you to write WPS processes and small applications in your preferred scripting language. Also included as a nightly community module available is a complete WCS 2.0 service implementation.

More information about the new features of the 2.3.x stream can be found in the  GeoServer 2.3-beta release announcement.

The good news do not stop there. GeoServer has finally completed the OSGeo incubation and it’s now an official OSGeo project. Many thanks to all that participated, in particular Jody Garnett for constantly pushing forward, Landon Blake for mentoring us, and all the people that participated to the FOSS4G-AU code sprint in which all of the grunt work of provenance review was done. We want to thank in particular Jody Garnett, Adam Brown, Karin Stronkhorst, Luca Morandini and Joshua Vote for the hard work.

OSGeo Project

And last but not least there have been some bug fixes since the RC1 release, you can find a full list in the GeoServer 2.3.0 changelog. Included in this list, for those willing to try out nightly builds, is a new fast WMS JPEG encoder based on libjpeg-turbo which should give a nice boost to your raster data serving.

Download GeoServer 2.3, try it out, and provide feedback on the GeoServer mailing list.  As with any new version, be sure to backup your data directory before upgrading.

Thanks again for using GeoServer!

Download GeoServer 2.3

 

Read More »

Registration Open for FOSS4G, Nottingham, UK, 17th-21st September

You can now register to the FOSS4G conference.

The details: "There are three things you will need to plan:

  • Which conference package do I want to book – Full, Day or Student?
  • Which extra items do I want to book – workshops, icebreaker, closing party?
  • Where am I going to stay – hotel on site, university accommodation, somewhere else?

Details of all the options are shown here. Note that the accommodation options are available once you’ve ticked your registration options checkbox(es), so you don’t need to book accommodation separately. It’s easiest to pay by credit card but if your organisation requires an invoice to pay you can tick that box when you register and we will send you an invoice.

  • Please note that you must pay the full amount in £ sterling including any bank charges. 
  • Invoices must be paid within 14 days of receipt to secure your room reservation and delegate place.

Early Bird prices are available until 31st May but we recommend booking as soon as you can as there are only a limited number of hotel rooms on the site."

Slashgeo is a proud media partner of FOSS4G.

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Open Source Geonews: OSM2GIS, OSGeo-Live 6.5, OSGeo Board Priorities, OpenBlock Project, JTS Union VS ArcGIS Dissolve, and much more

Still catching up, here's the recent open source geospatial news.

New software:

  • VIa OGD, an easy to use website, OSM2GIS to directly download OpenStreetMap data in GIS formats such as shapefiles and kml
  • MapTiler (mentioned in), which is an open source map overlay generator for Google Maps / Earth and a GUI for GDAL2Tiles, now has a free Mac App Store version

Software updates front:

  • Version 6.5 of the OSGeo-Live GIS software collection has been released, including 50 quality geospatial open source applications installed and pre-configured
  • There's Leaflet.draw 0.2 released, and as you can guess it's for drawing/editing vectors in Leaflet
  • Via UD, the color advice for cartography, ColorBrewer 2.0 has a no-flash version now
  • Updated, MapStore 1.1.0 released
  • Also available, GeoServer 2.2.5 released
  • And so is GeoTools 8.7 Released
  • Another one, ImageI/O-Ext 1.1.6 Released

Everything else:

  • Here's an entry on the OSGeo Board priorities
  • Related, a nice graph of the Moments in the History of OpenStreetMap
  • Hyper-local data and news tool Everyblock closed, and it's open source code will continue as the OpenBlock Project, related, DM shared an article named OpenBlock Rural Finds Three Key Audiences for Open Data
  • We love numbers right? At the beginning of last month was a user test between JTS Union VS ArcGIS Dissolve, result: 25 seconds vs 1.5 second in favor of the open source JTS
  • Probably of interest to some of you, an entry on Optimizing OpenLayers for Mobile Applications
  • DM shares an article named [U.S.] FedGeoDay: Advocating for Open Source, the summary: "FedGeoDay, held in Washington, D.C. this past week, can best be described as an advocacy forum for open source geospatial technology and data. Some of the leading organizations, government agencies and companies invested in open source tech sponsored the conference."
  • Another article from the same source, The Arches Project: Turning Open Source GIS into a Heritage Inventory and Management System
  • And a last article from DM, Palantir: An Open Source Development Success Story, which is really about leveraging PostGIS, the summary: "In late Palantir launched Gotham, a new geospatial and comprehensive analytics platform designed to meet the challenges of their vast array of customers. This article provides more information on Gotham that enables data integration, search and discovery, knowledge management, secure collaboration, and algorithmic analysis across a wide variety of data sources."
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Slashgeo is a Proud Media Partner of FOSS4G, Nottingham, UK, 17th-21st September

I am glad to announce that Slashgeo is a proud media partner of FOSS4G, to be held in Nottingham, UK, on September 17-21, one of the dominant geospatial conferences.

Here's what it is: "FOSS4G is the global conference for Free and Open Source Software for Geospatial, organized by the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo). In, FOSS4G will be held in in the United Kingdom for the first time, at the East Midlands Conference Centre in Nottingham, from 17th to 21st September. FOSS4G will follow on from the Association for Geospatial Information (AGI) annual GeoCommunity Event at the same venue, and delegates will have an opportunity to attend both events for a full week of Geo-Goodness!

Expect a vibrant mix of workshops, papers, seminars, birds-of-a-feather meetings, and great social events, in a fantastic location. Key dates and travel information will be published shortly, from early September, so check back for updates, follow us on twitter, or sign up to our mailing list for more information."

We'll try to have one or two Slashgeo Editors on the site at FOSS4G. Slashgeo had the chance to be active and cover 4 recent OSGeo FOSS4G events.

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Batch Geonews: Stick to WMS 1.1.1, ESA Free RS Book, ArcGIS Online Major Update, Christmas, and much more

This is our last batch-mode edition of the year - happy holiday break to everyone!

From the open source / data front:

  • MapBox share an interesting entry named The Trouble with Geoportals: "Heavy interface-driven sites based on predetermined data acquisition processes are a key part of a local, state, and national spatial and open data infrastructures, but they do not make open data open and accessible to all."
  • Here's a nice demo of OpenLayers 3, read the associated discussion
  • Here's news of the QGIS Globe and PostGIS 3D with a video demo
  • Here's an entry on how the LGPL license of geospatial software is completely destroying iOS adoption of open source geospatial software
  • Here's about the version 1.8.0 release of Libspatialindex (which switches from LGPL to MIT) 
  • And Jeff McKenna is the new OSGeo president
  • Here's an article on Vizzuality, the makers of CartoDB

From the Esri front:

  • Here's a summary of Whats New in ArcGIS Online (December): "This is major update, with new capabilities for authoring web maps, publishing hosted services, sharing, and configuring ArcGIS Online organizations."
  • DigitalGlobe Imagery for the United States and Western Europe added to the Esri's World Imagery map
  • If you're eager to know, here's What’s coming in the next update of the ArcGIS SDK for Android?

From the Google front:

  • Obligatory, Christmas Trees in Google Earth and Street View
  • Interesting, Using Google Earth to teach math
  • Google shared tips for getting the most from Google Maps on iPhone
  • Apparently, the iOS version of the Google Maps app might violate EU privacy laws
  • Here's what Google Earth looks like on the Nexus 10
  • Here's the Google entry on the Count down to Christmas Eve with Google Santa Tracker
  • It's the end of the world right? Predicting volcanic ash with Google Earth
  • That's not a reason for not providing New Google Imagery - December 17

In the remote sensing category:

  • If you have an iOS device, don't miss ESA's 'Earth from Space: the Living Beauty' free book: "The digital publication has over 100 pages with interactive maps, stunning image galleries and animations that encourage you to discover the various Earth processes. "
  • Name change, Copernicus is the new name for European Earth Observation Programme
  • Here's a discussion on How to build a microsatellite

In the miscellaneous category:

  • Know the WMS standard? Here's a pertinent entry named Don't "upgrade" to WMS 1.3.0 unless you really have to, stick to 1.1.1
  • Here's a pertinent entry on GIS user interfaces and how bad they are
  • Here's the Directions Mag summary of A Day at Nokia’s U.S. Headquarters
  • While they can't do it anymore with a GPS device, the U.S. government can use location data from cell towers in order to track suspects without a warrant

In the maps category:

  • Here's an Interactive map of the U.S. Nuclear Weapons Complex
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Batch Geonews: OSGeo Annual Report, Cloud-Offloaded GPS, Contact Lenses AR, Geojobs Shortage, and much more

Quite a few interesting news in this batch mode edition.

From the open source front:

  • It was the first time I heard about the open source LSI Viewer, an online Shapefile viewer
  • There's the new MapProxy 1.5.0 released
  • And Portable GIS is now at version 3.1
  • It is also the first time we mention GisClient, "an open source software written in AJAX, Javascript, PHP/MapScript that offers an innovative way to manage complex GIS projects. The main strength in it is that allows to configure a big range of tools and functionalities easily and quickly."
  • If you're working with the U.S. Federal government, take a look at FedGeo Day, to be held in Washington DC on February 28, here's the official website
  • Here's the MapBox New Features Roundup
  • Regarding QGIS, visualising QGIS data in 3D with Blender and on Sharing QGIS Symbols
  • Here's the just released OSGeo Annual Report
  • A bugfix, PostGIS 2.0.2 has been released
  • And there's the call for papers and new website for FOSS4G, in the U.K. this year
  • The open source ArcGIS for Local Government Apps Available Now on GitHub

From the Google front:

  • Google announced two new features for the Google Places API: Place Photos and Radar Search.
  • Google wants us to know that they're listening to our Google Maps feedback
  • The GEB shares links for The making of the "Powers of Ten", the 1977 video
  • The GEB also reports that Botswana not happy with Google Street View, since it "compromise their security"

In the miscellaneous category:

  • APB informs us about cloud-offloaded GPS (CO-GPS) to decrease power needed by GPS devices
  • DM reports that the National Geologic Map Database Gets a Face Lift
  • We now have drones that can infect with software virus other drones
  • Here's an OGC summary of Location Business Summit USA
  • Augmented reality to the extreme, Belgian Researchers Build LCD Contact Lenses
  • Extending their offer, MapBox Teams Up with DigitalGlobe on Satellite Imagery
  • Here's the ArcGIS Online World Topographic Map December updates, and also Esri-related, Esri Updates Terms of Use on (Free) Personal Accounts for ArcGIS Online
  • On geospatial jobs, APB shares two interesting entries; NZ Report on Geospatial Skill Shortage and Four of Eight Emerging Careers for Demand Geospatial Skills

in the maps category:

  • Here's an entry named Using Series of Maps to Represent Changes in Time: How Diabetes Swept the U.S.
  • VerySpatial links to an entry and map on the geography of US charity
  • Let's end this issue with a fake map on procrasti-nation

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