The Open Knowledge Foundation Blog has an article entitled “The Open Access Swindle“. It might be another interesting read about open access publishing and the “Matthew Effect”.
The Open Knowledge Foundation Blog has an article entitled “The Open Access Swindle“. It might be another interesting read about open access publishing and the “Matthew Effect”.
This is the Table of contents for Volume 11 of the OSGeo Journal.
Annual Report: deegree Software Project
Annual Report: GeoMOOSE Software Project
Annual Report: GRASS Software Project
Annual Report: QGIS Software Project
Annual Report: California Chapter
Annual Report: Francophone Chapter
Annual Report: Italian Chapter
Annual Report: United Kingdom Chapter
Case Study: Converting Hardcopy Engineering Records for Sanitary Sewer Networks Using OpenJUMP
Topical Article: Sharing GIS Data Models
Topical Article: The SurveyOS KML Toolkit (Part 1: Starting With Simple Placemarks)
To keep abreast of OSGeo news, watch the OSGeo news page, or subscribe
to its RSS feed. This report includes highlights from recent months,
plus items specifically sent to the News Editor.
Over the last several months elections have been held for both OSGEO
Charter Membership and the Board of Directors. The current slate of
Charter Members now numbers 144, located around the world. Five board
members were elected for two year terms: Anne Ghisla (Italy),
Jeff McKenna (Canada), Daniel Morissette (Canada), Cameron Shorter
(Australia), and Frank Warmerdam (Canada). Jo Cook had to step down
from her position immediately prior to the elections, and Jáchym Cepický
(Czech Republic) will serve for an interim one year term to fill the
vacancy. The new board has chosen Frank Warmerdam to serve as President,
Daniel Morissette to serve as Treasurer, and Michael Gerlek to serve
as Secretary. Congratulations and thanks to all the new and returning
Charter Members and Board Members.
FOSS4G Beijing 2012: Unfortunately, our international meeting in
Beijing was cancelled, despite great efforts to get it in place.
FOSS4G events have always depended highly on local volunteers to do
most of the organization, and while there have been fantastic successes,
the model has inherent risk. The OSGEO Board of Directors is
investigating models to mitigate these risks for future meetings.
Work is already well underway for FOSS4G 2013 in Nottingham, and multiple
regional events have also become increasingly important and popular parallel
initiatives. As an indicator of FOSS4G/OSGeo content at “other” GIS events,
one can track the distribution of the OSGEO Live DVD, which is documented
at the OSGeo Live History Wiki Page.
We’ve seen a plethora of regional events using FOSS4G moniker in the
past few months. This is an example of the growth in regional events
mentioned above. The first ever North American FOSS4G regional meeting
(FOSS4G-NA) took place from the 10th to the 12th of April, 2012, in Washington,
DC, and attracted over 350 attendees, and 50 speakers. That event was followed up by FOSS4G-CEE & Geoinformatics, in Prague, May 21-23, and again slides from the meeting
can be found at the conference web site. Also in Europe, June 28 was
“OSGeo.nl Day” in Velp, the Netherlands, and on the 5th of September,
Nottingham UK hosted an Open Source GIS Conference. Meetings in Asia
included FOSS4G Hokkaido 2012 and FOSS4G Southeast Asia (July 18-19 in Malaysia),
and soon we’ll see FOSS4G Korea in Seoul, on October 12, and FOSS4G
India, October 25-26.
Several new agreements between OSGeo and other industry or academic
associations have been announced in the past year. Most recently,
the existing agreement between the International Cartographic Association
(ICA) and OSGeo has enabled the creation of Open Source Geospatial Labs in
South America and Africa, at the Federal University of Parana in Brazil,
and at the Centre for Geoinformation Science at the University of Pretoria
in South Africa. These initiatives join Open Geospatial labs in Europe,
aiming to spread the advantages of geospatial technology to as many
as possible.
GeoMOOSE 2.6 Released: On June 19th, GeoMOOSE 2.6 was released, with
updates to the included OpenLayers version, Dogo javascript library,
website and documentation, and new flexibility for customizing settings.
GeoMOOSE is a web application framework that enables non-developers to
create web-mapping applications using familiar tools and simple configuration.
OpenLayers 2.12 Released: OpenLayers 2.12 made its debut on June 27th,
offering a new CSS-customizable zoom control, easier configuration of map
projections, tile caching to enable offline use, CSS-based tile animation,
support for UTFGrid, tile queuing, and fractional zooming for tiled layers.
More details can be found at GitHub.
GeoTools 8.0 Released: The GeoTools community announced a new major
release on August 7th, with many new features. The highlights include
an update to Java 6, SQL joins using the WFS protocol, temporal filters,
builds using Maven 2 / 3, and a new Sphinx-generated user guide with live
code examples, tutorials and build instructions. More details can be
found at the GeoTools web page.
OSGeo-Live 6.0 Released: The latest version of the OSGeo-Live
Xubuntu-based bootable DVD/flash drive/Virtual machine was completed
in late August, and officially released just days ago at the Open Source
GIS conference in Nottingham, UK. The disc/image includes demos,
installers and datasets of a wide range of open source geospatial software,
including 50 preconfigured geospatial applications, with overviews and
quick start guides for each of them, and a collection of free spatial data.
In addition to updating all the included software, a major accomplishment
in this release was to move all the Java-based applications on the image
to OpenJDK 7, since Oracle has announced that Sun Java can no longer be
included in Linux distributions. There has also been a lot of work to
translate OSGeo-Live documentation to more languages, and the core
documentation is now included in ten languages. More information
and downloads are available at the OSGeo Live web page.
Software development for the deegree Project during 2011 was focused
on the Feature Service, Map Service, Catalogue Service and underlying
core modules. Data access modules for PostGIS, Oracle, MySQL and SQL
Server were created or improved, with support for complex application
schemas and different access modes (such as blob and relational).
Basic support for WFS 2.0 was also implemented.
In March 2011 the project released deegree 3.0.3. Version 3.1 was
released in October. Version 0.4.2 of iGeoDesktop was released in July.
Presentations on deegree were given at the following events:
The project would like to improve outreach material of all kind. It wants to further open management of the project, increasing transparency. It wants to increase the number and type of contributions to the project. All kinds of contributions are welcome from an increased number of contributors.
The project is looking for help to test release candidates at an early stage.
It also needs help to provide or improve documentation (especially by native
speakers of a language) and help contributing to tutorial production process.
The project is actively seeking contributions to deegree 3 development. The
project also encourages users and developers to share their experiences
with deegree.
The project has the following goals for 2012:
The GeoMOOSE Software Project made its version 2.4 release in 2011.
This included fixes to measure, display, and printing, and a dependency
change from dbase to SQLLite. The project was also accepted into OSGeo
Incubation in 2011 and made the migration from SourceForge to OSGeo
infrastructure. As part of the incubation process the project also
adopted Project Steering Committee Guidelines.
A GeoMoose Project Steering Committee meeting and a GeoMOOSE code
sprint were held at FOSS4G 2011 in Denver.
GeoMoose projects were presented at FOSS4G in Denver and GIS-In-Action.
A more detailed development roadmap would help show where GeoMoose is headed.
The project could use help with the development of an automated testing
suite and updates to project documentation.
2012 looks to be a thrilling year for the project with lots of activity!
This will include more releases.
The GRASS software project released version 6.4.2RC1. This release included eleven (11) new modules and major changes in five (5) existing modules.
GRASS 6.4.2 RC1 Release Details
New Modules
Existing Module Changes
From February 9 to 11, 2011 the GRASS and FOSS4G-IT User Meeting 2011 was held in Trento, Italy.
On May 12 and 13, 2011 at the Open Software for Geodesy and Science Conference in Wroclaw, Poland where lectures, practical classes and individual consultations were offered.
On May 19 and 20, 2011 talks on GRASS were given at the International Conference on Free Software and Open Source in Geoinformatics, in Prague, Czech Republic.
From May 20 to 25, 2011 the GRASS GIS Community Sprint 2011 was held in Prague, in the Czech Republic.
From June 6 to 9, 2011 the Scientific Workshop 2011 “Spatial Analysis with GRASS” took place in the Department of Climatology and Atmosphere Protection, University of Wroclaw.
From June 17 to 19, 2011 the first GRASS and GFOSS Hellenic Users Camp was held at Paou Monastery, in Pelion, Volos, Greece.
The GRASS software project would like to develop a migration guide for public agencies and wants to improve the sponsorship program.
The software project is looking for help in translating GRASS GIS messages. It also needs help preparing marketing material, including updates to flyers and posters and preparation of a new web site.
The QGIS Software Project made the release of QGIS 1.7.0 “Wroclaw” on
June 19, 2011. It also supervised three (3) projects for the 2011 Google
Summer of Code. These Summer of Code projects included a SAGA interface
for QGIS, a Database Manager Plug-In, and QGIS Mobile. In addition,
during 2011 the project provided a new wiki and bug tracker.
The QGIS project held a number of developer meetings
(‘hackfests’ and ‘bughuntings’) during 2011. The purpose of these meetings
is to gather people committed to improving the Quantum GIS project. These
people include developers, documenters, bug reporters as well as users.
In 2011 the following developer meetings were held:
In 2011 the following user meetings were held:
The software project is interested in setting up a software test suite and
in making improvements and consolidations to the user interface.
The Quantum GIS project welcomes help from developers, UI designers, software
testers, translators and users. Join the mailing lists or visit one of our
events to learn more.
In 2012 the software project would like to make the release of QGIS 1.8.
It hopes to again participate in the Google Summer of Code. It will continue
to host developer and user meetings.
On June 17 to 19, 2011 the chapter carried out its main event with great success. It was a joint effort organized by the OSGeo Greek Local Chapter, the Greek GI Association (HellasGI) and the Greek Open Source Association (E/ELLAK). The event was the First GRASS and GFOSS Users’ Camp. It was held at the Paou Monastery, University of Thessaly, Pelion, Volos, Greece.
The event was highly successful with over 50 participants who stayed for the whole duration of the event. Many Greek and international experts (people from GRASS and gvSIG communities were invited) presented issues related to the main theme. Many participants recommended the event be repeated next year.
The chapter has coordinated work on the Greek translation of Version 4.5 and 5.0 of OSGeo Live. The Greek translation of the OSGeo Live DVD is one of the most complete.
Weekly tutorials and presentations were provided by the chapter at the National Technical University of Athens (NTUA) about Free and Open Source Geospatial Software. Approximately 15 to 20 students attend each week.
The chapter has also coordinated Open Source Geospatial Software adoption in classes in universities. An example is the class at TEI of Serres with gvSIG and GRASS.
We still do not have the participation in the chapter we expected. We need to intensify the efforts to increase the membership and the overall awareness. A big challenge is securing funding for organizing further events. Efforts to translate the OSGeo web site and some of the OSGeo Software stack into Greek will definitely help bring more people to the chapter.
In the future we will definitely need speakers for national FOSS or local GIS events. We would also like to demonstrate some cases of successful use of FOSS GIS by the public sector to local government officials.
We would like to plan some demo classes on FOSS GIS for students in universities and how these can be integrated in their curricula in order to show that we can achieve the exact same educational result as programs that use proprietary software. (This process has started to happen but more involvement is needed).
We would also be very interested in having the ability to apply for funding as a chapter or organization and we would like to seek help and information from other local chapters that have or plan to do the same. We would also like to become an official OSGeo Chapter.
The Francophone chapter completed the clean-up of an administrative paper needed to set up a legal association for the chapter.
It also elected a new governing board in June 2011.
The chapter would like to encourage people to contribute more to translation projects. It wants to create a marketing package and help people in organizing OSGeo booth at events. It would like to attract additional contributors and project managers. It has a general goal of improving communication in the Francophone geospatial community.
The chapter has four (4) opportunities to help in chapter activties. This include help in translating MapServer documentation, help in organizing Francophone QGIS events, help in monitoring a booth at
several conferences, and help with chapter marketing duties.
In 2012 the chapter would like to continue the work of setting up a legal association. It would also like to improve the document translation process. There are also plans to organize an “OSGeo-fr Day” event.