Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] incubation committee wants you!

2012-07-12 Thread Micho Garcia
Hi,

it is necessary be an OSGeo charter member to help you in the
incubator committee?. I searched info about that question in OSGeo
wiki but not found it.

Thanks.

Micho García
GIS Developer Artisan
michogarcia.org
geomati.co


2012/7/12 Jody Garnett jody.garn...@gmail.com:
 It is great to see so much enthusiasm on the email list with the Charter
 membership nominations. A reminder that a lot of the action is at the OSGeo
 committee level.

 With that in mind the incubation committee is looking for volunteers to help
 mentor projects. This is a great way to get involved with the foundation,
 meet new people and new projects and champion the ideals of our foundation
 where it matters (i.e. close the to code!).

 If you are interested in helping out - please sign up to the Mailing List
 and introduce yourself.
 --
 Jody Garnett


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[OSGeo-Discuss] world bank and open geo data

2012-07-12 Thread Dimitris Kotzinos

Hi all,

I think this decision is one big step forward:
World Bank Commits to Open Geo Data
http://blogs.worldbank.org/insidetheweb/maps-for-open-development
and
http://developmentseed.org/blog/2012/mar/19/world-bank-open-geo-data/

Best,

Dimitris
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Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] incubation committee wants you!

2012-07-12 Thread Jody Garnett
 it is necessary be an OSGeo charter member to help you in the
 incubator committee?. I searched info about that question in OSGeo
 wiki but not found it.
  
  

Participation in any OSGeo activity is open to all (as we are a volunteer 
organisation). Indeed participation in committee's, local chapters, code 
sprints and so on are a great way to take part in the organisation. As people 
get to know you they will be in position to comment on your work, and perhaps 
nominate you as a charter member.

The charter member thing is one of the few activities with a strict 
responsibility (i.e. the requirement to vote in the upcoming board elections). 
Everything else is volunteer driven, with the only guideline being to volunteer 
within your means.

All the best,
Jody
  
 Thanks.
  
 Micho García
 GIS Developer Artisan
 michogarcia.org (http://michogarcia.org)
 geomati.co (http://geomati.co)
  
  
 2012/7/12 Jody Garnett jody.garn...@gmail.com 
 (mailto:jody.garn...@gmail.com):
  It is great to see so much enthusiasm on the email list with the Charter
  membership nominations. A reminder that a lot of the action is at the OSGeo
  committee level.
   
  With that in mind the incubation committee is looking for volunteers to help
  mentor projects. This is a great way to get involved with the foundation,
  meet new people and new projects and champion the ideals of our foundation
  where it matters (i.e. close the to code!).
   
  If you are interested in helping out - please sign up to the Mailing List
  and introduce yourself.
  --
  Jody Garnett
   
   
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  Discuss@lists.osgeo.org (mailto:Discuss@lists.osgeo.org)
  http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
   
  
  
  


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[OSGeo-Discuss] Sol Katz award

2012-07-12 Thread Ravi Kumar
+1
The Sol Katz award is given each
year, and has little to do with the person being there or not, or even
what event it is at.  We didn't create this award so it can be given in
some years and not in other years.
Ravi Kumar





 From: Jeff McKenna jmcke...@gatewaygeomatics.com
To: bo...@lists.osgeo.org 
Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2012 10:30 PM
Subject: Re: [Board] Thoughts on FOSS4G
 
Hello Peter and the Board,

I feel I must comment on this, so my comments are line below:

On 12-07-12 11:35 AM, Peter Batty wrote:
 Hi all,
 
 I am aiming to attend the board meeting today but have various other
 commitments that I'm trying to juggle. In case I don't make it, and just
 to get the ball rolling, here are a few thoughts on follow ups from the
 FOSS4G cancellation.
 
 I think we should put out some sort of communication from the board
 about this - we can decide the exact forums, at least something to OSGeo
 lists and on the OSGeo web site, probably get it to some media outlets
 too. Unless someone else wants to volunteer, I'd be happy to draft
 something based on discussion at today's meeting and any input anyone
 else sends, and send that round for review.

I agree, in fact I did send the LOC a public response right away.  It is
important to not be negative at all, and thank them for all of their
effort in this.

I am also working with Venka (who is also a professor at CUMTB
university in Beijing, his influence is strong there as well) and Dr.
Song, both LOC members, to make sure we continue the FOSS4G passion there.

 
 A few points I would probably include something along the following lines:
 
 We are disappointed but not surprised that FOSS4G Beijing has been
 cancelled. We have known for some time, as has anyone who follows the
 OSGeo conference or board public mailing lists, that the local committee
 was facing various challenges. But we wanted to give them the maximum
 chance to try to pull together an event.
 
 FOSS4G has been successful being a truly global conference, taking a
 major event around the world with most of the work done by local
 volunteers. We've had great success with this approach, with great
 events in Sydney, Cape Town, etc. But this approach has its risks too,
 and we'll review our strategy in the light of what happened this year to
 see what we can do to mitigate those risks. (I can see various ways of
 approaching this section, definitely open to suggestions).

The same negative thoughts circled before such amazingly successful
events such as Sydney and Cape Town.  Yes there are risks, but we must
take risks to spread the FOSS4G passion to other areas of the globe.

 
 But FOSS4G remains strong. The 2011 event in Denver was the largest yet,
 with 900 people from 42 countries and great reviews. And plans for 2013
 in Nottingham are already very advanced, we have a very strong team
 organizing that and are looking forward to a great event there.

Indeed the FOSS4G brand has never been so strong.  It is really all
around the world.

 
 FOSS4G has also evolved into multiple regional events in addition to the
 global one. We have had multiple successful FOSS4G events already this
 year with NA and CEE, and Japan to come (include some info on number of
 attendees etc).

The FOSS4G-Japan event was a great success this year, it happened last
month.  FOSS4G-India plans are in the works as well.  Really great times
for the FOSS4G brand.

 
 A few thoughts that are probably outside this external communication:
 
 I think we should review our future strategy for FOSS4G in terms of
 location rotation, global versus local, how it is organized, etc. But I
 don't think there's a huge rush on this. We have a solid plan for the
 2013 event, we need to get something worked out by first part of next
 year before we start the selection process for 2014 (if we decide that
 we need any changes - we may decide not). I think we should focus first
 on short term communication and other immediate issues.

I could not disagree with you more here.  The process has been setup by
the Conference Committee and that process is working great.

The only changes I see needing is possibly dedicating resources to
assist in the FOSS4G continuity each year (such as my last year's FOSS4G
advisor role, funded or not).

 
 Second, there have been questions on what to do about the Sol Katz
 award, and suggestions of presenting it at some other event. I'd like to
 suggest that we consider NOT doing this as it risks diluting the award
 to me. It's a great tradition to recognize leaders in our community.
 However I think an important part of that is being recognized at a major
 meeting of the community. If we present it at some other event where
 there isn't a large attendance from the global open source community we
 risk losing that. And we put pressure on the winner to make a trip
 potentially to the other side of the world for an event that they may
 not have gone to otherwise.
 
 So I'd