Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!

2013-07-31 Thread Anne Ghisla
On Wed, 31 Jul 2013 14:05:34 +0900
Venkatesh Raghavan ragha...@media.osaka-cu.ac.jp wrote:

 Thanks, Markus and all the pioneers for keeping GRASS alive
 and kicking for the last 30 years.
 
 Looking forward for golden jubilee celebrations
 in the year 2033.
 
 Cheers and Kampai!!
 
 Venka

Happy birthday GRASS!

Congratulations to the generations of developers, translators, testers,
users and enthusiasts that have build up such a long-lived open source
project. I am always impressed by the fact that some developers are
younger than the codebase!

Long live to GRASS spirit - let it be a reference for younger projects! 

Best,

Anne

 On 7/31/2013 1:28 PM, Ravi Kumar wrote:
  Happy Birth Day GRASS.. Many happy returns.
  Markus you and all the GRASS team deserve a big applause..
  It is GRASS that has spread FOSS GIS to begin with.
  It is the 1st GRASS users conference, Thailand that has initiated
  FOSS4G events Ravi
 
 
  
From: Markus Neteler nete...@osgeo.org
  To: GRASS-announce list grass-annou...@lists.osgeo.org
  Cc: GRASS user list grass-u...@lists.osgeo.org; OSGeo-discuss
  discuss@lists.osgeo.org; freegis-l...@intevation.de; GRASS
  developers list grass-...@lists.osgeo.org Sent: Tuesday, July 30,
  2013 10:02 PM Subject: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of
  GRASS GIS! 
 
 
  Press release
  29 July 2013
  Today marks 30 years of GRASS GIS development
  Today the Free Software community celebrates the 30th birthday of
  GRASS GIS! GRASS (Geographic Resources Analysis Support System) is
  a free and open source Geographic Information System (GIS) software
  suite used for geospatial data management and analysis, image
  processing, graphics and map production, spatial modeling, and 3D
  visualization. GRASS GIS is currently used in academic and
  commercial settings around the world, as well as by many
  governmental agencies and environmental consulting companies. GRASS
  GIS can be used either as a stand-alone application or as backend
  for other software packages such as QGIS and R geostatistics. It is
  a founding member of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo)
  and can be freely downloaded at
  http://grass.osgeo.org/download/software/. Brief history In 1982,
  Lloyd Van Warren, a University of Illinois engineering student,
  began development on a new computer program based on a master's
  thesis by Jim Westervelt that described a GIS package called LAGRID
  -- the Landscape Architecture Gridcell analysis system. Thirty
  years ago, on 29 July 1983, the user manual for this new system
  titled GIS Version 1 Reference Manual was first published by J.
  Westervelt and M. O'Shea. The software continued its development at
  the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction Engineering Research
  Laboratory (USA/CERL) in Champaign, Illinois; and after further
  expansion version 1.0 was released in 1985 under the name
  Geographic Resources Analysis Support System (GRASS). The GRASS GIS
  community was established the same year with the first annual user
  meeting and the launch of GRASSnet, one of the internet's early
  mailing lists. The user community expanded to a larger audience in
  1991 with the Grasshopper mailing list and the introduction of
  the World Wide Web. The users' and programmers' mailing lists
  archives for these early years are still available online. In the
  mid 1990s the development transferred from USA/CERL to The Open
  GRASS Consortium (a group who would later generalize to become
  today's Open Geospatial Consortium -- the OGC). The project
  coordination eventually shifted to the actual international
  development team made up of governmental and academic researchers
  and university scientists. Reflecting this shift to a project run
  by the users, for the users, in 1999 GRASS GIS was released the
  first time under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).
  A detailed history of GRASS GIS can be found at
  http://grass.osgeo.org/history/. Since these early days GRASS
  development has progressed and grown, adjusting with and often at
  the forefront of new technologies as they became available. Today
  GRASS's software development is maintained by a team of domain
  experts as visualized in this beautiful new video animation which
  stylistically details the codebase evolution and modifications from
  1999 through to 2013, up to and including the latest GRASS GIS
  6.4.3 stable release. 30 years of active growth: where are we now?
  Recent versions of GRASS GIS come with exciting new features like:
  * A new modern graphical user interface complete with
  integrated workflow-wizards and interactive tools,
  * A new Python interface to the core C geoprocessing
  libraries, permitting Python developers to create powerful new
  modules in a quick and simple way,
  * Fully-fledged topological vector support for editing and
  tools for topological analysis and data cleaning,
  * Hundreds of new

Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!

2013-07-31 Thread Sylvain Maillard
Happy birthday GRASS !


Sylvain


2013/7/31 Anne Ghisla a.ghi...@gmail.com

 On Wed, 31 Jul 2013 14:05:34 +0900
 Venkatesh Raghavan ragha...@media.osaka-cu.ac.jp wrote:

  Thanks, Markus and all the pioneers for keeping GRASS alive
  and kicking for the last 30 years.
 
  Looking forward for golden jubilee celebrations
  in the year 2033.
 
  Cheers and Kampai!!
 
  Venka

 Happy birthday GRASS!

 Congratulations to the generations of developers, translators, testers,
 users and enthusiasts that have build up such a long-lived open source
 project. I am always impressed by the fact that some developers are
 younger than the codebase!

 Long live to GRASS spirit - let it be a reference for younger projects!

 Best,

 Anne

  On 7/31/2013 1:28 PM, Ravi Kumar wrote:
   Happy Birth Day GRASS.. Many happy returns.
   Markus you and all the GRASS team deserve a big applause..
   It is GRASS that has spread FOSS GIS to begin with.
   It is the 1st GRASS users conference, Thailand that has initiated
   FOSS4G events Ravi
  
  
   
 From: Markus Neteler nete...@osgeo.org
   To: GRASS-announce list grass-annou...@lists.osgeo.org
   Cc: GRASS user list grass-u...@lists.osgeo.org; OSGeo-discuss
   discuss@lists.osgeo.org; freegis-l...@intevation.de; GRASS
   developers list grass-...@lists.osgeo.org Sent: Tuesday, July 30,
   2013 10:02 PM Subject: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of
   GRASS GIS!
  
  
   Press release
   29 July 2013
   Today marks 30 years of GRASS GIS development
   Today the Free Software community celebrates the 30th birthday of
   GRASS GIS! GRASS (Geographic Resources Analysis Support System) is
   a free and open source Geographic Information System (GIS) software
   suite used for geospatial data management and analysis, image
   processing, graphics and map production, spatial modeling, and 3D
   visualization. GRASS GIS is currently used in academic and
   commercial settings around the world, as well as by many
   governmental agencies and environmental consulting companies. GRASS
   GIS can be used either as a stand-alone application or as backend
   for other software packages such as QGIS and R geostatistics. It is
   a founding member of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo)
   and can be freely downloaded at
   http://grass.osgeo.org/download/software/. Brief history In 1982,
   Lloyd Van Warren, a University of Illinois engineering student,
   began development on a new computer program based on a master's
   thesis by Jim Westervelt that described a GIS package called LAGRID
   -- the Landscape Architecture Gridcell analysis system. Thirty
   years ago, on 29 July 1983, the user manual for this new system
   titled GIS Version 1 Reference Manual was first published by J.
   Westervelt and M. O'Shea. The software continued its development at
   the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction Engineering Research
   Laboratory (USA/CERL) in Champaign, Illinois; and after further
   expansion version 1.0 was released in 1985 under the name
   Geographic Resources Analysis Support System (GRASS). The GRASS GIS
   community was established the same year with the first annual user
   meeting and the launch of GRASSnet, one of the internet's early
   mailing lists. The user community expanded to a larger audience in
   1991 with the Grasshopper mailing list and the introduction of
   the World Wide Web. The users' and programmers' mailing lists
   archives for these early years are still available online. In the
   mid 1990s the development transferred from USA/CERL to The Open
   GRASS Consortium (a group who would later generalize to become
   today's Open Geospatial Consortium -- the OGC). The project
   coordination eventually shifted to the actual international
   development team made up of governmental and academic researchers
   and university scientists. Reflecting this shift to a project run
   by the users, for the users, in 1999 GRASS GIS was released the
   first time under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).
   A detailed history of GRASS GIS can be found at
   http://grass.osgeo.org/history/. Since these early days GRASS
   development has progressed and grown, adjusting with and often at
   the forefront of new technologies as they became available. Today
   GRASS's software development is maintained by a team of domain
   experts as visualized in this beautiful new video animation which
   stylistically details the codebase evolution and modifications from
   1999 through to 2013, up to and including the latest GRASS GIS
   6.4.3 stable release. 30 years of active growth: where are we now?
   Recent versions of GRASS GIS come with exciting new features like:
   * A new modern graphical user interface complete with
   integrated workflow-wizards and interactive tools,
   * A new Python interface to the core C geoprocessing
   libraries, permitting Python developers to create powerful new
   modules

Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!

2013-07-31 Thread Massimiliano Cannata
Happy birthday GRASS GIS...

this 30 will certainly became 50 and then 100 and then

because... quality software... with quality algorithms... never die !!!


Maxi


On Wed, Jul 31, 2013 at 11:46 AM, Sylvain Maillard 
sylvain.maill...@gmail.com wrote:

 Happy birthday GRASS !


 Sylvain


 2013/7/31 Anne Ghisla a.ghi...@gmail.com

 On Wed, 31 Jul 2013 14:05:34 +0900
 Venkatesh Raghavan ragha...@media.osaka-cu.ac.jp wrote:

  Thanks, Markus and all the pioneers for keeping GRASS alive
  and kicking for the last 30 years.
 
  Looking forward for golden jubilee celebrations
  in the year 2033.
 
  Cheers and Kampai!!
 
  Venka

 Happy birthday GRASS!

 Congratulations to the generations of developers, translators, testers,
 users and enthusiasts that have build up such a long-lived open source
 project. I am always impressed by the fact that some developers are
 younger than the codebase!

 Long live to GRASS spirit - let it be a reference for younger projects!

 Best,

 Anne

  On 7/31/2013 1:28 PM, Ravi Kumar wrote:
   Happy Birth Day GRASS.. Many happy returns.
   Markus you and all the GRASS team deserve a big applause..
   It is GRASS that has spread FOSS GIS to begin with.
   It is the 1st GRASS users conference, Thailand that has initiated
   FOSS4G events Ravi
  
  
   
 From: Markus Neteler nete...@osgeo.org
   To: GRASS-announce list grass-annou...@lists.osgeo.org
   Cc: GRASS user list grass-u...@lists.osgeo.org; OSGeo-discuss
   discuss@lists.osgeo.org; freegis-l...@intevation.de; GRASS
   developers list grass-...@lists.osgeo.org Sent: Tuesday, July 30,
   2013 10:02 PM Subject: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of
   GRASS GIS!
  
  
   Press release
   29 July 2013
   Today marks 30 years of GRASS GIS development
   Today the Free Software community celebrates the 30th birthday of
   GRASS GIS! GRASS (Geographic Resources Analysis Support System) is
   a free and open source Geographic Information System (GIS) software
   suite used for geospatial data management and analysis, image
   processing, graphics and map production, spatial modeling, and 3D
   visualization. GRASS GIS is currently used in academic and
   commercial settings around the world, as well as by many
   governmental agencies and environmental consulting companies. GRASS
   GIS can be used either as a stand-alone application or as backend
   for other software packages such as QGIS and R geostatistics. It is
   a founding member of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo)
   and can be freely downloaded at
   http://grass.osgeo.org/download/software/. Brief history In 1982,
   Lloyd Van Warren, a University of Illinois engineering student,
   began development on a new computer program based on a master's
   thesis by Jim Westervelt that described a GIS package called LAGRID
   -- the Landscape Architecture Gridcell analysis system. Thirty
   years ago, on 29 July 1983, the user manual for this new system
   titled GIS Version 1 Reference Manual was first published by J.
   Westervelt and M. O'Shea. The software continued its development at
   the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction Engineering Research
   Laboratory (USA/CERL) in Champaign, Illinois; and after further
   expansion version 1.0 was released in 1985 under the name
   Geographic Resources Analysis Support System (GRASS). The GRASS GIS
   community was established the same year with the first annual user
   meeting and the launch of GRASSnet, one of the internet's early
   mailing lists. The user community expanded to a larger audience in
   1991 with the Grasshopper mailing list and the introduction of
   the World Wide Web. The users' and programmers' mailing lists
   archives for these early years are still available online. In the
   mid 1990s the development transferred from USA/CERL to The Open
   GRASS Consortium (a group who would later generalize to become
   today's Open Geospatial Consortium -- the OGC). The project
   coordination eventually shifted to the actual international
   development team made up of governmental and academic researchers
   and university scientists. Reflecting this shift to a project run
   by the users, for the users, in 1999 GRASS GIS was released the
   first time under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL).
   A detailed history of GRASS GIS can be found at
   http://grass.osgeo.org/history/. Since these early days GRASS
   development has progressed and grown, adjusting with and often at
   the forefront of new technologies as they became available. Today
   GRASS's software development is maintained by a team of domain
   experts as visualized in this beautiful new video animation which
   stylistically details the codebase evolution and modifications from
   1999 through to 2013, up to and including the latest GRASS GIS
   6.4.3 stable release. 30 years of active growth: where are we now?
   Recent versions of GRASS GIS come with exciting new features

[OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!

2013-07-30 Thread Markus Neteler
*Press release*
*29 July 2013*
Today marks 30 years of GRASS GIS development

Today the Free Software community celebrates the *30th birthday of GRASS GIS
*! GRASS (Geographic Resources Analysis Support System) is a *free and open
source* Geographic Information System (GIS) software suite used for
geospatial data management and analysis, image processing, graphics and map
production, spatial modeling, and 3D visualization. GRASS GIS is currently
used in academic and commercial settings around the world, as well as by
many governmental agencies and environmental consulting companies. GRASS
GIS can be used either as a *stand-alone application* or as *backend* for
other software packages such as QGIS and R geostatistics. It is a founding
member of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeohttp://www.osgeo.org/)
and can be freely downloaded at http://grass.osgeo.org/download/software/.

[image: 30 YEARS OF GRASS GIS!]
Brief history

In 1982, Lloyd Van Warren, a University of Illinois engineering student,
began development on a new computer program based on a master's thesis by
Jim Westervelt that described a GIS package called LAGRID – the Landscape
Architecture Gridcell analysis system. Thirty years ago, on 29 July 1983,
the user manual for this new system titled *GIS Version 1 Reference Manual*
was first published by J. Westervelt and M. O'Shea. The software continued
its development at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction
Engineering Research Laboratory (USA/CERL) in Champaign, Illinois; and
after further expansion version 1.0 was released in 1985 under the
name *Geographic
Resources Analysis Support System (GRASS)*. The GRASS GIS community was
established the same year with the first annual user meeting and the launch
of GRASSnet, one of the internet's early mailing lists. The user community
expanded to a larger audience in 1991 with the Grasshopper mailing list
and the introduction of the World Wide Web. The users' and programmers'
mailing lists archives for these early years are still available
onlinehttp://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/grass-user/
.
In the mid 1990s the development transferred from USA/CERL to The Open
GRASS Consortium (a group who would later generalize to become today's Open
Geospatial Consortium -- the OGC http://www.opengeospatial.org/). The
project coordination eventually shifted to the actual *international
development team* made up of governmental and academic researchers and
university scientists. Reflecting this shift to a project run by the users,
for the users, in 1999 GRASS GIS was released the first time under the
terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). A detailed history of GRASS
GIS can be found at http://grass.osgeo.org/history/.

Since these early days GRASS development has progressed and grown,
adjusting with and often at the forefront of new technologies as they
became available. Today GRASS's software development is maintained by a
team of domain experts as visualized in this beautiful new video
animationhttp://youtu.be/MR4_5GSID2Awhich stylistically details the
codebase evolution and modifications from
*1999 through to 2013*, up to and including the latest GRASS GIS 6.4.3
stable release.
30 years of active growth: where are we now?

Recent versions of GRASS GIS come with exciting new features like:

   - A *new modern graphical user
interfacehttp://grass.osgeo.org/screenshots/user-interface/
   * complete with integrated workflow-wizards and interactive tools,
   - A *new Python interfacehttp://grasswiki.osgeo.org/wiki/GRASS_and_Python
   * to the core C geoprocessing libraries, permitting Python developers to
   create powerful new modules in a quick and simple way,
   - Fully-fledged *topological vector
support*http://grass.osgeo.org/grass64/manuals/vectorintro.htmlfor
editing and tools for topological analysis and data cleaning,
   - Hundreds of *new modules* to analyze raster and vector data of all
   scales and types, with hundreds more contributed in an active community
   repository,
   - Support for *massive data processing* (e.g. relevant for LiDAR
   processing) and Large File Support ( 2GB, 64-bit files on 32-bit systems),
   - A codebase *portable* to all of today's major Operating Systems,
   - Installed on everything from low-power dataloggers and field laptops
   to high performance Grid Engines and TOP500 supercomputers.

GRASS GIS is currently developed by a global team of around twenty core
programmers, plus numerous add-on contributors, testers, and translators.
Overall, more than seventy core developers have worked on the code in the
past thirty years, making over fifty-thousand modifications to the code.
All the while, hundreds more have provided peer review and improvements to
algorithms and documentation while using GRASS GIS in professional,
educational, and research contexts.
Where to next?

Development on GRASS GIS continues with as much energy and interest as
ever. *Version 6.4.3 has been released as a birthday

Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!

2013-07-30 Thread Angelos Tzotsos

Happy birthday GRASS GIS!
:)

On 07/30/2013 07:32 PM, Markus Neteler wrote:

*Press release*
*29 July 2013*
Today marks 30 years of GRASS GIS development

Today the Free Software community celebrates the *30th birthday of GRASS GIS
*! GRASS (Geographic Resources Analysis Support System) is a *free and open
source* Geographic Information System (GIS) software suite used for
geospatial data management and analysis, image processing, graphics and map
production, spatial modeling, and 3D visualization. GRASS GIS is currently
used in academic and commercial settings around the world, as well as by
many governmental agencies and environmental consulting companies. GRASS
GIS can be used either as a *stand-alone application* or as *backend* for
other software packages such as QGIS and R geostatistics. It is a founding
member of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeohttp://www.osgeo.org/)
and can be freely downloaded at http://grass.osgeo.org/download/software/.

[image: 30 YEARS OF GRASS GIS!]
Brief history

In 1982, Lloyd Van Warren, a University of Illinois engineering student,
began development on a new computer program based on a master's thesis by
Jim Westervelt that described a GIS package called LAGRID -- the Landscape
Architecture Gridcell analysis system. Thirty years ago, on 29 July 1983,
the user manual for this new system titled *GIS Version 1 Reference Manual*
was first published by J. Westervelt and M. O'Shea. The software continued
its development at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction
Engineering Research Laboratory (USA/CERL) in Champaign, Illinois; and
after further expansion version 1.0 was released in 1985 under the
name *Geographic
Resources Analysis Support System (GRASS)*. The GRASS GIS community was
established the same year with the first annual user meeting and the launch
of GRASSnet, one of the internet's early mailing lists. The user community
expanded to a larger audience in 1991 with the Grasshopper mailing list
and the introduction of the World Wide Web. The users' and programmers'
mailing lists archives for these early years are still available
onlinehttp://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/grass-user/
.
In the mid 1990s the development transferred from USA/CERL to The Open
GRASS Consortium (a group who would later generalize to become today's Open
Geospatial Consortium -- the OGC http://www.opengeospatial.org/). The
project coordination eventually shifted to the actual *international
development team* made up of governmental and academic researchers and
university scientists. Reflecting this shift to a project run by the users,
for the users, in 1999 GRASS GIS was released the first time under the
terms of the GNU General Public License (GPL). A detailed history of GRASS
GIS can be found at http://grass.osgeo.org/history/.

Since these early days GRASS development has progressed and grown,
adjusting with and often at the forefront of new technologies as they
became available. Today GRASS's software development is maintained by a
team of domain experts as visualized in this beautiful new video
animationhttp://youtu.be/MR4_5GSID2Awhich stylistically details the
codebase evolution and modifications from
*1999 through to 2013*, up to and including the latest GRASS GIS 6.4.3
stable release.
30 years of active growth: where are we now?

Recent versions of GRASS GIS come with exciting new features like:

- A *new modern graphical user
interfacehttp://grass.osgeo.org/screenshots/user-interface/
* complete with integrated workflow-wizards and interactive tools,
- A *new Python interfacehttp://grasswiki.osgeo.org/wiki/GRASS_and_Python
* to the core C geoprocessing libraries, permitting Python developers to
create powerful new modules in a quick and simple way,
- Fully-fledged *topological vector
support*http://grass.osgeo.org/grass64/manuals/vectorintro.htmlfor
editing and tools for topological analysis and data cleaning,
- Hundreds of *new modules* to analyze raster and vector data of all
scales and types, with hundreds more contributed in an active community
repository,
- Support for *massive data processing* (e.g. relevant for LiDAR
processing) and Large File Support ( 2GB, 64-bit files on 32-bit systems),
- A codebase *portable* to all of today's major Operating Systems,
- Installed on everything from low-power dataloggers and field laptops
to high performance Grid Engines and TOP500 supercomputers.

GRASS GIS is currently developed by a global team of around twenty core
programmers, plus numerous add-on contributors, testers, and translators.
Overall, more than seventy core developers have worked on the code in the
past thirty years, making over fifty-thousand modifications to the code.
All the while, hundreds more have provided peer review and improvements to
algorithms and documentation while using GRASS GIS in professional,
educational, and research contexts.
Where to next?

Development on GRASS GIS continues with as 

Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!

2013-07-30 Thread Ravi Kumar
Happy Birth Day GRASS.. Many happy returns.
Markus you and all the GRASS team deserve a big applause.. 
It is GRASS that has spread FOSS GIS to begin with.
It is the 1st GRASS users conference, Thailand that has initiated FOSS4G events
Ravi 



 From: Markus Neteler nete...@osgeo.org
To: GRASS-announce list grass-annou...@lists.osgeo.org 
Cc: GRASS user list grass-u...@lists.osgeo.org; OSGeo-discuss 
discuss@lists.osgeo.org; freegis-l...@intevation.de; GRASS developers list 
grass-...@lists.osgeo.org 
Sent: Tuesday, July 30, 2013 10:02 PM
Subject: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!
 


Press release
29 July 2013
Today marks 30 years of GRASS GIS development
Today the Free Software community celebrates the 30th birthday of GRASS GIS! 
GRASS (Geographic Resources Analysis Support System) is a free and open source 
Geographic Information System (GIS) software suite used for geospatial 
data management and analysis, image processing, graphics and map 
production, spatial modeling, and 3D visualization. GRASS GIS is 
currently used in academic and commercial settings around the world, as 
well as by many governmental agencies and environmental consulting 
companies. GRASS GIS can be used either as a stand-alone application or as 
backend for other software packages such as QGIS and R geostatistics. It is a 
founding member of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo) and can be 
freely downloaded at http://grass.osgeo.org/download/software/.
Brief history
In 1982, Lloyd Van Warren, a University of Illinois engineering 
student, began development on a new computer program based on a master's thesis 
by Jim Westervelt that described a GIS package called LAGRID – 
the Landscape Architecture Gridcell analysis system. Thirty years ago, 
on 29 July 1983, the user manual for this new system titled GIS Version 1 
Reference Manual was first published by J. Westervelt and M. O'Shea. The 
software 
continued its development at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers 
Construction Engineering Research Laboratory (USA/CERL) in Champaign, 
Illinois; and after further expansion version 1.0 was released in 1985 
under the name Geographic Resources Analysis Support System (GRASS). The GRASS 
GIS community was established the same year with the first 
annual user meeting and the launch of GRASSnet, one of the internet's 
early mailing lists. The user community expanded to a larger audience in 1991 
with the Grasshopper mailing list and the introduction of the 
World Wide Web. The users' and programmers' mailing lists archives for 
these early years are still available online.
In
 the mid 1990s the development transferred from USA/CERL to The Open 
GRASS Consortium (a group who would later generalize to become today's 
Open Geospatial Consortium -- the OGC). The project coordination eventually 
shifted to the actual international development team made up of governmental 
and academic researchers and university 
scientists. Reflecting this shift to a project run by the users, for the users, 
in 1999 GRASS GIS was released the first time under the terms of the GNU 
General Public License (GPL). A detailed history of GRASS GIS 
can be found at http://grass.osgeo.org/history/.
Since these early days GRASS development has progressed and grown, 
adjusting with and often at the forefront of new technologies as they 
became available. Today GRASS's software development is maintained by a 
team of domain experts as visualized in this beautiful new video animation 
which stylistically details the codebase evolution and modifications from 1999 
through to 2013, up to and including the latest GRASS GIS 6.4.3 stable release.
30 years of active growth: where are we now?
Recent versions of GRASS GIS come with exciting new features like:
* A new modern graphical user interface complete with integrated 
workflow-wizards and interactive tools,
* A new Python interface to the core C geoprocessing libraries, 
permitting Python developers to create powerful new modules in a quick and 
simple way,
* Fully-fledged topological vector support for editing and tools for 
topological analysis and data cleaning,
* Hundreds of new modules to analyze raster and vector data of all 
scales and types, with hundreds more contributed in an active community 
repository,
* Support for massive data processing (e.g. relevant for LiDAR 
processing) and Large File Support ( 2GB, 64-bit files on 32-bit systems),
* A codebase portable to all of today's major Operating Systems,
* Installed on everything from low-power dataloggers and field laptops 
to high performance Grid Engines and TOP500 supercomputers.
GRASS GIS is currently developed by a global team of around twenty 
core programmers, plus numerous add-on contributors, testers, and 
translators. Overall, more than seventy core developers have worked on 
the code in the past thirty years, making over fifty-thousand

Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!

2013-07-30 Thread Venkatesh Raghavan

Thanks, Markus and all the pioneers for keeping GRASS alive
and kicking for the last 30 years.

Looking forward for golden jubilee celebrations
in the year 2033.

Cheers and Kampai!!

Venka

On 7/31/2013 1:28 PM, Ravi Kumar wrote:

Happy Birth Day GRASS.. Many happy returns.
Markus you and all the GRASS team deserve a big applause..
It is GRASS that has spread FOSS GIS to begin with.
It is the 1st GRASS users conference, Thailand that has initiated FOSS4G events
Ravi



  From: Markus Neteler nete...@osgeo.org
To: GRASS-announce list grass-annou...@lists.osgeo.org
Cc: GRASS user list grass-u...@lists.osgeo.org; OSGeo-discuss 
discuss@lists.osgeo.org; freegis-l...@intevation.de; GRASS developers list 
grass-...@lists.osgeo.org
Sent: Tuesday, July 30, 2013 10:02 PM
Subject: [OSGeo-Discuss] Celebrating 30 years of GRASS GIS!
  



Press release
29 July 2013
Today marks 30 years of GRASS GIS development
Today the Free Software community celebrates the 30th birthday of GRASS GIS! 
GRASS (Geographic Resources Analysis Support System) is a free and open source 
Geographic Information System (GIS) software suite used for geospatial
data management and analysis, image processing, graphics and map
production, spatial modeling, and 3D visualization. GRASS GIS is
currently used in academic and commercial settings around the world, as
well as by many governmental agencies and environmental consulting
companies. GRASS GIS can be used either as a stand-alone application or as 
backend for other software packages such as QGIS and R geostatistics. It is a
founding member of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo) and can be 
freely downloaded at http://grass.osgeo.org/download/software/.
Brief history
In 1982, Lloyd Van Warren, a University of Illinois engineering
student, began development on a new computer program based on a master's thesis 
by Jim Westervelt that described a GIS package called LAGRID --
the Landscape Architecture Gridcell analysis system. Thirty years ago,
on 29 July 1983, the user manual for this new system titled GIS Version 1 Reference 
Manual was first published by J. Westervelt and M. O'Shea. The software
continued its development at the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Construction Engineering Research Laboratory (USA/CERL) in Champaign,
Illinois; and after further expansion version 1.0 was released in 1985
under the name Geographic Resources Analysis Support System (GRASS). The GRASS 
GIS community was established the same year with the first
annual user meeting and the launch of GRASSnet, one of the internet's
early mailing lists. The user community expanded to a larger audience in 1991 with the 
Grasshopper mailing list and the introduction of the
World Wide Web. The users' and programmers' mailing lists archives for
these early years are still available online.
In
  the mid 1990s the development transferred from USA/CERL to The Open
GRASS Consortium (a group who would later generalize to become today's
Open Geospatial Consortium -- the OGC). The project coordination eventually 
shifted to the actual international development team made up of governmental 
and academic researchers and university
scientists. Reflecting this shift to a project run by the users, for the users, 
in 1999 GRASS GIS was released the first time under the terms of the GNU 
General Public License (GPL). A detailed history of GRASS GIS
can be found at http://grass.osgeo.org/history/.
Since these early days GRASS development has progressed and grown,
adjusting with and often at the forefront of new technologies as they
became available. Today GRASS's software development is maintained by a
team of domain experts as visualized in this beautiful new video animation 
which stylistically details the codebase evolution and modifications from 1999 
through to 2013, up to and including the latest GRASS GIS 6.4.3 stable release.
30 years of active growth: where are we now?
Recent versions of GRASS GIS come with exciting new features like:
* A new modern graphical user interface complete with integrated 
workflow-wizards and interactive tools,
* A new Python interface to the core C geoprocessing libraries, 
permitting Python developers to create powerful new modules in a quick and 
simple way,
* Fully-fledged topological vector support for editing and tools for 
topological analysis and data cleaning,
* Hundreds of new modules to analyze raster and vector data of all 
scales and types, with hundreds more contributed in an active community 
repository,
* Support for massive data processing (e.g. relevant for LiDAR processing) 
and Large File Support ( 2GB, 64-bit files on 32-bit systems),
* A codebase portable to all of today's major Operating Systems,
* Installed on everything from low-power dataloggers and field laptops 
to high performance Grid Engines and TOP500 supercomputers.
GRASS GIS is currently developed by a global team of around