I am honored to be nominated to continue on the PSC.

By way of background, I have been a GRASS user and contributor for nearly two 
decades. When I first managed to compile GRASS on my Mac, I wrote a polite 
email to Markus Neteler asking about the possibility of a GUI. He wrote back a 
polite email explaining that this new open source project relied on volunteers 
to do such development. While uncertain about my ability to contribute the 
project, I tried anyway--learning and benefiting much. I have had a number of 
roles in the GRASS community and indeed ended us designing and coding several 
generations of GUI's, including the one now used. This work is now carried on 
by others younger and more talented than I am. Importantly, all of my 
contributions would not have been possible without the collaboration of other 
volunteers in this community. While I still do a little development work, my 
main contribution is to maintain the Mac binaries.

I use GRASS for socio-ecological research and dynamic modeling, and teach 
geospatial technologies with GRASS (in the USA, Germany, and Spain). Being a 
member of the international GRASS community has made me an ardent and vocal 
advocate of FOSS and open science. Promoting open scientific computation is key 
to the mission of the scientific network I lead, CoMSES.NET. I regularly point 
to GRASS as an exemplar open source software project, a bottom up, 
self-organized network of users and developers around the world who together 
create some of the most powerful and highest quality geospatial software 
available.

I will continue to participate in the GRASS developer and user communities, 
advocating for GRASS and FOSS, whether or not I am on the PSC. If selected, I 
am happy to continue to provide input, a historical perspective, and support 
the PSC as a researcher/educator/developer and as a Mac user of GRASS. My goals 
for GRASS center around making it more accessible so that more people can use 
it and contribute to the project. I am very happy to see the continued growth 
of the developer and user communities, especially the new generation of 
developers who are continuing the GRASS tradition of high-quality, cutting-edge 
software. I certainly support ongoing work to make the GUI more flexible and 
more usable, critically important for enabling a wide diversity of people to 
apply this sophisticated and powerful software. Along these lines, I would 
encourage incipient development efforts to provide a browser-based version of 
GRASS, available online as software-as-a-service. Also, in order to support 
transparent, scientific workflows, one suggestion I have is for an option that 
would automatically record the commands behind a series of GUI actions in a 
file that could be saved and shared. All the functionality to do this is 
already in place in GRASS. Finally, while preparing this statement, I went 
looking for an expression of the GRASS mission, and found that one is not 
available beyond "Bringing advanced geospatial technologies to the world". This 
is indeed laudable. But given the long and successful history, and worldwide 
use of GRASS, it would be of value for the PSC, with approval of voting 
community members, to articulate a more comprehensive GRASS mission statement 
to communicate the vision of this community to a global audience.

Michael Barton

______________________________
C. Michael Barton
Network for Computational Modeling in Social & Ecological Sciences
School of Complex Adaptive Systems
School of Human Evolution & Social Change
Arizona State University
USA



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