Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Gov't adopting open source ?

2010-01-15 Thread Ravi
Hi.
in India the southern state of Kerala is officially committed to Open Source.

http://www.catfoss.kerala.gov.in/index.php?option=com_contentview=articleid=49Itemid=57

Cheers
Ravi Kumar

--- On Fri, 15/1/10, Jorge Gaspar Sanz Salinas js...@osgeo.org wrote:

 From: Jorge Gaspar Sanz Salinas js...@osgeo.org
 Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Gov't adopting open source ?
 To: OSGeo Discussions discuss@lists.osgeo.org
 Date: Friday, 15 January, 2010, 3:10 AM
 2010/1/14 andrea giacomelli pibi...@gmail.com:
  Hi Tyler
 
  2010/1/14 Tyler Mitchell (OSGeo) tmitch...@osgeo.org:
  I'm just starting to dig into this question
 myself, but thought I'd ask if
  anyone else knows of a resource/document/site,
 etc. that shows which
  governments (nationally, regional or municipal)
 have committed to open
  source software?
 
 
  1) in Europe, there is OSOR, which is the Open Source
 observatory. www.osor.eu
 
  This can be a good source.
 
 Maybe more related with use cases is ePractice[1], another
 european
 portal focused on use cases in public administration.
 
 In fact, OSOR, ePractice and SEMIC are three parallel
 efforts of the
 European Union to promote free software on public admin.
 
 Cheers
 
 [1] http://www.epractice.eu/
 [2] http://www.semic.eu
 -- 
 Jorge Gaspar Sanz Salinas
 Ingeniero en Geodesia y Cartografía
 http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Jorge_Sanz
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[OSGeo-Discuss] FOSS4G 2010 Call for Workshops and Tutorials is open

2010-01-15 Thread Oscar Fonts
Barcelona, Spain. 15 January 2010.


The Free and Open Source Software for Geospatial (FOSS4G) conference
is pleased to announce a Call for Workshops and Tutorials for the 2010
conference, being held September 6-9, 2010, in Barcelona, Spain.

FOSS4G is the international gathering of tribes for open source
geospatial communities. Users and developers are encouraged to present
their latest projects and software to demonstrate the power of Open
Source for system integration through a series of workshop sessions
and tutorial presentations. Session participants should expect to see
presentations on both geospatial open source and propriety software
integration along with pure open source solutions.


Workshops


Workshops are expected to be 3 hour hands-on experiences with
participants following along with the instructor, working directly
with the application under discussion. All workshop rooms will be
equipped with computers to support this vision. A projector will be
provided for each computer room for use within a workshop. Instructors
will need to discuss pre-installation requirements with the Conference
Organising Committee if required.

Workshops are expected to require considerable effort to create, with
past experience showing that three days of preparation per hour of
presentation are required to produce a high quality workshop.
Additionally you will be expected to develop material for attendees to
take home with them, such as handouts, workbook, CD-ROMs, etc. Due to
the effort involved in producing and presenting a workshop,
instructors will receive a single complementary registration to the
conference for delivering a workshop.

All workshop submissions will be considered, but particular interest
will be shown in:

 * Practical Introduction to FOSS4G software
 * Integrating Open Source
 * Spatial Data Infrastructure


Tutorials


Tutorials are 90 minute sessions during the regular presentations
portion of the conference. Tutorial rooms will not be equipped with
computers. However, presenters may make use of delegate laptops and
the FOSS4G LiveDVD.

Preference will be given to hands-on tutorials.

Any hands-on aspects to a tutorial will be the responsibility of the
presenter and needs to be described in the tutorial description.
Presenters making use of the LiveDVD will be expected to contribute to
testing pre-releases to ensure material and software is properly
installed. To discuss your requirements for LiveDVD, please contact
the LiveDVD community:
http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Live_GIS_Disc#Contact_Us.

All tutorial submissions will be considered, but particular interest
will be shown in the following topics:

 * Practical Introductions
 * Interoperability
 * Integration
 * Performance tuning
 * SDI services
 * Mobile/phone applications


Application form
---

Follow this link to submit your proposals:
http://intranet.pacifico-meetings.com:8081/abscoweb/Inicio.iface?id=14
Please add a 300 word abstract, in plain text format (pasting a text
with style markup could make the process fail).

The deadline for workshop / tutorial submissions is January 30.


FOSS4G 2010 Highlights


Workshops and Tutorials: Workshops and Tutorials allow presenters to
lead attendees through applications, integration solutions, or other
topics in an interactive environment. Half-day workshops (3 hours)
will be held in computer rooms on September 6 (afternoon session) and
7 (morning session). Tutorials (90 minutes) will be held in standard
presentation rooms, run concurrently with presentations on 7-9
September.

Presentations: The meat of the conference are it's presentations.
Drawing on a huge community of local, regional and international
experts we will discuss some of the most current and poignant topics
in the industry today.

Academic Track: The academic sessions, with paper publications and
poster presentations, aims at bringing together researchers,
developers, users and practitioners carrying out research and
development in the geospatial and the free and open source fields and
willing to share original and recent research developments and
experiences. The academic track will act as an inventory of current
research topics, with the main objective of promoting cooperative
research between OSGeo developers and the academia.

FOSS4G Live DVD: LiveDVDs, based on the Xubuntu operating system and
including Geospatial Open Source Software, will be given to all
delegates. Users can boot a Live DVD on their computer and trial the
software without installing or effecting the existing system.
http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Live_GIS_Disc

Installfest: The Installfest will give delegates the opportunity to
meet in a common area and install a wide variety of FOSS software on
their laptops, netbooks or any other system they care to bring in.
Community members will assist with any troubles and provide help and
insight into the software.

Birds of a 

[OSGeo-Discuss] Looking for information about Open Data practices and how it help to foster collaboration.

2010-01-15 Thread Bob Basques
All, 

I'm putting together a proposal here at the City to open up more of our 
datasets to the public.  We currently have about 30 GIS data layers available 
to the public, ( http://, ) with ~170 layers that are not public.  While there 
are some layers that won't be made available for security or licensing issues, 
there are many that the owners of simply don't want to make available. 

I'm looking for information to include in a short proposal that might sway some 
of the folks sitting on datasets internally to get them to publish the data to 
the masses and need points of reasoning to point them at. 

I already have some info related to general practices moving towards this type 
of data availability, and some of the recent threads on the OSGEO lists about 
data licensing would likely come into play as well.   

Thanks for any pointers on this. 

bobb 



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Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] Looking for information about Open Data practices and how it help to foster collaboration.

2010-01-15 Thread Schlagel, Joel D IWR

Publishing data would be consistent with Presidents open government
initiative

http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/TransparencyandOpenGovernment/

-joel


On 1/15/10 1:11 PM, Bob Basques bob.basq...@ci.stpaul.mn.us wrote:


 
  All,
 

 
  I'm putting together a proposal here at the City to open up more of our
 datasets to the public.  We currently have about 30 GIS data layers available
 to the public, http://,  with ~170 layers that are not public.  While there
 are some layers that won't be made available for security or licensing issues,
 there are many that the owners of simply don't want to make available.
 

 
  I'm looking for information to include in a short proposal that might sway
 some of the folks sitting on datasets internally to get them to publish the
 data to the masses and need points of reasoning to point them at.
 

 
  I already have some info related to general practices moving towards this
 type of data availability, and some of the recent threads on the OSGEO lists
 about data licensing would likely come into play as well.
 

 
  Thanks for any pointers on this.
 

 
  bobb
 
   
 
  
 
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-joel

 
Joel D. Schlagel
U.S. Army Engineer Institute for Water Resources
http://www.iwr.usace.army.mil


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