Hi
In the UK there is centrally collated personal injury road accident data and
this is made available via the UKDA. I have a web page that links to some of
the data for Great Britain:
http://www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/people/a.turner/data/Stats19/Stats19.html
Personal injury road accidents are only
Hi,
It is possible to come up with a set of tasks and tests used to confirm and
classify what software are capable of. Working out what is included and how
this is included is non-trivial and I think this is in the domain of the Open
Geospatial Consortium and the standards defining organisation
Sorry, what time is the meeting? Somehow, I can't find this detail...
Thanks,
Andy
http://www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/people/a.turner/index.html
From: Discuss [mailto:discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Suchith
Anand
Sent: 22 March 2018 10:50
To: geofor...@lists.osgeo.org; discuss@lists.osg
Hi List,
I am looking for some advice on the existence, availability and
appropriateness.
Am I asking in the right place? Can anyone help?
OGSA-DAI (http://www.ogsadai.org.uk/) has pipeline architecture. It is
designed like that to work fast in a multi-threaded way with streams of
data.
Many th
Hi,
I'm processing a dataset for the Cairngorms National Park in the UK.
This source is NextMap data at a 5 metre square gridded raster. It has
3 columns and 24000 rows. Amongst other things I calculate roughness
for kernels taking in all values within 64 celldistances. The roughness
output i
nal/blog/archive/2008/
03/03/GIS Specification.doc>
From: Andy Turner
Sent: 03 March 2008 14:14
To: 'OSGeo Discussions'
Cc: Stephen Carver; '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: FW: GIS for JMT
Hi OSGeo Community (cc Steve, Mike),
Sorry if
> At the moment, I can't think of any "really successful open source
projects" that didn't have their origins with "a network of
partly-funded enthusiast contributors" where the originator didn't have
some form of organizational home and/or a funding stream for the first
few releases of the softwar
Hi,
I developed some code that would do this. I called it Geographically Weighted
Statistics and it relies on another library I developed called Grids. You can
find these via the following URLs:
http://www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/people/a.turner/src/andyt/java/gws/
http://www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/people/a.
Hi,
In the UK, you can see this happening from:
http://blogs.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/digitalengagement/
Best wishes,
Andy
From: discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org [discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org] On
Behalf Of Haris Kurtagic [ha...@sl-king.com]
Sent: 16 January 2010 0
Hi Kumaran, OSGeo,
As part of the SPIN!-project funded by the European Commission I was involved
in developing a cluster component to a suite of spatial data mining tools. It
is a standalone java implementation of numerous spatial clustering routines
including GAM/K. Ian Turton, now at Penn Sta
Hi,
Seadragon reminds me of Virtual Vellum
(http://www.sheffield.ac.uk/hri/projects/projectpages/virtualvellum.html), but
I don't know the current status of that. (Peter, Mike?)
Best wishes,
Andy
http://www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/people/a.turner/
-Original Message-
From: discuss-boun...@lis
Hi OSGeo Discussions, (cc Steve, Justin),
In terms of the computing of viewsheds, both Steve Carver
(http://www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/people/s.carver/) and Justin Washtell
(http://www.comp.leeds.ac.uk/washtell/) have done some work on this, but I
don't know the latest...
It can be useful to compute
details of
season etc may well come into such a calculation...
From: discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org [discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org] On
Behalf Of Andy Turner [a.g.d.tur...@leeds.ac.uk]
Sent: 14 September 2010 18:53
To: discuss@lists.osgeo.org
Cc: Stephen
On the bags front, the FOSS4G conference bag from Lausanne was the best
conference bag I have ever got and I have used mine loads to carry laptop and
stuff and it has lead to some impromptu introductions/meetings. Such a great
bag! Mine though is surely wearing out... I would be happy to buy a s
There is use of a the term Geospatial Free and Open Source Software (GFOSS):
http://www.osgeo.org/node/778
Andy
http://www.geog.leeds.ac.uk/people/a.turner/
-Original Message-
From: discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org [mailto:discuss-boun...@lists.osgeo.org]
On Behalf Of Cameron Shorter
Se
Hi,
Is there more to this than loading the data and the data server technology onto
a machine you take into the field and configuring the clients on that machine
to use the local data and server technology?
Do you take a network with you? You could for example network and rely on one
server wh
3. To technically certify a product or application - (e.g. as a sort of
endorsement that the technology meets some OSGeo standard)
I don't understand this. The following standards come to mind: Does the product
output OGC compliant data? Uses compatible versions and licenses?
Maybe to do with
Hi,
There are many ways to do this.
In my experience some academic conferences that have peer reviewed outputs have
developed the following Modus Operandi (I don't know how normal this is):
1. Abstracts and/or Modified Abstracts or Full Papers (and sometimes Posters)
are published in Conference
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