Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

In+ersec+ion for Spatial People

OSGeo Foundation to Provide a Geospatial Umbrella

posted by Satri on Tuesday March 07, @07:49AM   Printer-friendly   Email story  Permalink  Trackback URI  Slashdotthis  Diggthis  Del.icio.us
from the first-steps-of-a-great-journey dept.
OSGeo Foundation writes "Press release: Open Source Geospatial Foundation Created to Strengthen Collaborative Development of Open Geospatial Technologies. OSGEO to provide an umbrella for community-led GIS and mapping projects. March 06, 2006 - The open source geospatial community today announced the formation of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation, a not-for-profit organization whose mission is to support and promote the collaborative development of open geospatial technologies and data. The foundation was formed in February to provide financial, organizational and legal support to the broader open source geospatial community. It will also serve as an independent legal entity to which community members can contribute code, funding and other resources, secure in the knowledge that their contributions will be maintained for public benefit." Read more below for the whole press release.
On February 4th, OSGEO held its first meeting in Chicago with 25 participants representing 18 groups and over 20 different open source geospatial projects, and 39 other parties participating via Internet Relay Chat. At this meeting, the participants took important steps in forming and organizing a foundation to develop and support open source geospatial technologies, including defining the foundation's name, structure and vision. The consensus reached at the Chicago meeting paves the way to establish a productive, inclusive foundation.

The Chicago meeting also resulted in the appointment of an initial board of directors that will be responsible for the drafting and execution of the foundation's charter and bylaws. The initial five directors come from North America and Europe and represent various open source projects and technologies. The initial five directors of OSGEO are:
  • Arnulf Christl - Mapbender, CCGIS, Germany;
  • Chris Holmes - GeoServer/GeoTools, The Open Planning Project, U.S.;
  • Gary Lang - MapGuide, Autodesk, U.S.;
  • Markus Neteler - GRASS, Istituto Trentino Di Cultura, Italy;
  • Frank Warmerdam - GDAL/OGR, Canada.


The foundation expects to appoint four additional directors within the next several weeks to serve as the full interim board until the next annual meeting of the foundation membership at FOSS4G this fall.

OSGEO draws governance inspiration from several aspects of the Apache Foundation, including a membership composed of individuals drawn from foundation projects who are selected for membership status based on their active contribution to foundation projects and governance. The initial membership consists of the five initial board members plus 16 other participants who attended the Chicago organizational meeting. The foundation added recently further 24 members from the broader open source geospatial community through a public nomination and election process to reach 45 voting members.

Initial OSGEO projects are GeoTools, Mapbender, MapBuilder, MapGuide, MapServer, GDAL/OGR, GRASS, and OSSIM.

The foundation will not require that OSGEO software projects to be licensed under any one particular open source license, but will require that all OSGEO software be released under an open source license approved by the Open Source Initiative (OSI). The long term goal is to encourage licenses that allow the different foundation projects to work better together and permit for code exchange among them. The foundation will implement contribution and intellectual property policies designed to avoid the inclusion of proprietary or patented code in OSGEO projects. Foundation projects are focused on interoperability - both with one another at the library level, and with other proprietary and open source projects through the use of open standards.

The foundation will also be pursuing goals beyond software development, such as promoting more open access to government produced spatial data, which is a major problem outside of North America.

About the Open Source Geospatial Foundation

The Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGEO), is a not-for-profit organization whose mission is to support and promote the collaborative development of open geospatial technologies and data. The foundation was formed to provide financial, organizational and legal support to the broader open source geospatial community. It will also serve as an independent legal entity to which community members can contribute code, funding and other resources, secure in the knowledge that their contributions will be maintained for public benefit.

For more information, write to info@osgeo.org and see http://www.osgeo.org/

Related Stories

OSGeo Celebrates Accomplishments at Six-Month Mark [+]
Open Source Geospatial Foundation writes "Seattle, Washington, USA, July 19 — The Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo) announced today that Mapbender, a portal-based suite of software for geodata management using OGC OWS architectures, has met all of the legal and community requirements to become the first official product supported by the Foundation. Just six months after its inception, the Foundation is already starting to make an impact on the geospatial industry, providing a degree of quality assurance for open source geospatial software users and getting its message out to the GIS community at conferences and tradeshows." Read below the rest of the PR.
State of Open Source GIS Report 3 comments [+]
At GeoTec in June Refractions distributed their State of Open Source GIS report. Their website provided an old version of the document so I requested the newer one by email. Jody on the OSGeo mailing list tells us the new version is available on Refractions' website. This 42-pages report is worthed and introduces every major open source GIS/Geospatial project in the wild. From the introduction: "Fundamentally, successful OSS projects are not created by releasing free source code – they are created through the growth of communities of shared interest."
The Total Cost of Ownership of Open Source GIS Software [+]
Steve's Little World blog discuss, ultimately somewhat, the total cost of ownership of open source geospatial software. Steve later provided clarifications. From the first entry: "GIS users spent A LOT of time learning how to do things the ESRI way - and whether that is the right or wrong way is immaterial. Time AND money is precious and it takes both to switch to new software, especially when it requires new ways of doing things." Spatially Adjusted commented: "I’ll play devils advocate here and say that if someone really wanted to go open source, they could just take their ESRI maintenance costs and apply that to a consultant who could help them deploy open source correctly." Don't miss Paul Ramsey's reaction: "What open source projects want to attract is not users -- it is developers. Developers will make the project stronger, add features, fix bugs, do all the things that end users want, but cannot do for themselves.". Coincidently, the actual poll is about open source geospatial software.
OSGeo: What's Working and What's Not Working after 6 Months [+]
After a long and interesting discussion on the OSGeo mailing list, their wiki now partly summarize what's working and what's not working with the OSGeo after over 6 months of existence. Here's the first message of the long thread. From the not working side: "The main part of OSGeo that I think is not working as well as it could is communication. We have many mailing lists, which somewhat hide the real activity that is going on if you aren't following them every hour. There are committee conference calls as well. We also have a very active IRC channel which allows for awesome 1-on-1, real- time discussion, but it is also veiled somewhat from the public. Of course you can review IRC logs, follow many mailing lists and watch the wiki for changes, but we need some way to distill or amplify these great discussions in a manner that allows everyone to know, at a glance, what is going on. I have no real solution for this, but I'm sure we can hack something together."
OSGeo Selects Tyler Mitchell as Executive Director [+]
mpg writes "Seattle, Washington, Oct. 19, 2006- The Open Source Geospatial Foundation, or OSGeo, today announced that Tyler Mitchell has been hired as its new executive director. Mitchell-who has a decade of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) experience as an Analyst, Manager, open source advocate and author-will be responsible for the Foundation's day-to-day operations, supporting development and promotion." Rest of the press release below.
Calendar: Autodesk's Lisa Campbell Keynote at Montreal's Geomatics 2006 3 comments [+]
Lisa Campbell, Autodesk's VP of the Infrastructure Solutions Division, gave the Keynote speech at the Geomatics 2006 event this morning. The speech emphasized on data as key to geospatial business (see previous stories). With Autodesk's backing of the OSGeo, I wasn't surprised to see her focus on open source geospatial software, including MapGuide, with mentions of geospatial standards and the OGC. The Feature Data Objects library was also on the menu. She additionally told us about landxml.org, an initiative I wasn't aware of. On a personal note, in my speech (which took place right after Lisa!), I underlined the fact that the project I was presenting is extensively using GDAL/OGR open source libraries. On another personal note, I was surprised to meet several Slashgeo readers that came to say hello during the day (thanks :-).
First Anniversary of the Open Geospatial Foundation [+]
Tyler Mitchell, OSGeo's Executive Director, announced the rather quiet first year anniversary of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation. The interesting blog entry summarize what that year has been all about. From the entry's introduction: "February 4th, 2007 was the first anniversary of OSGeo. One year ago 25 people met face-to-face, and many more via phone and IRC, to discuss the possibility of starting an umbrella organisation. These participants represented over 13 different open source projects. The foundational purpose of the organisation was to help promote and continue to develop open source tools in the geospatial sphere. Since that time, much has happened and momentum around OSGeo continues to develop. Here are only a few highlights from that first year."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold:
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.