Open Source GIS Conference Wrapup 22
Wugger writes "The open source GIS community has been around for a long time, but has only been meeting regularly for the past three years. The most recent conference wrapped up on the weekend in Minneapolis. An excellent summary article and blog postings are available from Directions Magazine. Other attendees have also
posted
blogs
and
observations.
The conference was attended by 300 people this year (up from 200 the previous year) and all the major open source GIS hackers were in attendance. In addition, some proprietary corporate players showed up to check out the scene: Autodesk, ERMapper, and ESRI, the Microsoft of the GIS industry."
Low Attendance? (Score:4, Funny)
400 people were registered, but the missing 100 people were not able to locate the convention center thanks to faulty map software.
Harsh (Score:3, Funny)
That's like saying "these guys club baby penguins to death", especially on
Re:Harsh (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Harsh (Score:2, Interesting)
If you really want to feel the pain, try GRASS, especially for Cygwin, where its basically unusable.
And for things that are difficult to do, ArcGIS 9 has much easier scripting with python than arcview did with AVENUE( arcview scripting) And the ancient arcinfo systems? Very painful to use.
I hail the new featur
Re:Harsh (Score:2)
And the grandparent poster was correct, they do have the upgrade treadmill thing going on -- if I'm not mistakened, the very next version ditches the new COM/VBA base and moves to
Cool for programmers. Not cool for GIS shops with a lot of code. I'm presently making a lot of money on the side helping some local GIS folks port the
Re:Harsh (Score:2)
I whine and moan the same way a lot of people do. ESRI has a huge following, but their users aren't like Macintosh people. Everyone I know who uses ESRI software does so because it's the only option for what they do. (Or, yes, the best option) As GIS software, their stuff is great and functional. Probably the best under most scenarios. But as softw
Summary fails to mention primary open source GIS. (Score:3, Informative)
Odd that they mention AutoDesk too, considering their mapping software doesn't feature as nice spatial analysis stuff as ArcGIS does, although I haven't used it enough to make any other conclusions about it.
Now if GRASS would only improve their text interface and revamp their GUI.
Another critical open source GIS application for webmaps is MapServer http://mapserver.gis.umn.edu/ [umn.edu]
I've found that doing the data analysis with ArcGIS and displaying it with mapserver is the only way to go. ArcIMS is a bit too complex, at least compared to mapserver.
Re:Summary fails to mention primary open source GI (Score:1)
That said, GRASS could be as powerful as Almighty God, but most people would never get past what is surely the worst user-interface known to man. C'mon guys, fix the damn thing already.
Re:Summary fails to mention primary open source GI (Score:1)
The posters who mention the GRASS user interface neglect to mention that the prime GRASS UI is the unix shell. You can do _anything_ that GRASS can do within shell scripts, or python or perl, etc.
This also means that your scripting language has the power of the full UNIX tool chain philosophy.
The new GRASS Vector model also rocks, very hard, and you have full connectivity to PostGIS-the geospatial exte
One thing I've found missing in FOSS (Score:2)
Re:One thing I've found missing in FOSS (Score:2)
But, the only public domain streets database is the TIGER data, several years old already. However, ESRI does make it publicly available [pgfoundry.org] in shapefile format, ready for importing to postgres.
Maybe I've found a new project to start. Or at least a HOWTO to write.
OK, but it's not as easy as you make it sound (Score:2)
You can force the user to put things into different fields, like this:
Street Number:
Prefix Direc
Re:One thing I've found missing in FOSS (Score:2)
Re:One thing I've found missing in FOSS - Geocoder (Score:1)
The perl module is free software, and the Tiger data that it uses is also free.
The Geocoder.us web site runs this module to do lookups for non-profits for free (commercial use of the web site is not free-but you are welcome to download the code and the data and do it yourself for free).
As a note: The full census data when loaded into Postgis is something like 40 gb, and is dog slow. Refractions is working (or was wor
ESRI the Microsoft of GIS? If Only! (Score:2, Interesting)