Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

13
Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source OSGIS 2004 & MUM2 David McIlhagga, President DM Solutions Group

description

Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source. OSGIS 2004 & MUM2 David McIlhagga, President DM Solutions Group. Open Source – The Ingredient for Partnership. Communities are guaranteed to be free of barriers for propagation of technology to associated groups - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Page 1: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

OSGIS 2004 & MUM2

David McIlhagga, President

DM Solutions Group

Page 2: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Open Source – The Ingredient for Partnership

Communities are guaranteed to be free of barriers for propagation of technology to associated groups

Industry is ensured growth and success through the development of quality technology

Result – Partnership based on trust and shared end goals

Restrictive LICENSING is the barrier to mutual success

Page 3: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Open Source for Communities of all Types and Sizes

Government

Academia

Industry

Non-Government Organizations

Page 4: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Government Community - Enabling a Distributed Infrastructure for the National

Forest Information System (NFIS)

Requirement for assisting provinces and territories in Canada to publish data to OGC specifications

Cost of paying for software licenses of existing software supporting OGC and deploying to all provinces -- prohibitive

The cost-effective solution - fund implementation of Web Map Service support in MapServer and deploy with no license restriction

The added bonus - somebody else later funded support for other specifications that NFIS then reaped the benefits from.

Page 5: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Government Community - Publishing point data to OGC specifications within

Environment Canada

Problem - Vast majority of spatial data in Environment Canada is NOT in spatial formats. It is held in standard databases or flat files.

Data Providers have a requirement to publish to OGC specifications, but do not want to convert to a spatial format. The capabilities and cost of commercial products are overkill for this requirement.

Solution - Enhance MapServer to support direct read of point data in non-spatial data formats and deploy throughout the organization.

Bonus - Additional support for the Time variable in MapServer currently being funded by another community will in the future be required by Environment Canada.

Page 6: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

University Community - Incorporating Open Source into Carleton University’s

GIS Curriculum

Problem - Within universities, there is a lack of curriculum for Internet Mapping available and dominance of teaching based on single vendor solutions.

Problem - Students enter the workforce without the skills or more importantly, knowledge that open source exists or is an option.

Solution - DM Solutions and Carleton University develop a short intro to Internet Mapping based on MapServer and Chameleon and make it available as ‘open source’ curriculum.

Page 7: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Industry as Vehicle to Community - MapsOnline - an affordable solution for

small communities

Problem - PeopleGIS recognized that commercial licensing of industry software is prohibitive for small communities to afford publishing data within web mapping applications

Solution - PeopleGIS and DM Solutions partner to develop an affordable solution for numerous small communities in New England.

Page 8: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

NGO Community – Centre for Sustainable Watersheds requires technology for a

Watersheds InfoXchange

Problem - Technology solution is required to better support community collection of sensitive watershed information

Problem - Community groups do not have the funds to purchase commercial solutions to achieve this.

Solution - DM Solutions and CSW jointly solicited funding to support the development of WIX with the full solution to be made freely available.

The Future Result - Affordable solution for similar communities across Canada and around the world and potential for rapid growth in adoption of open source technologies.

Page 9: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

NGO Community - Trailpaq – Partnership in Action

Page 10: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

NGO Community - Developing a map-based Health Planning tool for CIET

Group

Problem - Spatial health planning tool required by community groups to make better policy decisions in health planning around the world.

Problem - Most of the people who need this, don’t have the money for software licensing.

Solution - DM Solutions and CIET partner to develop CIETmap based on OpenEV for free distribution around the world.

Page 11: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Oceanographic Community - Bridging the gap between Land and Water

Problem - GIS has not traditionally met the needs of the oceanographic community

Problem - Software licensing fees for GIS are prohibitive for any single individual group in the community

Solution - Through community funding from the Office of Naval Research and SURA SCOOP Program, MapServer is enhanced to support key components required by the community for the benefit of all community stakeholders.

Page 12: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

What do all of these examples have in common?

Licensing fees can be a significant barrier to finding creative partnering solutions between all forms of communities and industry.

Value can be measured in many forms other then license costs.

Collective Value for community identifies the opportunity for collaboration between industry and communities and focuses them as partners on finding a mutually beneficial solution.

Page 13: Partnerships between Industry and Communities through Open Source

Thank you!

Contact Information:

Dave McIlhagga

Email: [email protected]

Phone: 613-565-5056 x15

http://www.dmsolutions.ca