Posts Tagged ‘Event’

  • GIS Day 2008

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    GIS Day provides an international forum for users of geographic information systems (GIS) technology to demonstrate real-world applications that are making a difference in our society. More than 80 countries will participate in holding local events such as corporate open houses, hands-on workshops, community expos, school assemblies, and more.

    The National Geographic Society has sponsored Geography Awareness Week since 1987 to promote geographic literacy in schools, communities, and organizations, with a focus on the education of children. GIS Day is held on the Wednesday during Geography Awareness Week.

    In 2007, hundreds of organizations hosted GIS Day events in countries all around the world. Read their Success Stories.

    GIS Day 2008 will be held on Wednesday, November 19, 2008.

    The GIS Day in Carinthia is organized by the University Klagenfurt, the Federal State Government of Carinthia and the Carinthia University of Applied Sciences. The event will take place on November 20, 2008 at the University Klagenfurt.

    Further Informations:

  • Are we heading for something big again ? – Apple Event Oct. 14th

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    Apple has now officially announced an event on October 14th, where new notebook series will be introduced. It is expected that notebooks will become significantly cheaper. There are some rumors speaking of the introduction of Apple Netbooks or a tablet PC, other sources show a concept of a full display notebook as it is implied by the picture below.

    The last apple keynotes were a little bit disappointing for some apple fans because of a lack of real innovations. Maybe this time there is coming something “big” again. But as it is always the case we will be sure of on October 14th after Steve Jobs has held his keynote.

  • GeoWeb 2008 Keynote talks

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    You can watch the keynote talks from the Geoweb 2008 conference on Youtube. I have listed the video also here.

    Full podcast will be available for download at www.geowebconference.org.

    Alex Miller is founder and President of ESRI Canada Limited, a privately held Canadian owned company specializing in the design and implementation of geographic information systems. Mr. Miller is a graduate of the University of New Brunswick in Fredericton with a Bachelor of Science in Surveying Engineering. Mr. Miller has over 35 years experience in surveying, mapping, engineering, information systems design and management consulting. He is past Chair of the Geomatics Industry Association of Canada, Co-Chair of the GeoConnections Policy Advisory Committee, Chair of the Geomatics Canada Advisory Committee and a member of the Federal Department of Natural Resources Minister’s National Advisory Board on Earth Sciences.

    You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video
    Full podcast will be available for download at www.geowebconference.org.

    Michael T. Jones is Google’s Chief Technology Advocate, charged with advancing the technology to organize the world’’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. He was formerly Chief Technologist of Google Maps, Earth, and Local Search – the teams responsible for providing location intelligence and information in global context to users worldwide. Before its acquisition by Google, Michael was CTO of Keyhole Corporation, the company that developed the technology used today in Google Earth. Previously he was CEO of Intrinsic Graphics and Director of Advanced Graphics at Silicon Graphics. A computer programmer since 4th grade, he is a prolific inventor, developer of notable scientific and computer graphics software, an engineering and business executive, and an avid traveler and photographer using a home-built 4 gigapixel camera made with parts from the U2/SR71.

    You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video
    Full podcast will be available for download at www.geowebconference.org.

    Dr. Michael Kay is best known for his work on XML. Based in the UK, he is the editor of the XSLT specification and author of the definitive book on the language, and is also active on the standards group for XQuery and XML Schema. He is also the developer of the popular open-source Saxon software which implements these specifications. He gained a PhD from the University of Cambridge in 1975 for work on database technology, and has retained links with the academic world, currently holding the position of Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Reading.

    You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video
    Full podcast will be available for download at www.geowebconference.org.

    Kimon G. Onuma, FAIA, is recognized as a leader in building industry technologies and has a unique perspective that spans architecture, planning, programming and software development. Onuma was one of the first to use BIM on large scale US government facilities in 1994. His US Coast Guard (USCG) work for the Sector Planning System streamlined the design process of 35 sector Command Centers to six months and integrated data from various command centers and received a 2006 CETI award in the Small Scale Implementation category. In December 2006 he proved at an international Open Geospatial Consortium event that web feature services can link BIM and GIS.

    You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video
    Full podcast will be available for download at www.geowebconference.org.

    Dr. William B. Gail is Director of Strategic Development within Virtual Earth at Microsoft Corporation, with responsibility for expanding the capabilities of Virtual Earth and its use throughout the community. He was previously Vice President of the Mapping and Photogrammetric Solutions division at Vexcel Corporation (acquired in 2006 by Microsoft), where he directed a global organization responsible for a range of Earth information systems and services. Dr. Gail is on the Board of Directors of Peak Weather Resources, Inc., is a member of the editorial boards for Imaging Notes magazine and the Journal of Applied Remote Sensing, and is the Director of Industry Relations for the IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Society. In 2007, he received awards from GITA for best conference speaker and AGU for excellence in scientific journal review.

    You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video
    Full podcast will be available for download at www.geowebconference.org.

    Dr. Michael F. Goodchild is Professor of Geography at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and Director of spatial@ucsb. His published books include Accuracy of Spatial Databases; Geographical Information Systems: Principles and Applications; Environmental Modeling with GIS; Scale in Remote Sensing and GIS; Interoperating Geographic Information Systems; Geographic Information Systems and Science; Uncertainty in Geographical Information; Foundations of Geographic Information Science; Spatially Integrated Social Science; GIS, Spatial Analysis, and Modeling; and Geospatial Analysis: A Comprehensive Guide to Principles, Techniques and Software Tools.

    You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video
    Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.
  • This was AGIT 2008

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    Today the AGIT 2008 will end and in my opinion it was a great event.

    Starting with the keynote from Mike Goodchild with the topic ASSERTION AND AUTHORITY: USER-GENERATED GEOGRAPHIC CONTENT. He talks about Web 2.0 mechanisms for compiling and distributing massive amounts of information volunteered by users and the role of Geographic Information in this context. He shows some differences between traditional approaches to generate geographic content form authoritative sources. The talk includes some examples for volunteered geographic information (VGI); the motivations that drive it, its accuracy, its value to science, its preservation, and a number of other issues. In his opinion (and also mine) VGI is likely to play an increasingly important role in spatial data infrastructure in the coming years. Form the content of the presentation most thinks are well known and is not new anymore but it is an experience to see such a keynote live.

    There are several other great talks covering many different areas of Geoinformatics. For example there was a talk about the Geoportal of Rheinland-Pfalz from the WhereGroup using Open source Web-GIS solutions, or one talk about the use of GIS in the Austrian Federal Ministery of Interior (BMI). A. Zipf and P. Neis talk about OpenLS and OpenStreetMaps in OpenRouteService.org. In another Block he explains the processing of Digital Terrain Models (DTM) via Grid computing.

    Of course the quality of the talks and presentation is very broad. They range from product presentations for different companies of the GI sector, which are more or less advertisements to sophisticated and high quality talks with academic background.

    Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.

  • Agit 2008: Poster Presentation

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    Tomorrow the GIForum starts and the day after tomorrow AGIT 2008 begins. I will submit a poster presentation with the topic “Scenario Visualisation and Comparison for Spatial Decision Support” as coauthor. You can see the poster below.

    Click on the image to get a larger view. I’ll try to post some articles during the AGIT.

    Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.

  • GeoGames 2008

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    Geogames is an event with the objective to apply Geoinformation playfully. The pupils should learn to use GIS to solve tasks of everyday’s life. Four different station with topics about Geography, GIS, etc. give an insight where these technologies are used. Students from the Carinthian University of Applied Sciences (CUAS) support pupils in their tasks and at each station.

    The event is organized by the CUAS and the federal state government of Carinthia.

    On the homepage the pupils will see their walking routes as GPS tracks.

    When: 25.06.2008, 8:30 a.m

    Where: FH Kärnten | Europastraße 4 | A-9524 Villach/St. Magdalen

    Official Site: www.geogames.at

    Announcement: http://www.fh-kaernten.at/cms/stg-geo/news_3212.htm

    Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.

  • GIS Day 2008

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    In November there will be the next annual GIS day. This video is an announcement of this event. I think also in Salzburg and Carinthia there will be a GIS day 2008.

    You need to a flashplayer enabled browser to view this YouTube video

    Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.

  • NASA Presents Knowledge Planet at JavaOne Conference

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    Prof. Arno Scharl of the MODUL University Vienna has send me an interesting Information about a project called Knowledge Planet. Unfortunately I had only litte time to look at this project, but it deals with with Ontologies and Knowledge Bases. Ontologies and Knowlegde Bases are populare buzzwords many people in the GI industy uses for neary everything, but in my opinion less people understand how this could applied properly to build up applications. I think this is one of the few implementations dealing with ontologies.

    Excerpt of the mail:

    At this year’s JavaOne conference in San Francisco, NASA developers showed that virtual globes are not only suited to explore geographic maps, but can also serve as rendering engines for other types of imagery.

    The first public Knowledge Planet prototype, a java applet developed by a European team of researchers is now available (www.ecoresearch.net/climate). It visualizes large document collections using a landscape metaphor and was demonstrated by Tom Gaskins who leads the NASA World Wind engineering team at the JavaOne conference.

    The peaks of the virtual landscape indicate abundant coverage on a particular topic, whereas valleys and oceans represent sparsely populated parts of the information space. The applet draws upon the extensive news archive of the Media Watch on Climate Change, which provides a continuously updated account of media coverage on climate change and related issues.

    Further information about the Knowledge Planet, a screenshot and the underlying research project as well as the official press releases can be found at www.modul.ac.at/nmt/javaone .

    On this way I want to thank Mr. Scharl for this information, and I’d like to share following links:
    Media Watch — www.ecoresearch.net/climate
    Knowledge Planet — www.ecoresearch.net/climate/knowledge-planet
    Press Material — www.modul.ac.at/nmt/javaone

    Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.

  • Google Announces 2008 Developer Events

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    Two-Day Google I/O Event in San Francisco Will Focus on Building Great Web Apps and Advancing the Web as a Platform

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    Google announced a new developer event for 2008: Google I/O™, a two-day, in-depth gathering for developers to share knowledge about Google’s own developer products and web application development in general. Google I/O will be held at the Moscone Center in San Francisco on Wednesday, May 28th, and Thursday, May 29th, 2008.

    Google I/O will include a mix of practical, hands-on advice for building web apps as well as opportunities to learn about and discuss emerging trends. Sessions with top Google engineers will cover tools developed both inside and outside Google, including yet to be announced initiatives designed to move the web forward.

    Five simultaneous topic areas will cover:

    • AJAX & JavaScript: AJAX and JavaScript continue to capture the imagination of web developers. These sessions focus on tools and techniques of client-side code, and how to use them to make serious applications quickly and easily.
    • APIs & Tools: Development tools for the web are evolving. Product APIs allow integration and extension of web applications. Tools like the Google Web Toolkit™ provide a whole new way to improve performance and compatibility.
    • Social: The web is an inherently social place. A new wave of APIs and frameworks, including OpenSocial, are opening up interesting ways to interact with people through applications.
    • Mobile: Mobile devices are blurring the lines between handset developers and web developers, opening up interesting opportunities for applications that span multiple platforms. We’ll take a look at how developers can use technologies such as Android™ and Mobile Gears to build applications on the mobile web.
    • Maps & Geo: Since the introduction of the Google Maps™ API in 2005, geo and map applications have been one of the most interesting phenomena on the web. These sessions focus on the many aspects of geo applications, from KML to the Google Maps API and more.

    Tickets are $400 for developers, with discounts available for students.

     Sessions related to Maps & Geo

    • Location, Location, Location (Android Engineers)
      The ability to access, utilize, and display location information gives mobile applications a unique dimension. It’s also a feature built into the Android platform. Come find out how you can create applications that do the right thing, according to where they are.
    • From Mashups to Mapplets (David Day)
      Mapplets are mini-applications that run within Google Maps, allowing you to add new features or overlay your data directly onto Google Maps. These applications allow a developer to take advantage of the power of the Maps API while getting exposure to millions of users on Google Maps. In addition, Google provides free hosting, free bandwidth, and an official directory where users from all around the world can find your Mapplet.
      We’ll introduce Mapplets in detail, explain the benefits of writing one, and walk through the details of how to get started. This includes what you need to host your Mapplet and best practices for gaining users.
      Participants should have knowledge of basic JavaScript and HTML. Knowledge of the Google Gadgets API is recommended, but not required. We’ll discuss how Mapplets relate to Gadgets in this session. Advanced Ruby Scripting for Google SketchUpGoogle Sketchup contains a Ruby API for users who want to extend the capabilities of SketchUp. The interface allows users to create macros, such as automated component generators and additional tools, to be included in the menus within SketchUp. This session will cover two Ruby technologies that can be used to add functionality to SketchUp: WebDialogs and Ruby Extension Modules. For those comfortable with web programming, WebDialogs allow you to create rich user interfaces easily. For those with a native library they’d like to use, Ruby Extension Modules can help with high performance computations.
    • Parsing and Generating KML with Google’s KML Library (Michael Ashbridge)
      KML is a file format used to display geographic data in an earth browser, such as Google Earth, Google Maps and Google Maps for mobile. You can create KML files to pinpoint locations, add image overlays and expose rich data in new ways. This session will introduce Google’s open source KML library for working with KML files. We’ll explore its architecture and then show you how to parse and generate KML in your applications and scripts.
    • Advanced KML (Bent Hagemark)
      This session will cover advanced techniques in KML for displaying data and creating dynamic presentations. We’ll show how to to use Region to display very large datasets without clutter and without compromising performance. We’ll also look at how time features can be used to add animation effects and how NetworkLinkControl and Update can be used to make dynamic KML presentations. (Participants should have a strong background in KML.)
    • Using Ads with Your Maps API Application (Jim Payne)
      This session will explore strategies for using Google’s AdSense program with your Maps API application. We’ll discuss placement, targeting and how to choose the AdSense products that will work well with the Maps API. We’ll also review best practices for maximizing the value of your traffic. (Participants should have previous experience with the Google Maps API.)
    • Fireside Chat: Google Maps & Earth (Google Geo engineering team)
      Fireside chats are a chance to talk to the engineering team building products. Come tell the team what you want, discuss issues and design decisions, and hear the team’s thoughts on just about whatever you ask.

    Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.

  • Barcamp SenzaConfini

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    barcamp-blog.jpg

    This weekend the Barcamp SezaConfini will take place in Klagenfurt. Let’s see what we can learn form there.  I’m looking forward to see some interesting talks. For more information check http://www.barcamp.at/BarCamp_Senza_Confini_2008

    [barcamp.at]

    Written and submitted from CUAS, Villach.

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