The GI2008 Symposium took place recently in Dresden, Germany. The symposium brought together a wide range of public, private and educational people, all interested in the pursuit of geoinformation and geospatial applications for sustainability purposes. As an educational and capacity building event, GI2008 featured many unique cross-border applications. Vector1 Media editor Jeff Thurston attended the event and reports on some of the many leading examples of European projects in such areas as metainformation, catalog services, cross-border geospatial collaboration, data search and public information re-use and more.
The 8th Saxonian GIS-Forum
was recently held in Dresden, Germany with nearly 100 people in
attendance from across Europe. The symposium featured a strong
inter-regional theme with many presentations originating from
European Union funded projects under the 6th Framework
Programme (FP6) thematic priority of sustainable development.
The FP6 project NaturNet+REDIME figured
prominently into the presentations under the program title 'New
Education and Decision Support Model for Active Behaviour in
Sustainable Development based on Innovative Web Services and
Qualitative Reasoning.'
Accordingly topics surrounding education and
web technologies as they relate to geospatial topics were
particularly present. A significant number of projects involved
trans-border and inter-regional research and educational materials.
A Pre-Workshop was presented by
Intermap Technologies of Munich, Germany who have recently completed
the collection of data for their NEXTMAP Europe product, building
upon earlier collected digital elevation model products. Rene
Gunzkofer of Intermap showed a very interesting example of this data
from Land's End, UK which depicted the cliffs and tip of the furthest
westerly point of the United Kingdom. He also indicated that 8
million square kilometres of land had been flown and the data was
held in 55,150 tiles for the U.S.
Interesting details for
Europe included the facts that 2.4 million square kilometres had been
flown in Europe and the data was stored in 20,000 tiles. During data
collection 65 reflectors were used in Germany and that it took around
2.5 months to cover the entire German land area. The company used 18
people to process the data and over 100 people were involved in
editing the data. Data consists of three primary products including,
ortho-rectified 2.0m Geotiff, digital surface model (DSM) 5.0m BIL
format and digital terrain model in BIL format as well. Data is
referenced to ETRS89 datum and GRS80 ellipsoid.
It was interesting
to note the different levels of accuracy across the country, all
exceeding specification, but including differences where terrain
varied. Just as a matter of noting, it appeared to this writer that
Berlin has some of the highest level of accuracy data in the complete
NextMap Germany dataset. We can expect to purchase NextMap Europe
data some time in mid-2009.
Karel Charvat of Czech Republic gave
the Keynote address speaking about 'NATURNET' – Uniform Resource
Management in the EU-FP6, a project about managing sustainability
information together. He indicated that a Google search of
information on the topic of sustainability would draw 60-100,000
references, but that it would be difficult to define their relevance.
As a consequence standardised metadata and field based searches would
be preferred he said. Information should have a context awareness.
The Uniform Resource Management (URM) is a framework for sharing
information and is designed to increase access to information using a
focus on visualisation and analysis. Its main parts include searching
and catalogue services and collaborative tools. URM components
included:
thesaurus
– for well known hierarchical systems
geospatial
thesaurus – with geo-parsers and geo-coders
catalogue
services – to find individual portals
metadata
scheme – to define structure
In operation URM includes Moodle
(e-learning web application), MapMan (Map composer application), PDF
documents (documents) and WORD documents (metadata creation). MapMan
is a Map Project Manager for MapServer and is a tool for users to
create map projects and compositions. The system has now been
integrated into the work of NaturNet, LivingLab WIRELESSINFO and URM.
Czech Living Lab – WIRELESSINFO is a
project oriented to the development of applications based on
collaborative technologies to improve processes in territorial
decision making. There are three directions of activity:
1) applied research of geospatial
technologies
2) standardisation efforts in national,
European and world wide scale
3) implementation of mobile and geospatial
solution into everyday life through its members
The work is ideally suited to meet the
goals and objectives of spatial data infrastructures (SDI),
collaborative decision tools and collaborative environments. As a
result this work is valuable for cross-border applications and
situations where numerous different groups need to come together in a
collaborative fashion and is based on open source and freeware tools.
It includes several technological instruments including metadata
system (MICKA), spatial data management system, spatial data analysis
tools based on GRASS, mobile solutions and a eLearning system.
Jorg Schaller, Director at ESRI
Geoinformatik began by informing the audience that the company is
celebrating 30 years of ESRI in Germany. He pointed out that there is
difficulty in finding people to work in the company because of a
shortage of skilled labour. “Education is lagging behind
technology,” he said. This is also a common theme that several
people in the GIS and CAD fields have been saying around the world.
Schaller indicated that there is a need to standardise and archive
data better because there is so much of it and it continues to grow.
“The sources of data and costs of data remain high,” Schaller
said.
He described the ESRI software portfolio and indicated
that desktop software is fairly simple to use for individuals but
that the trend is toward many people gaining access to data and
consequently depending upon server technologies, particularly for
moving data between organisations and individuals, thereby increasing
access and use. He mentioned the use of JAVA, SOAP, REST, OPENLS,
J2ME and ArcXML in the ArcGIS product line. Examples of the modelling
and the use of ESRI ModelBuilder were shown and he described how the
City of Munich is using these tools for handling environmental
modelling.
It was interesting to learn that ESRI is operating 'Girls
for Technology' camps as a way to increase the number of women in the
field. Schaller also described the education efforts that ESRI is
involved in including location analysis, environmental modelling and
many other disciplines.
Creating Content with eLML (eLesson
Markup Language) is a project Joel Fisler presented. It is an open
learning management system and is based on the concept of building
pool of educational materials that can be used between users and
cross-purposed. For use it can include different layouts, all
compliant to standards.
Thus it can be seen that standardisation
provides a mechanism for re-purposing. The real question Fisler
pointed out was, “how can we write lessons in a consistent manner?”
Different people think in different ways and also conceptualise
differently. He mentioned the use of one XML file as a means to
re-purpose and suggested the possibility of creating different styles
mapped with different schema. Outputs included XHTML, PDF, SCORM,
ODF etc.)
The quest Fisler dwelled upon was
oriented around the need to have sustainable content. Furthermore,
there is a need to have many authors, thus an abundance of diversity
in the material to create a large enough pool of resources that could
be re-purposed. He mentioned the need to check data for validation
reasons prior to including it into layouts and design. Overall eLML
provides a means to re-purpose information for educational purposes
where different layouts can be used.
Walter Mayer of ProGIS gave a Keynote
presentation entitled 'ICT Solutions for a Future, Managed by Farmers
and Foresters Producing Food/Feed, Biomass and a Healthy Environment'
In his view the major drivers today are climate change, food
production and a need for more IT/ICT to solve problems. Mayer
described WinGIS, a GIS platform that was one of the first object
oriented GIS and capable of connecting to many databases. It include
programming functions for developers and is focused on farmers and
foresters.
Mayer suggested that “it is not
necessary to buy resolution twice.” He further asked the audience
to think about history over different time periods before asking,
“what's history?” He then described the numerous functions within
WinGIS including the AGROffice capabilities that tie the complete
agricultural workflow and business processes into the software. Mayer
suggested that “farmers should be able to participate” when
operating their own farms and the software enables them to do that.
Andreas Hergert described FGIS –
Online, a web based application being used by the Staatsbetrieb
Sachsenforst (State Forestry agency in Sachsen –
www.sachsenforst.de),
an area covering 18,411 square kilometres It includes the Sachsen
Atlas (www.atlas.sachsen.de)
and the web client GEOMIS. Metainformation is available on the site
and the terraCatalog available from Conterra in Germany is being
used.
Intergraph was present and Markus
Schaffert, education sales representative in central Europe described
a hydrological grid application built on GeoMedia 6.0 covering 25 sq.
km. And used for educational purposes. The course includes data and
WORD documents with a step-by-step analysis for training new GIS
users. Students import raw text files and create a grid and perform a
cell-by-cell analysis, creating hydrological boundaries and more. It
is a 9-part course (www.ikgis.de/intergraph).
Dirk Bolitz outlined the 'Current State
of Cross-Border Collaboration on EU-Programme INTERREG III.' This
project included the border region of Saxony-Poland, Saxony-Czech
Republic. Objectives included dealing with convergence, regional
cooperation and employment and European territorial cooperation. He
pointed out that the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) had
increaed from 75% to 85% over the 2000-2006 period and that there
were now higher demands on the projects. He suggested the need for
common project preparation, common realisation, common staffing and
common financing all served to make these types of projects
successful. Priorities were divided into social, economic and
environmental elements. Other changes included the establishment of
one lead partner in these types of projects who would be responsible
for overall project goals and have responsibility for same
(www.sn-pl.eu).
ePSIplus (www.epsiplus.net)
is a European Union funded project that promotes the sharing of
public information throughout the EU. Under the title 'Review of the
EU Public Sector Information (PSI) Re-Use Directive -Towards Global
Action,' Chris Corbin delivered a presentation. “2008 is an
important year,” he said. Citing the fact that independent nations
need to be working toward PSI initiatives, “this is a global push.”
Corbin said that a significant legal basis supports PSI including
several laws such as:
Data
Privacy
Database
Protection
Access
to environmental information
Re-use
of Public Sector Information
Intellectual
Property Rights
INSPIRE
All of these sit atop Directives, but
Corbin also indicated “that this was long story,” reflecting on
the fact that the EU has been working toward these objectives for
about 30 years. It was also interesting to learn that the OECD has
been running similar initiatives and created a Directive on PSI.
Corbin indicated issues remain with the UK National Mapping Agency
over free use of spatial information, and he also asked “is the
public sector in tune with the Internet today?” This question
being one that many people are asking around the world as they seek
better eGovernment services. “The way forward is to find best
practices but member states need to be doing the work rather than
having it forced top-down.”
Ales Pekarek is probably one of few
people in the world pursuing education on the topic of PSI.
Discussing PSI experiences at Charles University in the Czech
Republic he said that PSI was not fully exploited and that “problems
remain with metadata and transparency.” He suggested that more
research was needed and none is being done in the Czech Republic.
Also, there is a lack of awareness about PSI with no holistic
approach present. It was particularly interesting to learn of the
replies he received from agencies to a questionnaire he mailed out,
asking for public information. Some simply responded that they did
not know what he was talking about, others were still searching
information and yet others indicated that he could not have access to
the information he requested. He teaches a course on the topic of PSI
and students are quite interested he indicated.
'Cartographic Presentation of
Environmental Information in Ecophysiographical Study of the
Dolnoslaskie Voivodeship' was given by Przemyslaw Malczewski. The
scope included a characterisation of the legal framework involved,
modelling content and providing an Internet service. Planning began
in 2003 with discussions on how participates wanted to use the areas,
discussion on investment possibilities and diagnosing the present
state of the environmental area. The project will create general and
synthetic maps indicating ecological restraints and is considered to
be the first ecophysiographical map of Poland. The work is completed
by several dozen agencies and includes 50 layers in 12 thematic
areas. He did mention that “INSPIRE is hard to get going in
Poland,” citing issues of the government unwillingness to work more
closely with the EU.
Sabine Witschas spoke on the topic
'Searching the Treasure – How to Find Geodata Throughout Europe.'
She pointed out the difficulties of actually acquiring geoinformation
using available services through example. The metadata was of
heterogenous status with multi-lingual geonames often used. “A need
exists to have relevant skills in search and rules and regulations
for storing information,” she said. “Geoportals are not ready yet
to use” and it may be a case to get better results using search
enginesby keywords or synonyms/syntax/diacritics. She cited the fact
that many geoportals are about development rather than use and that
ontologies for them were not very helpful. “The INSPIRE portal
returns 806 results in text but no graphical maps,” she said. “Why
is that?”
Other issues included problems filling in fields
on access pages where terms were not well known. “To find data in
Google is also dependent on language” and “particular browsers
must be used for finding data in Holland.” She cited one case in
Portugal where 1160 graphics (maps) were returned when searching for
data and said, “we need more research on geospatial catalogues.”
“Dictionary's are gragmentary in most cases.”
Highest needs Witschas pointed out
were:
multi-lingual
data access and consistency
knowledge
strategy
search
engines
translation
abilities
online
dictionaries
Geonames,
metainformation, interfaces
geospatial
semantic web
Frank Hoffman, IGN e.V. Organiser GI2008
GI2008 was an interesting event to
attend for several reasons. Firstly, it is one of few conferences in
the European Union that focuses on GI and cross-border applications.
It brings together many people who are developing the products and
services within the research and education community. Secondly, the
symposium has a strong educational dissemination component.
This
particular event allowed attendees to see and learn about the connection of sustainability to education. Thirdly, the symposium
transcends the public, private and educational sectors bringing
together all three. This, in my view, is rare in European conferences
and a valuable way for building capacity because of the enhanced
opportunity for dialogue, learning and communication. Frank Hoffman
and the various committee's involved are to be commended for a job
well done and organising a very good program.