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Archive for the ‘Caught Live’ Category

Toronto open source code sprint in March

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

Lechuguilla CaveIt is an oft-invoked stereotype that engineers prefer to work alone in dark caves, and there’s certainly some truth there. Here at LizardTech, for example, each development team member works in a well-ventillated but cozy and earthy burrow that our ops team constructed to individual specifications out of papier-mache. Some of these workspaces have convincing stalactites, or narrow entrances lined with lichens. A few are strewn with bones.*

But in mass emergences similar to those of the 13- and 17-year cicada, engineers periodically gather together in high-energy events called “code sprints”, which last several days and whose purpose is to resolve bugs, churn out new code, share information and ideas, and dispatch untold wedges of pizza. Ethnologists now suspect that a form of socialization is also carried on.

In March, LizardTech will be cosponsoring such an event in Toronto hosted by OSGeo. A couple of lizards will be attending and will work on GDAL/MrSID performance issues. Please consider joining us there!

*By contrast, our sales team is housed in a single, large spherical room partially filled with rubber balls and water toys.

Seriously, image of New Mexico’s Lechuguilla Cave courtesy of Wikipedia.

Bonfire of the urbanities: GeoWeb wants YOU

Monday, January 5th, 2009

The “Call for Presentations and Workshops” for GeoWeb 2009 has just been announced. The theme of this year’s conference is “Cityscapes”: the geography of urban environments, BIM-CAD-GIS convergence, 3D modeling.

LizardTech has been fortunate to be involved with this conference for a number of years now, and so we’re once again looking forward to July and another fun week with our neighbors to the north.

GeoWeb 2008 trip report (or, What I did on my summer vacation)

Friday, August 1st, 2008

Last week I had the pleasure of attending GeoWeb 2008 on behalf of both LizardTech and OSGeo. The conference was once again in Vancouver BC, at my favorite business hotel and conference venue. I’ve attended this conference for a number of years now, and it gets better every passing year.

Just a few highlights:

  • The underlying theme running through the week was the integration (confluence? convergence?) of the GIS world with the worlds of CAD and BIM (building information model). Architects typically operate at a different scale than we’re used to, but increasingly they want to be able to envision and model their buildings in the larger urban landscape that we can provide for them. Kimon Onuma and his BIMStorm work demonstrated this integration very well. Going the other direction, traditional GIS folks are looking to things like CityGML to be able to improve the fidelity and add that 3rd dimension to their own models.

panelists

  • I moderated a one hour discussion on Open Source Servers, ably assisted by panelists Paul Ramsey of Clever Elephant, Justin Deoliveira of OpenGeo, and Bob Bray of Autodesk. The attendance was good, and we had some good questions and discussions about the pros (and sometimes cons) of working in and with open source software.
  • On behalf of Cody Benkelman of Mission Mountain Technology, I also presented a cool paper on using Amazon’s Mechanical Turk web service and Google Earth to solve a real problem for a real customer. I tried to get across two main ideas. First, Turks and Turk-like things can be seen as “outsourcing for the Web 2.0 generation”. Secondly, and possibly disconcertingly to some, complete “automation” is not always the best answer – us geeks think of it first, and yes, it’s usually the right move – but not always. Contact us for reprints.

Mechanical Turk

  • Dr. Michael Goodchild gave a great workshop on Data Quality – a topic which quite honestly sounded pretty dry and uninspiring, but which turned out to be both educational and interesting. He convinced me that LizardTech’s viewers are displaying lat/long incorrectly, at least from a data quality perspective.
  • Michael Jones of Google keynoted again this year, and he once again made everyone stop and think deeply about the human impact the geo community can – and does – have on the world. Not the kind of talk you can summarize easily, you just had to be there.
  • This year the conference held its first Student Competition. The competition required use of open source software for the projects; OSGeo was one of the sponsors and as such I was one of the judges. First prize went to Tobias Fleischmann (Paris Lodron University Salzburg, Germany) for “Web Processing Service for Moving Objects Analysis”, which was built using deegree. Second prize went to Tran Tho Ha and Nguyen Thi Thanh Thuy (Politecnico di Milano, Italy) for “e-Collaboration for DGPS/GPS data distribution and receiver device evaluation”, which used PostGIS, MapScript, and OpenLayers. Congratulations to both winners!
  • GeoWeb is also famous for being scheduled during Vancouver’s annual “Celebration of Light“, an international

    Shipmates

    fireworks competition held several evenings high above English Bay. As in previous years, the conference’s evening reception was turned into a sunset dinner cruise, after which we all went up on deck to oooh and aaah at the pyrotechnic ballet.

Finally, just for kicks, I’ll offer the following bits of geotrivia I collected during the conference:

  • “A GPS with a bullet hole in it is a paperweight. A paper map with a bullet hole in it is a paper map with a bullet hole in it.” (attributed to the US Marine Corps)
  • Tobler’s First Law of Geography: “Nearby things are more similar than distant things.”
  • city furniture (noun): features of the urban landscape such as park benches, bus shelters, street lamps, etc
  • “The amount of metadata needed for a piece of data varies with the ‘social distance’ from me to my data consumer.” (Michael Goodchild)
  • For Amazon’s web services, 85% use the REST API and 15% use the SOAP API. (quoted by Satish Sankaran, ESRI)
  • On the Vancouver transit system today, 100 of 144 bus routes are under detours, due to 2010 Olympics work. (Peter Ladner, Vancouver deputy mayor)
  • Thirty percent of all 911 calls are not associated with a street address. (Talbot Brooks)

GeoWeb 2009 is already being planned, and will include special emphasis on both cityscapes and 3-D modeling.

Calling all lizard collectors!

Monday, June 30th, 2008

our mutual friends

I’ve been at LizardTech for almost five years now, and one thing that has always been (pleasingly) surprising to me is how much people like the plastic lizards we include with our software and give away at events. These little guys have been all over the world, and are so popular that we order them 50,000 at a time.

Last year at the ESRI International User Conference in San Diego we had a contest for you to “Show Us Your Lizards.” It was a great success; the winner brought in 31 unique LizardTech lizards from over the years. Everyone seemed to enjoy it, but the only problem was not everyone knew about it before the show started. Lots of people I spoke to at our booth said “Oh, I wish I would have known. I have dozens of them at home!”

Well, now’s your chance, because we’re doing it again. Take a look at our new contests for this year’s user conference, and show us your lizards this August in San Diego!

A brave stand at GameWorks

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Cyrena and Dave Shooting

Last Tuesday evening, LizardTech hosted a party at GameWorks in conjunction with our participation in the GITA conference. I couldn’t attend the party, but several of my fellow Lizards did and the report is that a good time was had by all. Thanks to all who stopped by.

Here is one of our favorite photos from the evening. As editor of Geospatial Solutions Online, Cyrena Respini-Irwin is an old friend of LizardTech. She has reviewed a number or our product releases in recent years. Here she is blasting away at indiscriminate evil alongside our own marketing coordinator, David Calabro.

We’ve always known her aim is true.