[OSGeo-Discuss] OSGeo friendly countries to live in

Landon Blake lblake at ksninc.com
Thu Aug 20 10:36:45 EDT 2009


MPG,

I didn't mean to shine a spotlight on the USDA's use of MRSID. It is one
of several examples of an attitude I was trying to describe.

I think you and I respectfully disagree with one another on one aspect
of this debate. In my humble opinion sharing data acquired with tax
payer funding in a format that is easily accessed without the use of
proprietary software should be the most important factor in a file
format decision by a government agency. (Well, maybe the second most
important. The most important is the license that data is released
under.)

A company is well within its rights to use and promote a proprietary
file format. I admit that file format may even have awesome benefits
when compared to the best equivalent open file format.

Just don't ask me to be happy when my government decides to use this
proprietary file format. I think it short changes the citizens of the
government and give that company an unfair advantage over its
competitors.

I'd much rather see the government support a company that was trying to
build its business around open technology standards.

In my opinion, you can't have it all. If you want to build your business
model around a proprietary file format like DWG or MRSID you should be
prepared to deal with a little push back from open source and open
technology advocates, especially when their money (in the form of tax
dollars) is involved.

One of the greatest things ESRI ever did was publish the Shapefile
specification. I don't doubt they have a software monopoly of sorts, but
I will always respect them for that move. In many respects it has
changed my view of their company. I don't know that the free software
movement on the geospatial side of things would have been widely adopted
without that standard way to share data.

But alas, I am just one man and my opinion doesn't count for much in the
greater scheme of things! 

I appreciate having an open source advocate like you at LizardTech, and
please don't take my e-mail as a personal attack. The use of open file
formats by our governments is just something I feel strongly about.

Landon


-----Original Message-----
From: discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org
[mailto:discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Michael P. Gerlek
Sent: Thursday, August 20, 2009 7:23 AM
To: OSGeo Discussions; punkish at eidesis.org
Subject: RE: [OSGeo-Discuss] OSGeo friendly countries to live in

Like the subject of patents from a couple weeks ago, we need to be
careful of painting
these things with too broad a brush.


> I've got to have MicroStation to work with CALTRANS, AutoCAD to work
with my local city,
> ESRI to work with the County's GIS department, and software from
LizardTech to use the 
> imagery distributed by USDA for my County in MRSID format. To make it
even more pleasant, 
> AutoDESK breaks its file compatibility every other version or so,
which means my company 
> gets to purchase a license upgrade if we want to keep dealing with our
government clients.
> 
> Money talks in United States politics, and I'm sure the big boys in
the software development
> throw plenty of greenbacks around when it suits there purpose.

I'm not sure what you mean by this -- lobbying?  Campaign contributions?
Yes, MrSID is widely
used in parts of the federal government but it is certainly not the case
that LizardTech has
ever "thrown plenty of greenbacks around" to get anyone to use our file
format.  (I doubt the
various owners of ECW ever have either.)


> I'm not saying there is a malicious intent on government agencies to
make life difficult.
> But I certainly don't see a widespread effort to embrace open source
for its benefits, or
> to look for any alternatives to the widely established monopolies.

In the case of one very prominent use of MrSID in the US federal
government, an open standard
solution was explicitly considered as an alternative, but it was notably
rejected in large part
because of the lack of penetration and technical expertise in the target
marketplace and
ecosystem.

I actually see a lot of explicit government consideration of open
standards and open source
software -- and it gets better every year.  However, adoption of new
technologies (when done
right!) requires evaluation of a myriad of criteria, only one of which
is open access.


-mpg (not speaking officially for LizardTech)



-----Original Message-----
From: discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org
[mailto:discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Landon Blake
Sent: Tuesday, August 18, 2009 9:10 AM
To: punkish at eidesis.org; OSGeo Discussions
Subject: RE: [OSGeo-Discuss] OSGeo friendly countries to live in

I'm a long ways from Washington DC and a lot closer to the Silicon
Valley, which may be a reason why I perceive different attitudes.

I do think the new US Administration seems friendlier towards open
source software. Still, when I think about the fight over using ODF in
Maryland and other similar situations I realize open source software
still has an uphill battle in many parts of the United States. This may
even be truer in the geospatial arena than in others.

Autodesk and ESRI may be great corporate citizens, but there is no doubt
in my mind that the control software monopolies, especially in the
government market. This isn't just true at the federal level, but at the
state and local level as well.

I've got to have MicroStation to work with CALTRANS, AutoCAD to work
with my local city, ESRI to work with the County's GIS department, and
software from LizardTech to use the imagery distributed by USDA for my
County in MRSID format. To make it even more pleasant, AutoDESK breaks
its file compatibility every other version or so, which means my company
gets to purchase a license upgrade if we want to keep dealing with our
government clients.

Money talks in United States politics, and I'm sure the big boys in the
software development throw plenty of greenbacks around when it suits
there purpose.

I'm not saying there is a malicious intent on government agencies to
make life difficult. But I certainly don't see a widespread effort to
embrace open source for its benefits, or to look for any alternatives to
the widely established monopolies.

(I do know of a couple cases where some state agencies in California are
making an effort to use open source GIS desktop software.)

Things may be very different in the web-mapping world. I'm talking about
desktop software, since that is what I deal with 98% of the time.

But, like you, I speak from personal experience, and don't have any hard
facts or statistics to back up my wild claims. :]

Landon
Office Phone Number: (209) 946-0268
Cell Phone Number: (209) 992-0658
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org
[mailto:discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of P Kishor
Sent: Tuesday, August 18, 2009 7:53 AM
To: OSGeo Discussions
Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] OSGeo friendly countries to live in

On Tue, Aug 18, 2009 at 9:37 AM, Landon Blake<lblake at ksninc.com> wrote:
> Cameron wrote:
>
> " Canada looks preferable to the US. I wonder how much the Canadian
> GeoConnections program is responsible for Canada's strong OSGeo
> industry."
>
> I believe governments in Canada are much more supportive of open
source
> software than governments in the United States. In my experience, the
> attitude towards open source software held by many organizations in
the
> United States is still skeptical, if not hostile.
>

Well, I would make that assertion if I can back it up.

A quick check shows me that while I don't know what Whitehouse.gov
uses on the backend, it uses the open source jquery framework on the
front-end, and publishes all its content under a CC3.0 Attribution
license.

Similarly for data.gov, and its http://www.data.gov/catalog/geodata
catalog.

Reminds me of the story --

Reporter sees Bill Gates' dog swimming. Next day the headlines says,
"Bill Gates' dog can't walk on water!"

My feeling is (_feeling_, not an assertion backed by evidence) that
the US govt. agencies stay out of supporting or not supporting any
particular kind of software or technology. They use what they think is
best, without creating a policy out of it, and generally let the
provider and the consumer of technologies duke it out. Of course, I
have no scientific evidence for this statement. But the proliferation
of Canadian Blackberries in the US Senate and House is a fairly decent
reflection of this.

Other govts. may choose to support a particular vendor or sector
because of various reasons -- one reason might be to make a concerted
effort to develop an alternative to US vendors and technologies.




> I believe this may be due in part to successful lobbying and marketing
> campaigns by big software companies in the US. We also seem to be more
> tolerant of software monopolies than other industrialized nations.
> Microsoft's trouble with the EU might be one example demonstrating the
> differences in attitude.
>
> Go Canada! (Home of the original JUMP desktop GIS, I might add.) :]
>
> Landon
> Office Phone Number: (209) 946-0268
> Cell Phone Number: (209) 992-0658
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org
> [mailto:discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Cameron Shorter
> Sent: Sunday, August 16, 2009 1:43 PM
> To: OSGeo Discussions
> Subject: [OSGeo-Discuss] OSGeo friendly countries to live in
>
> Yves Jacolin has sliced FOSS4G <http://2009.foss4g.org/> website hits
to
>
> determine the number of FOSS4G attendees per million people, broken
down
>
> by country. From this, you can get a feeling for the most OSGeo
tolerant
>
> populations in the world (distorted around Australia due to the
> conference location).
>
> So what can we learn?
>
>    * Japan and Mongolia are the place be in Asia
>    * Chilli is the place to be in Latin America
>    * Canada looks preferable to the US. I wonder how much the Canadian
>      GeoConnections program is responsible for Canada's strong OSGeo
>      industry.
>    * There is a lot of interest across Europe, so FOSS4G 2010 should
be
>      a crowded event.
>    * Africa seems to have learned all they need to know when FOSS4G
>      attended Johannesburg last year, and won't be heading to
Australia
>      in force.
>
>
> You can view the maps here:
>
http://cameronshorter.blogspot.com/2009/08/osgeo-friendly-countries-to-l
> ive-in.html
>
> and in French on Yves blog:
>
http://georezo.net/blog/geolibre/2009/08/16/geolocalisation-des-visite-d
> u-site-foss4g-2009/
>
> --
> Cameron Shorter
> Geospatial Systems Architect
> Tel: +61 (0)2 8570 5050
> Mob: +61 (0)419 142 254
>
> Think Globally, Fix Locally
> Geospatial Solutions enhanced with Open Standards and Open Source
> http://www.lisasoft.com
>
> _______________________________________________
> Discuss mailing list
> Discuss at lists.osgeo.org
> http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
>
>




-- 
Puneet Kishor http://www.punkish.org
Carbon Model http://carbonmodel.org
Charter Member, Open Source Geospatial Foundation http://www.osgeo.org
Science Commons Fellow, http://sciencecommons.org/about/whoweare/kishor
Nelson Institute, UW-Madison http://www.nelson.wisc.edu
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