[OSGeo-Discuss] [OSGeo-Standards] "Geoservices REST API" story is being discussed on slashdot

Baumann, Peter p.baumann at jacobs-university.de
Fri Jun 7 01:23:40 PDT 2013


I like the part of "not talk of OGC using 3rd person". Being one of the activists in OGC spec writing and group chairing, and also talking on behalf of my many colleagues in this, I'd like to point out that a lot of useful work is going on which goes largely unnoticed.

Did you notice that since recently we can model temporal CRSs just like spatial ones? Can combine CRSs adhoc? Have a RESTful interface to WCS pretty much finished? Have 5 WCS Extensions just waiting for roll-out?

Partly this was our fault, too: not enough information provided. As a consequence of "the ESRI case" we are more and more opening up discussions to the general public. For example, WCS stuff can be found here:
http://external.opengeospatial.org/twiki_public/CoveragesDWG/WebHome
Of course maintaining such information puts extra burden on us, but we are beginning to realize that it is instrumental in keeping contact with "the world outside OGC" (using this consciously).

Conversely, we hope that there will be more feedback than has been in the past. DWG (Domain Working Group) mailing lists are open as well, so why not subscribe, follow, comment...it's up to all of us to improve on this essential communication.

Just my 2 cents,
Peter


-- 
Dr. Peter Baumann- Professor of Computer Science, Jacobs University Bremen
  http://www.faculty.jacobs-university.de/pbaumann
  mail: p.baumann at jacobs-university.detel: +49-421-200-3178, fax: +49-421-200-493178
- Executive Director, rasdaman GmbH Bremen (HRB 26793)http://www.rasdaman.com,
  mail: baumann at rasdaman.com
  tel: 0800-rasdaman, fax: 0800-rasdafax, mobile: +49-173-5837882
"Si forte in alienas manus oberraverit hec peregrina epistola incertis ventis dimissa, sed Deo commendata, precamur ut ei reddatur cui soli destinata, nec preripiat quisquam non sibi parata." (mail disclaimer, AD 1083)

________________________________________
From: discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org [discuss-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] on behalf of Daniel Morissette [dmorissette at mapgears.com]
Sent: Thursday, June 06, 2013 9:33 PM
To: discuss at lists.osgeo.org
Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] [OSGeo-Standards] "Geoservices REST API" story is being discussed on slashdot

Arnulf, and all,

I am also of the opinion that ESRI's decision was probably not solely
driven by the OSGeo letter and that some journalists got a bit carried
away in their "open source wins over proprietary" interpretation.
However I also believe that the OSGeo letter added some weight in the
balance.

And BTW I did sign the letter for what I think are good technical
reasons that I expressed on this list a month ago and unrelated to the
open source vs proprietary divide. At least in my mind this was not a
political move, purely technical, even if maybe for some people it was
political.

FWIW I invite you to re-read my reasoning expressed here a month ago:

http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/discuss/2013-May/011618.html

"""
What the geospatial community needs is an organization that provides
direction around a consistent set of standards that guarantee
interoperability between interchangeable software components.

The suite of WxS services built over the last 10-15 years is somewhat on
the way of achieving this, even if some pieces still do not interoperate
as smoothly as we wish. Is OGC trying to tell the world that it no
longer believes in WxS?

OGC and its members need to decide whether they want the OGC logo to be
perceived as the "guarantee of interoperability", or just as a
rubber-stamping organization with a large portfolio of inconsistent
standards.

Whether your source is open or closed is out of the question here, so I
am not sure that a statement from OSGeo matters unless it is to point at
this obvious slippery slope in which OGC is falling (a movement which
started with KML a few years ago).
"""

Oh, and you're right when you say that we should not talk of "the OGC"
using the 3rd person (which is what I did above), and that we should
instead ask ourselves what we can do to help. However my plate is too
full already and I'll have to pass on this one and hope that others with
more time available can help (out of the 100+ people who signed the
letter and obviously care about standards).

Cheers all

Daniel


On 13-06-06 9:45 AM, Seven (aka Arnulf) wrote:
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>
> Brent,
> well said. I agree with all you say and I would have signed the letter
> - - if I had thought it necessary to stop the REST API from happening.
>
> One more thing to add: We always think that "the OGC" does this or
> that. Just like people tend to think that OSGeo has a leading voice
> but can anybody tell me how an umbrella can talk? The OCG and OSGeo
> likewise are collectives of sorts and as we are all habituated to
> democrazy-ness we tend to perceive organizations as dual, black and
> white, one opinion and one reason responsible for everything.
>
> Coming back to the latest OGC events I ask: Can an organization like
> the OGC take a political decision at all? If technically things are
> doable (N.b. I do not think that the esri REST API is a technical
> master piece, but it is doable), then what are the reasons to not make
> it a standard? If at all it can only be stopped by a majority of
> members. And even they have a hard time except arguing that there is a
> lack of competing implementations (like Adrian mentioned).
>
> Hence - if you want to get things done (or specifically not done),
> then there is a hard road with lots of work to be gone within the OGC.
> Opened up to five active OSGeo hackers for free. If anybody is
> interested, here is the background:
> http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/OGC_Membership
>
> Cheers,
> Arnulf
>
> On 06.06.2013 09:38, pcreso at pcreso.com wrote:
>> + 1/2
>>
>> I agree with much of Arnulf's commentary, and as an OSGEO member
>> who did sign the letter, my reasons were not primarily
>> philosophical or technical, but political. Heavy sigh :-)
>>
>> For some years I have been working towards data sharing &
>> interoperability between a wide range of national & international
>> environmental agencies. "OGC compliant" has become a catchword
>> representing the progress we have made, mostly using WMS, WFS, CSW
>> & SOS. From my perspective, introducing a standard that enabled
>> "OGC compliance" but failed to provide the interoperability was a
>> retrogade step - irrespective of technical merits. I admit this is
>> only one perspective & others may feel differently but it was my
>> primary motivation.
>>
>> I have no doubt that giving the FOSS GIS community open access to
>> ESRI protocols would indeed give the FOSS community a situation
>> they would successfully take advantage of, but I believe there is a
>> better way forward, & hopefully we are heading there.
>>
>> I don't know how much the "open source" input had to do with ESRI
>> withdrawing. I don't really care why ESRI does what it does, I do
>> care about what my community does, & I'm very pleased with the
>> result.
>>
>> I think one longer term outcome will be a better RESTful API, that
>> is perhaps largely ESRI compatible, but addresses some of the
>> technical issues that have been mentioned.
>>
>> I believe that both OSGEO & OGC have represented the majority of
>> their stakeholders well, and have made considered decisions that
>> lead forward. Robust (rather than acrimonious or self righteous)
>> debate is the best way for communities to determine the best way
>> forward, & I'd say the vast majority of the commentary I've
>> followed has been robust & rational, which is very positive.
>>
>>  From a cynical perspective, for what is basically a group of
>> committees, the issue & outcome have been remarkably open, widely
>> discussed by well informed experts, & have resulted in what I think
>> is a sensible decision.
>>
>> What more can be asked of a committee?
>>
>>
>> Congratulations to all those who participated!!
>>
>> Brent Wood
>>
>> --- On *Thu, 6/6/13, Baumann, Peter
>> /<p.baumann at jacobs-university.de>/* wrote:
>>
>>
>> From: Baumann, Peter <p.baumann at jacobs-university.de> Subject: Re:
>> [OSGeo-Discuss] [OSGeo-Standards] "Geoservices REST API" story is
>> being discussed on slashdot To: "Seven (aka Arnulf)"
>> <seven at arnulf.us>, "OSGeo Discussions" <discuss at lists.osgeo.org>,
>> "standards at lists.osgeo.org" <standards at lists.osgeo.org> Date:
>> Thursday, June 6, 2013, 2:32 AM
>>
>> +1, a very balanced viewpoint indeed! -Peter
>>
>> -- Dr. Peter Baumann - Professor of Computer Science, Jacobs
>> University Bremen http://www.faculty.jacobs-university.de/pbaumann
>> mail: p.baumann at jacobs-university.de
>> </mc/compose?to=p.baumann at jacobs-university.de> tel:
>> +49-421-200-3178, fax: +49-421-200-493178 - Executive Director,
>> rasdaman GmbH Bremen (HRB 26793) http://www.rasdaman.com,
>> mail:baumann at rasdaman.com </mc/compose?to=baumann at rasdaman.com>
>> tel: 0800-rasdaman, fax: 0800-rasdafax, mobile: +49-173-5837882 "Si
>> forte in alienas manus oberraverit hec peregrina epistola incertis
>> ventis dimissa, sed Deo commendata, precamur ut ei reddatur cui
>> soli destinata, nec preripiat quisquam non sibi parata." (mail
>> disclaimer, AD 1083)
>>
>> ________________________________________ From:
>> standards-bounces at lists.osgeo.org
>> </mc/compose?to=standards-bounces at lists.osgeo.org>
>> [standards-bounces at lists.osgeo.org
>> </mc/compose?to=standards-bounces at lists.osgeo.org>] on behalf of
>> Seven (aka Arnulf) [seven at arnulf.us
>> </mc/compose?to=seven at arnulf.us>] Sent: Wednesday, June 05, 2013
>> 3:56 PM To: OSGeo Discussions; standards at lists.osgeo.org
>> </mc/compose?to=standards at lists.osgeo.org> Subject: Re:
>> [OSGeo-Standards] [OSGeo-Discuss] "Geoservices REST API" story is
>> being discussed on slashdot
>>
>> Folks, lets not get carried away. The decision esri took depended
>> on many factors and I have a hard time mapping it directly and
>> exclusively to the engagement of open sauce (fudzilla original)
>> developers.
>>
>> Don't get me wrong, I think the initiative by OSGeo showed that we
>> are functioning nicely and that we have our act together (I say we
>> although I did not sign the submitted paper). But to say that esri
>> took the decision to withdraw the standard proposal because of
>> Open Source is simply not justified.
>>
>> There was a long debate and discussions and even some dialog on
>> all levels inside and outside of the OGC by many members and
>> externals for two years! It was a good discussion and everybody
>> involved learned a lot. The OGC showed its willingness to change
>> and open their processes to better fit the way things evolve these
>> days. This is ongoing.
>>
>> Yes, there was also input from OSGeo but in my opinion pretty late
>> in the game. We (at least on this list) have known of this effort
>> by esri since June 2011 two years ago:
>> http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/standards/2012-July/000456.html
>> (thanks to Bart) We were reminded several times, for example in
>> July 2012 by Volker:
>> http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/standards/2012-July/000456.html
>> ...plus there were several posts from the OGC in their regular
>> channels for those who care.
>>
>>
>> Has the standard been removed for technical reasons? I think not.
>> It was because of a backlash of the broader geospatial developer
>> (or rather business?) community (Nota Bene: not only us Open
>> Source heroes). And the reasons were fear of the market leader
>> taking over. Taking over what exactly?
>>
>> I am still not convinced that the result of this standard would
>> have been detrimental to Open Source. How that? There is a good
>> chance that it would have opened up all current esri clients for
>> Open Source code because the proposed standard goes right into the
>> underwear of esri's ArcGIS. Having the specification in the OGC
>> would have guaranteed that it would not be dropped or changed in a
>> proprietary whim. Every single esri client would have had the
>> chance to get some Open Source pieces into their game, be it on the
>> client or the server side. Then learn that it is more stable,
>> evolves quicker and can replace the other esri stuff over time.
>> Simple as that.
>>
>> Chance passed, but no problem, we'll get another one.
>>
>>
>>
>> For those unsure whether I turned bad: Nope, I didn't. I still
>> don't get paid by esri and I still know (not believe) that Open
>> Source is the better way forward and it is all happening already
>> anyway. But when it comes to politics and strategy we must
>> acknowledge that things are not black and white but come in all
>> colors (no, not shades of gray :-).
>>
>>
>> Have fun, Arnulf
>>
>> On 04.06.2013 22:41, Cameron Shorter wrote:
>>> The "Geoservices REST API" story has been picked up by ITNews,
>>> Slashdot, and Fudzilla, and is being discussed by their
>>> communities in the comments.
>>
>>
>> http://www.itnews.com.au/News/345493,open-source-crusade-blocks-geospatial-standard.aspx/0
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> http://tech.slashdot.org/story/13/06/03/2229245/gis-community-blocks-esris-geospatial-open-standard-rest-api
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> http://fudzilla.com/home/item/31581-open-sources-revolt-against-standard
>>
>>
>>
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--
Daniel Morissette
http://www.mapgears.com/
Provider of Professional MapServer Support since 2000

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