[OSGeo-Discuss] Does rasdaman CE solve an open source geospatial problem?

Dave McIlhagga dmcilhagga at mapsherpa.com
Sat May 21 09:36:02 PDT 2016


I think OSGeo should stay out of the business of weighing in on how companies decide to commercialize technologies, so long as they respect the licensing terms.

We and many companies use MapServer for instance at the heart of our proprietary stacks, which is simply another flavor of the open core model.

The more important issue here is whether the structure of a project's licensing and PSC provides a commercial advantage to one company over any other.

The concern I have with the benevolent dictator model in discussion here is that reasonable advancements members of the PSC may want to pursue for the project that may erode from the commercial interests of the benevolent dictator could be denied, and that doesn't feel like a fair playing field for the PSC to operate in, or a scenario OSGeo should endorse.

Dave






Sent from mobile
dmcilhagga at mapsherpa.com

> On May 21, 2016, at 8:06 AM, Cameron Shorter <cameron.shorter at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Edzer,
> Thank you for raising this topic questioning the value of radsaman community edition. It is pertinent considering recent discussions about Rasdaman incubation.
> 
> Peter, your comments about programmers wanting to get paid for their work is valid, but does not provide justification for OSGeo     promoting a proprietary business model. OSGeo is in the business of promoting open source software, and helping people who create open source software.
> 
> Rasdaman's business model is in a grey zone. It provides a community edition and a proprietary edition. This is often referred to as an "open core" business model, or sometimes less favorably called "crippleware".
> I think Rasdaman is the only OSGeo (proposed) project which provides an open core model. All prior projects have been pure open source.
> 
> Although a an open core model deviates from OSGeo's original principles, one could argue that Rasdaman community edition stands on its own as a valuable, quality open source geospatial application by itself, worthy of OSGeo promotion.
> 
> Edzer's comments appear to counter this argument. Edzer, I understand you suggest Rasdaman community edition is of little value for real world problems?
> Extending from this, OSGeo endorsement of Rasdaman should be questioned and potentially withdrawn. 
> 
> I'd be interested to hear opinions of others in the field as to whether Rasdaman community version is of value for real-world     production systems by itself.
> 
> A deeper question for the greater OSGeo community is should OSGeo endorse Open Core business models?
> 
> Warm regards, Cameron
> 
>> On 21/05/2016 6:07 pm, Peter Baumann wrote:
>> oh, just looking at the subject again:
>> 
>> several service providers believe indeed rasdaman community does offer a significant advantage:
>> - see the download figures on www.rasdaman.org
>> - concretely, see www.planetserver.eu which is running rasdaman community on - I believe - about 20 TB of Planetary Science data.
>> 
>> -Peter
>> 
>> 
>>> On 05/21/2016 09:56 AM, Peter Baumann wrote:
>>> Hm, first of all: this is opening a different thread, talking about functionality of rasdaman community. Next, it is based on assumptions - without details (because off topic): conclusions are wrong.
>>> 
>>> But to respond to the core message emphasized in the first paragraph: I respectfully disagree. In particular, such a position does not benefit the open source community very much as I am trying to explain below. 
>>> 
>>> TL;DR:
>>> 
>>> You have a strong expertise in Geoinformatics, I know something about Computer Science. This is where we can talk as professors and scientists. Your statement is about economics, industry etc. Having an opinion there (and articulate it) is fair, but in these fields our opinion weighs not more than anyone else's in the street. We should not attempt to attain importance through inapplicable roles.
>>> 
>>> Let us look at a professor. They have a conveniently high salary which is paid by society, that is: tax payers. Nobody can influence what a professor does and how much return s/he generates for society.
>>> 
>>> A single open source developer (or a small group, whatever) do not experience this convenience. They have a dream where they invest, they try to not make money for getting richer than a professor ;-) but merely for their economic survival. Some (in particular scientists) enjoy the money rain coming from publicly funded projects (again: the tax payer subsidizes), but most in the community have to struggle hard. They face reluctant customers, competition by the giants in the market, and many more obstacles.
>>> 
>>> From the cosy place of a lifelong position with a secured salary and decent retirement funds it is easy to say that all software should be free like free beer (quote from below: "can be reproduced by other scientists without prohibitive license         costs").
>>> 
>>> If the open source movement cannibalizes itself it will make it all so easy for the big players to maintain their dominance, they will silently applaud. Quoting Jeroen:
>>> > NEVER IGNORE COMPANIES AGAIN IN OSGEO OR FOSS4G! THEY ARE NOT A THREAT, THEY ARE A NECESSITY.
>>> 
>>> That said: It is entirely ok to have the opinion you have. Others, though, may disagree. I am one of those.
>>> 
>>> respectfully,
>>> Peter
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On 05/20/2016 09:30 AM, Edzer Pebesma wrote:
>>>> As a scientist, I teach my students that for doing science it is a
>>>> requirement to work with open source software, because only then
>>>> workflows are fully transparent and can be reproduced by other
>>>> scientists without prohibitive license costs. Currently, working
>>>> with large amounts of earth observation (EO) or climate model data
>>>> typically requires to download these data tile by tile, stitch them
>>>> together, and go through all of them. Array databases may simplify
>>>> this substantially: after ingesting the tiles, they can directly
>>>> work on the whole data as a multi-dimensinal array ("data cube").
>>>> Computations on these array are typically embarassingly parallel,
>>>> and scale up with the number of cores in a cluster.
>>>> 
>>>> Rasdaman is an array data base that comes in two flavours, the open
>>>> source community edition (CE) and the commercial enterprise edition
>>>> (EE). The differences between the two are clear [1]. When I want to
>>>> use rasdaman CE (open source) for scalable image analysis, I get
>>>> stuck waiting for one core to finish everything [1]. This is not
>>>> going to solve any problems related to computing on large data,
>>>> and is not scalable. The bold claim that rasdaman.org opens with
>>>> ("This worldwide leading array analytics engine distinguishes itself
>>>> by its flexibility, performance, and scalability") is not true for
>>>> the CE advertised. This has been mentioned in the past on mailing
>>>> lists [2,3], but the typical answer from Peter Baumann diverts into
>>>> other arguments. Also the benchmark graph (photo from an AGU poster)
>>>> [4] that Peter sent this week [5] must refer to the enterprise
>>>> edition, since Spark and Hive both scale, but rasdaman CE does not [3].
>>>> 
>>>> I assume that on the discussions on this list, ONLY the open
>>>> source community edition is considered, compared, and discussed,
>>>> as a potential future OSGeo project.
>>>> 
>>>> OSGeo supports the needs of the open source geospatial community [6].
>>>> 
>>>> Given
>>>> 
>>>>  * the bold claims and continuing confusion about whether,
>>>>    and which, rasdaman is scalable,
>>>>  * the need for OSGeo to give good advice to prospective users
>>>>    about technologies that do scale EO data analysis,
>>>>  * the current (unfilled!) needs of scientists for good, open source
>>>>    software for such analysis, and
>>>>  * the potential conflict of interest of its creator [7],
>>>> 
>>>> I wonder wether OSGeo should recommend rasdaman CE to the open
>>>> source geospatial community.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> [1] http://rasdaman.org/wiki/Features
>>>> [2] https://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/incubator/2014-October/002540.html
>>>> [3] https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/rasdaman-users/66XL3tmDDQI
>>>> [4]
>>>> https://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/discuss/attachments/20160515/49200cd4/attachment.jpg
>>>> [5] https://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/discuss/2016-May/016099.html
>>>> [6] http://www.osgeo.org/content/faq/foundation_faq.html
>>>> [7] https://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/discuss/2016-May/016045.html
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> Discuss mailing list
>>>> Discuss at lists.osgeo.org
>>>> http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
>>> 
>>> -- 
>>> Dr. Peter Baumann
>>>  - Professor of Computer Science, Jacobs University Bremen
>>>    www.faculty.jacobs-university.de/pbaumann
>>>    mail: p.baumann at jacobs-university.de
>>>    tel: +49-421-200-3178, fax: +49-421-200-493178
>>>  - Executive Director, rasdaman GmbH Bremen (HRB 26793)
>>>    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)
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
>> -- 
>> Dr. Peter Baumann
>>  - Professor of Computer Science, Jacobs University Bremen
>>    www.faculty.jacobs-university.de/pbaumann
>>    mail: p.baumann at jacobs-university.de
>>    tel: +49-421-200-3178, fax: +49-421-200-493178
>>  - Executive Director, rasdaman GmbH Bremen (HRB 26793)
>>    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)
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
>> Discuss mailing list
>> Discuss at lists.osgeo.org
>> http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
> 
> -- 
> Cameron Shorter,
> Software and Data Solutions Manager
> LISAsoft
> Suite 112, Jones Bay Wharf,
> 26 - 32 Pirrama Rd, Pyrmont NSW 2009
> 
> P +61 2 9009 5000,  W www.lisasoft.com,  F +61 2 9009 5099
> _______________________________________________
> Discuss mailing list
> Discuss at lists.osgeo.org
> http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss
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