[OSGeo-Discuss] UN-GGIM The Future Trends in geospatial information management: the five to ten year vision

Suchith Anand Suchith.Anand at nottingham.ac.uk
Sun Oct 25 08:19:28 PDT 2020


Hi Peter,


Thank you for sharing the RDA Array databases report. That is very useful.


The UNGGIM future trends report  (third edition) was produced by the hardwork and efforts of many colleagues and organisations over a  year. There was an open call inviting all interested to contribute on all areas of future developments , so  it would have been great if you could contribute your expertise in data cubes for this. The call inviting contributions was open to all and was shared in UN-GGIM website,  all key GIS/EO networks and mail lists.  I request you to please consider sharing your expertise for this topic for the next edition.


I think there is always room for improvement for any work, so I hope UNGGIM in their next edition will be able to improve based on the feedbacks and include more ideas/inputs. I think it is important to thank and acknowledge the good work done by all colleagues in UN GGIM and all colleagues and organisations who responded to the open call and contributed thier time and expertise for this report.


Best wishes,


Suchith



________________________________
From: Peter Baumann <p.baumann at jacobs-university.de>
Sent: 25 October 2020 12:53
To: Suchith Anand <ezasa7 at exmail.nottingham.ac.uk>; discuss at lists.osgeo.org <discuss at lists.osgeo.org>; GeoForAll <GeoForAll at lists.osgeo.org>
Subject: Re: [OSGeo-Discuss] UN-GGIM The Future Trends in geospatial information management: the five to ten year vision

thanks for sharing this, Suchith!

While the report overall makes a very good impression it violates the principles of both open + science in at least one place, the one I checked: datacubes, for my personal curiosity. What I find is that only one tool, ODC, gets described, leaving the impression to the innocent reader that this is the only technology relevant/existing.

Why this is problematic:

- Science: Science is all about reproducibility. A scientific report would reflect on the state of the art; for example, in the RDA report [1] 19 tools have been investigated, and meantime for sure there are more. Further, objective criteria would get established along which the tools would get assessed. Science requires (i) listing tools and (ii) assessing them for adequate criteria, such as power, performance, standards adherence, etc. Hard work? Yes, of course, who said science is one lazy afternoon's work? The RDA report took over 1.5 years to compile, devise and run benchmarks, etc.

- Open: would require that the collection process is documented, the community at large can contribute before publishing. I could not find any earlier invitation to contribute on the topics of datacubes. Bottom line, the procedure is all but open and transparent.

Bottom line, this report is in contrast to openness, transparency, and good science, it rather represents subliminal advertisement for a single tool lobbied. That the name of the UN is (mis)used here makes it even more problematic.

Not a shining example for the principles this community is striving for.

Disappointedly,
Peter

[1] https://rd-alliance.org/system/files/Array-Databases_final-report.pdf

On 23.10.20 12:05, Suchith Anand wrote:


The United Nations initiative on Global Geospatial Information Management (UN-GGIM) aims at playing a leading role in setting the agenda for the development of global geospatial information and to promote its use to address key global challenges. It provides a forum to liaise and coordinate among Member States, and between Member States and international organizations. Details at https://ggim.un.org<https://ggim.un.org/>


'The Future Trends in geospatial information management: the five to ten year vision – Third Edition, August 2020’  by the United Nations Committee of Experts on Global Geospatial Information Management is now published at


https://ggim.un.org/meetings/GGIM-committee/10th-Session/documents/Future_Trends_Report_THIRD_EDITION_digital_accessible.pdf




The section on Open Science might be of interest. I wish to thank all colleagues who contribute to open education and open geospatial science [1] for bridging the geospatial digital divide. [2],[3],[4]



I am grateful to everyone working to make geoeducation and digital economy opportunities available for everyone.



Best wishes,



Suchith



Dr. Suchith Anand

Chief Scientist

Global Open Data for Agriculture and Nutrition

https://www.godan.info<https://www.godan.info/>




[1] https://www.osgeo.org/foundation-news/open-geospatial-science/



[2] https://www.osgeo.org/foundation-news/applying-open-principles-in-geospatial-education-to-enable-the-right-to-benefit-from-scientific-progress/



[3] https://www.osgeo.org/foundation-news/sharing-the-digital-economy-with-everyone/



[4] https://www.osgeo.org/foundation-news/please-share-geoforall-teaching-research-resources-colleagues-students/






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