[Ica-osgeo-labs] OSGeo-Live - GSoC 2015

Mueller, Thomas Mueller at calu.edu
Mon Mar 23 05:27:19 PDT 2015


Very cool - thanks
Tom


Thomas R. Mueller, Ph.D., GISP 
Advisor: Geography Major with GIS and Emergency Management Concentration 
Co - Director: Pennsylvania View 
Department of Earth Sciences, California University of Pennsylvania 
"A man never gets to this station in life without being helped, aided, shoved, pushed and prodded to do better." - Johnny Unitas


-----Original Message-----
From: ica-osgeo-labs-bounces at lists.osgeo.org [mailto:ica-osgeo-labs-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Hogan, Patrick (ARC-PX)
Sent: Sunday, March 22, 2015 10:56 PM
To: ica-osgeo-labs at lists.osgeo.org
Subject: Re: [Ica-osgeo-labs] OSGeo-Live - GSoC 2015

Tom and Suchith and All (quite a thread),

This all sound great! Java apps seem to be having a hard time holding up these days, security flags and permission issues popping up here and there. So, for massive distribution, JavaScript/HTML5 web apps seem to be the preferred platform going forward. Regardless, a world of geospatial solutions will benefit from an open source visualization platform, as World Wind Java is, and then as an open source web app with an open API for the menu system, as Web World Wind will be. We're getting there (the HTML files), http://worldwindserver.net/webworldwind/examples/ 

I didn't know about ChangeViewer. That's pretty cool! JSatTrak is another one, http://www.gano.name/shawn/JSatTrak/, as well as all the Europa Challenge apps. 

I wonder if Maria's PoliCrowd 2.0 app might be good for your crime mapping activity. http://geomobile.como.polimi.it/policrowd2.0/

And yes, I couldn't agree more, Phil's GeoAcademy is awesome!!! https://foss4geo.wordpress.com/ 

-Patrick

-----Original Message-----
From: Mueller, Thomas [mailto:Mueller at calu.edu] 
Sent: Sunday, March 22, 2015 6:04 PM
To: Suchith Anand; Hogan, Patrick (ARC-PX); ica-osgeo-labs at lists.osgeo.org
Subject: RE: [Ica-osgeo-labs] OSGeo-Live - GSoC 2015

I am fairly new to Open Source...

I agree on all points and I am thinking I could include some World Wind examples in my Introduction to Geography course - this course has quite a few education majors in it.  
For example, I am going to use ChangeViewer (which utlilizes World Wind) in my Intro course:
http://www.climatechangehumanhealth.org/changeviewer 

I am also hoping to take my crime mapping course this summer and convert it to QGIS.  I use CrimeStat right now as my statistical analysis work, so I do not expect it to be that difficult since the mapping software is used to visual this analysis.


Phil's GeoAcademy is awesome.  I have taken the first 3 courses and I cannot wait to take the last two - especially the next one on Remote Sensing.  That is another one of courses which I would like to highlight Open Source.  


Tom

________________________________________
From: ica-osgeo-labs-bounces at lists.osgeo.org [ica-osgeo-labs-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] on behalf of Suchith Anand [Suchith.Anand at nottingham.ac.uk]
Sent: Sunday, March 22, 2015 9:05 AM
To: Hogan, Patrick (ARC-PX); ica-osgeo-labs at lists.osgeo.org
Subject: Re: [Ica-osgeo-labs] OSGeo-Live - GSoC 2015

Hi Patrick, all,

Fully agree that we need to de-silo and find the overlap in all of our FOSS work, wherever possible.

In addition to the potential for this for undergraduate/postgraduate teaching programs already mentioned by Maria, Rafael, Charlie etc, i can also see the potential  if we can somehow make use of World Wind examples for school teacher training  in developing countries especially.

If you remember some months back we had some ideas/discussions on building educational tools for Spatial literacy using OSGeo technologies and open data and i can see potential for synergies with the ideas put by Massimo.

The reason i believe this is important is that it can then provide opportunities for learning spatial technologies for wider number of students globally . For example, if there is a school teacher in a government school in rural India or Africa or South America and their school now has 3 or 4 computers (very basic hardware ), with basic internet connection , then they can make use of this to teach thier secondary level students on urban developments ,  climate change effects etc . Again low cost hardware along with free and open software is key esp. in developing countries, and with Charlie's links with "Public Laboratory for Science"  etc in future we can think more ideas in expanding this.

All ideas welcome.

Suchith

________________________________________
From: ica-osgeo-labs-bounces at lists.osgeo.org [ica-osgeo-labs-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Hogan, Patrick (ARC-PX) [patrick.hogan at nasa.gov]
Sent: Saturday, March 21, 2015 10:34 PM
To: ica-osgeo-labs at lists.osgeo.org
Subject: Re: [Ica-osgeo-labs] OSGeo-Live - GSoC 2015

Dear OSGeo and GSoC activity,

Any reason why we shouldn't include our interest in a CitySmart app as another target?
http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/GeoForAll_UrbanScience_CityAnalytics
Being successful here, winning that is, will look great on a resume! And a crystal trophy ain't a bad thing either.

And no reason why the Europa Challenge couldn't also be used to 'double-down' on their effort, whether for this year or an expansion of their work for next year's Europa Challenge. We have no limitation on where the OS app was previously applied!
http://eurochallenge.como.polimi.it/

And many of these capabilities/functionalities wonderfully described by Massimo should probably be tailored specifically for how they would be applied into the Osgeo/GeoForAll CitySmart App, and written into that wiki. We need to de-silo and find the overlap in all of our FOSSy work, wherever possible.

-Patrick

From: ica-osgeo-labs-bounces at lists.osgeo.org [mailto:ica-osgeo-labs-bounces at lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Massimo Di Stefano
Sent: Saturday, March 21, 2015 1:09 PM
To: Charles Schweik
Cc: ica-osgeo-labs at lists.osgeo.org
Subject: Re: [Ica-osgeo-labs] OSGeo-Live - GSoC 2015

Hi Charles,

thank you so much for your feedback.

This is an extract from the GSoC proposal :

            Discuss with mentors about the topic oriented notebooks, the idea will be to build the notebooks in section and subsections like a book. So i need to spend the first and perhaps second week to organize a precise outline. The following is a first attempt to make a list of possible main topics (dedicating up to 12 days for each topic) :

            * data types : vector, raster, I/O & subsetting (include sql basic)

            * datum and projections : work on coordinates conversion and datum transformation (simple points), reprojection of geospatial data (use of EPSG code and custom defined projection)

            * raster algebra : first simple examples based on numerical array; last more complex example based on real use case (filtering, masking, general statistics) - working with satellite data can be a good topic (a full section dedicated to landsat 8 processing, depending on time/resources this can be extended to modis data as well)

            * web data access: define what OGC standards are, and study a solution to access web based resources (focus on OGC std, only mention netcdf which will have it's own section)

            * time series of gridded and ungridded data (this section will be dedicated to netcdf data access and processing)

            * intro to geostatistic (combined use of R, GRASS and Python) (simple statistic, bivariate statistic, interpolation, time series analysis)

            * use of the notebook to process raw data and publish the results in simple web-gis projects based on mapserver and  js libraries

*note: the list above is a list of topics I identified as possible candidate to be included in this GSoC. With the mentor advise, based on the time frame and complexity we want reach for each topic, I will identify the ones to implement (if not all)

I'm planning to dedicate the first two weeks (along with other tasks) to work with my mentors to identify the topics and content to focus on.
 I have already an idea on how to develop each topic but I'll need help and guidance from expert educators in choosing the right "topic oriented notebooks".

Of course I'll be happy to implement part of those notebooks adapting existent documentation.
For this Idea i'll try to make use of the dataset already installed on the live, however i consider the use of data available as web resource if needed.

Please let me know if the list of topics make sense for you.

I attach here few example usage of the notebook.
but maybe useful to give you an idea  about the notebook approach.

*Note: this is not educational material which will have a different form (more theory and better structure [introduction, numbered sections, references and appendix])

essentially in a notebook is possible to render anything that a browser can render (images, video, latex, hyperlink etc ..)


Examples:
            * notebook using GRASS GIS
            * An example notebook based on a presentation I gave at AGU 2014 :
            * this is a raw json file (an Ipython notebook)
            * https://gist.github.com/epifanio/349e64e982f6ce295825
            * which can be rendered in html :
            * http://nbviewer.ipython.org/gist/epifanio/349e64e982f6ce295825
            * or as a slide show : http://slideviewer.herokuapp.com/urls/gist.githubusercontent.com/epifanio/349e64e982f6ce295825/raw/e3304d45ad745e6588faa8072f2f6c0774fce388/AGU-2013-H52E02-MDS?create=1#/
            * (note it is the same file rendered in different ways)
            * Notebook showing axcess to netcdf:
            * http://epinux.com/shared/The_Perfect_Storm_1991.html
            * My Ocean acoustic report:
            * html output http://nbviewer.ipython.org/gist/epifanio/7455aa1d43b9b467aa04
            * pdf output http://epinux.com/shared/Ocean_Measurments_SONAR.pdf
            * very basic openlayers example output generated by running notebook where raw data were processed to generate new layers
            * http://epinux.com/shared/oceanmapping/index.html
            * http://epinux.com/shared/index.html

I'll provide to each mentor an account on my personal server where i have all the software infrastructure installed.  This will replicate the same software environment present on the OSGeo-Live. Each user will have a clone of the github repository where the code for this idea will be developed.  this will speed-up testing and debugging. Moreover, each notebook can be simply shared as html link and made publicly available.

Please let me know your thoughts,

Cheers,
Massimo.


On Mar 21, 2015, at 6:22 AM, Charles Schweik <cschweik at pubpol.umass.edu<mailto:cschweik at pubpol.umass.edu>> wrote:

I'm not against saying that, but I think it would be good to find someone to advise who will be teaching the topic/content in the next year.

Massimo, do you know what specific topics/content you are going to focus on?

Cheers,
Charlie

On Sat, Mar 21, 2015 at 10:42 AM, Cameron Shorter <cameron.shorter at gmail.com<mailto:cameron.shorter at gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi Charlie,
Thanks for your feedback.

Is there any chance you could strengthen your statement to say:
"I hope to be co-teaching a web-GIS class at UMass next spring. Details haven't been finalised yet. However, in anticipation, I am offer to commit some of my time to help advise Massimo in creating content which will likely be of use to GIS trainers such as myself."

Regards, Cameron
On 21/03/2015 7:30 pm, Charles Schweik wrote:
Two comments from my end:

1) One connection returns to our ongoing quest to build a working educational content inventory system for education that is on the web. So connecting that idea to the material that Cameron and others have been maintaining on the Live DVD production process is important. This will be an important issue we take on at FOSS4G EU in Como in July. So Massimo, you could help us in this context, potentially.

2) Open source web GIS class

On my end, *I may* be co-teaching a web-GIS class at UMass next spring. Not yet sure, and my collaborators and I aren't sure what technologies we would use for student projects. But if open source web-GIS is something you might do, and if I do end up designing a course, I could potentially help review your material.

Others? I agree with Cameron -- a nice opportunity here potentially.

Cheers,
Charlie Schweik


On Sat, Mar 21, 2015 at 4:46 AM, Cameron Shorter <cameron.shorter at gmail.com<mailto:cameron.shorter at gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi OSGeo Education folk and Massimo,

Massimo, I think your Google Summer Of Code education idea is very compelling. As you are aware, I've volunteered to mentor from an OSGeo-Live perspective.

What I find incredibly compelling about your idea is that you are proposing to provide technical material to be used directly by OSGeo Educators. However, what is missing is endorsement from a number of educators validating that the material created will be used.

OSGeo educators, please do step up if you can, and say:
"This proposal will result in material that I expect to use within my OSGeo training course(s) XXX. I volunteer to help Massimo define the scope of material to cover."

Regards,
Cameron

On 19/03/2015 8:17 pm, Suchith Anand wrote:
Hi Massimo,

Thank you for informing this excellent project idea. I really hope this project will be successful as i can see the potential for expanding this by other educators. Please do keep us updated. Thanks.

Best wishes,

Suchith
________________________________________
From: geoforall-northamerica-bounces at lists.osgeo.org<mailto:geoforall-northamerica-bounces at lists.osgeo.org> [geoforall-northamerica-bounces at lists.osgeo.org<mailto:geoforall-northamerica-bounces at lists.osgeo.org>] On Behalf Of Massimo Di Stefano [epiesasha at me.com<mailto:epiesasha at me.com>]
Sent: Wednesday, March 18, 2015 10:16 PM
To: geoforall-northamerica at lists.osgeo.org<mailto:geoforall-northamerica at lists.osgeo.org>; ica-osgeo-labs at lists.osgeo.org<mailto:ica-osgeo-labs at lists.osgeo.org>
Subject: [GeoForAll-NorthAmerica] OSGeo-Live - GSoC 2015

Hi,

sorry for any cross-posting,

I'm applying as Google Summer of Code student for the OSgeo-Live project.
My idea, described here [1], focus on free and open source software for education, so i thought it can be of interest to this list.

Thanks for your valuable feedback,

Massimo.

[1]  http://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Live_GIS_GSoC_2015

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