Difference between revisions of "OpenTechnologyConference Mar2007"
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Revision as of 13:33, 23 January 2007
Open Technology Development - Realizing the Vision
We are currently working with the Associate for Enterprise Integration (AFEI) to organize a two day conference in Washington DC, 14, 15 March at the Hyatt at Crystal City. The 14th will be focused on the Open Technology Development effort within the federal government. The 15th will focus on open source geospatial capabilities and support for those technologies. The Open Source Geospatial Foundation will guide the planning and agenda for 15 March.
Conflict with venue is resolved and conference continues on schedule, March 14-15, Hyatt Crystal City, Arlington VA. Attendees have choice of attending just one day, or both days. Day one focuses on DoD Open Technology Development. Led by Advanced Systems and Concepts organization of OSD, it focuses on making open standards, architecture and open source software metods available in DoD acquisition processes.
Day two focuses on Open Geospatial Software, co-sponsored by OSGeo. Please watch AFEI website (www.afei.org) for more details. Registration will begin soon. - Dave Chesebrough, President, AFEI
Marketing
This is an opportunity to communicate the benefits of OSGeo and Open Technologies to government agencies and contractors. Perhaps the key message is that these technologies are mature and supportable through existing organizations and companies.
Why should you attend?
Learn about the latest trends in bringing open technologies solutions into government systems and acquisitions. A special focus will demonstrate open source geospatial solutions and their supporting organizations and companies. Open source software and open systems have revolutionized how complex architectures are implemented. The collaboration, tools, and technologies used in open source systems provide agile technology paths that are critical in our ever changing environment. This conference will educate the participants on open technology initiatives and open source software solutions that are backed with commercial support.
Who should attend?
Decision makers, systems integrators and technologists from contractors and government that are interested in how to improve government solutions through the use of open architectures and open source software. The conference will focus on the efforts of the Open Technology Development Initiative within the Department of Defense with a special focus on advanced open source geospatial technologies from the Open Source Geospatial Foundation.
Agenda
14 Mar - Open Technology and the Federal Government
Keynote Speakers
Confirmed: Chris Dibona, google open source manager
Possible: Sue Payton (AF Aq) - no Gen Croom (DISA) Capt Shannon (Navy OA) Eric Haseltine (DNI)
Panels/Sessions
AM
- Business SI's Vendors Ecipse.org
- Gov GSA DDR&E DoD Software Group JFCOM OSD-NII others
PM
2 tracks - 1st track, open source 101 (andy gordon has the material) - 2nd track, advanced issues
Hosted Social - Unisys
Presentations
15 Mar - Open Source Geospatial Software and the Government
The goal this day of the conference is to educate the attending government decision makers and contractors that open source geospatial technologies are mature and supportable. These technologies and open source practices would provide substantial benefits to government programs and projects. The collaborative technology development methodologies employed by open source geospatial projects can be accessed through collaboration with the Open Source Geospatial Foundation.
Potential speakers: Tyler Mitchell - OSGeo Executive Director (accepted) Gary Lang - VP Autodesk (accepted) Mark Lucas - Large DATA JCTD/OSSIM (accepted) Dave McIlhagga - DM Solutions (accepted) Canadian Government Speaker (DM working) Joel Schlagel - US Army Corps of Engineers (accepted) Al Kelly - Ilabs (accepted) Jim Long - NGA (accepted) Steve Jayjock - NGA Open Geospatial Policy (potential) Chris Holmes - openplans.org (accepted) Michele Weslander - DNI CIO (invited) MetaCarta - OpenLayers Refractions - Paul Ramsey uDig, PostGIS (accepted)
Agenda 15 March 2007
AM
7:00 AM Registration and Continental Breakfast
8:00 AM Introduction and Welcome
8:15 AM Keynote Speakers
Michele Weslander - has not responded... (Chuck Riechers - AF Acquisitions)
Tyler Mitchell - Executive Director, Open Source Geo-Spatial Foundation
Overview of the GoMoos project Dave McIlhaaga - Dramatic story of how research agencies and coastal monitoring systems came together for a national system of coastal monitoring with Open Source Geospatial software.
10:00 AM Networking Break
10:30 AM Government Panel Discussion: What's ahead for Open Source Geospatial Software
Moderated by Joel Shlagel, US Army Corps of Engineers Jim Long - NGA Al Kelly - ILabs - Systems Architect for the ILabs. Classified laboratories for advanced national systems. Steve Jayjock? - NGA Canadian Government (DMcIlhaga working) Has interest from a representative from NRCAN
12:00 Lunch
1:00 PM Keynote Speakers
Finding the Role for Open Source Geospatial Gary Lang, Vice President, AutoDesk
OGC Presentation - in process of inviting
Large Data JCTD and Open Source Geospatial Mark Lucas, Principal Scientist, RadiantBlue Technologies Inc.
2:30 PM Networking Break
3:00 PM Panels Industry Panel Discussion
3:00-4:30(?) -
- moderator: Michael P. Gerlek (mpg) - LizardTech & OSGeo
- panelists: [still under development]
- "nonprofit/NGO" - Chris Holmes
- "small company"
- "large company"
- "OS-dedicated company" - Paul Ramsey
- "major defense contractor"
- topics & questions: [still under development]
- Welcome and Intro (mpg)
- Intro, by each panelist
- topic: How can use OS software be used in various govt/DOD projects?
- as finished product? for integration into larger package? for extension/customization?
- topic: What barriers exist to OS adoption in projects?
- concerns about IP? concerns about GPL/viral licenses? lack of understanding / misconceptions about what "OS" is?
- topic: How to manage OS-based projects within the traditional DOD arena?
- OS development style is different; how does this affect the traditional DOD procurement, contracting, and development processes?
- topic: What kinds of DOD projects are suitable for OS?
- large multiyear projects? small R&D-type efforts? ..?
- topic: Specific examples of successes and failures from panelists?
- [other topics?]
- Final thoughts, by each panelist
- Conclusion and Thanks (mpg)
Speaker Information
This section includes biography paragraphs, a quick synopsis of the presentation and speaker contact information.
Tyler Mitchell
OSGeo Executive Director (accepted)
Tyler Mitchell serves as the Executive Director for the Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo). OSGeo provides support for open source projects focused on geospatial software applications. Projects include web mapping tools, data access libraries, image processing libraries, tools for web services access to data using OGC specifications, desktop GIS analytical tools and metadata catalogs. Special projects are focused on providing easy access to freely available geospatial data and for developing teaching material to train users in these projects. While OSGeo has a particular set of projects that it supports it also serves to generally encourage the use of other open source geospatial applications.
This talk will provide background on the groundswell of activity leading up to the forming of OSGeo and how it is improving options for end user and those implementing geospatial technologies. An overview of the various tools and applications will also be provided.
Dave McIlhagga
DM Solutions Canadian Government Speaker (DM working)
Joel Schlagel
US Army Corps of Engineers (accepted)
Jim Long
NGA
Mark Lucas
Large DATA JCTD/OSSIM
Mark Lucas Principal Scientist - RadiantBlue Technologies Inc. (321) 266-1475 mlucas@radiantblue.com
Gary Lang
VP Autodesk
Paul Ramsey
Paul Ramsey is the President and founder of Refractions Research, a spatial database and geomatics consultancy. Refractions' staff of 30 provide consulting on spatial database design, spatial data infrastructures and enterprise GIS systems. Refractions is heavily involved in the open source geomatics community, making contributions and providing commercial support for PostGIS, Mapserver, GeoTools, GeoServer and uDig.
Paul has been working with spatial data, open spatial standards and open source tools for the past 8 years, and has kept Refractions focussed on open source tools and technologies. As a frequent conference presenter and writer on geospatial topics, Paul maintains a high profile in the professional geospatial community. Paul holds a BSc in Mathematics from the University of British Columbia and a MSc in Statistics from the University of Victoria.
Paul Ramsey President, Refractions Research Inc. (250) 383-3022 pramsey@refractions.net
Chris Holmes
'Chris Holmes is Managing Director, Strategic Development of The Open Planning Project (TOPP), a non-profit organization based in New York. TOPP's mission is to build technology to enhance the role of the citizen in democratic society, and leads development on the open source GeoServer Project to help create a free, distributed, and open geographic information infrastructure. TOPP is more of a hybrid organization, similar to the Mozilla Foundation, in that it employs top developers to advance the state of open source software, and can perform contract work to serve as expert implementors on GeoServer. Chris has served as lead developer of GeoServer, and currently chairs the Project Steering Committee, and he is also on the Project Management Committee of GeoTools, the leading Java GIS toolkit. Chris is additionally a board member of the new Open Source Geospatial Foundation, of which GeoTools is a founding project.'
And a blurb. I can change it around any which way, it's just what occurred to me first.
'This talk will give an introduction to the Java 'stack' of Open Source Geospatial Software that has been quickly maturing in to some of most solid mapping solutions, open source or otherwise. At the center is GeoTools, a generic GIS Java toolkit and an OSGeo project, which in turn has been combined with a variety of best of breed open source Java projects for particular applications. GeoServer is built upon GeoTools and the Spring framework, plus either Tomcat or Jboss, while uDig builds upon GeoTools plus the Eclipse RCP to build a flexible, customizable desktop GIS. And a number of other projects are emerging. The talk will also look to the future, of what's on the immediate horizon and what will be possible as the community of users, supporters and developers grows.'
And contact info:
Chris Holmes cholmes@openplans.org Managing Director, Strategic Development The Open Planning Project 349 W. 12th Street #3 New York, NY 10014 718-290-5730.