Difference between revisions of "CUGOS 2011 Spring Fling"

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= Attendees  =
 
= Attendees  =
  
Michael P. Gerlek (mpg) - Flaxen Geo<br>
+
''(alphabetical by last name)''
  
Peter Keum - King County DNRP - Wastewater Treatment Division  
+
#RogerA
 +
#Yaw Anokwa
 +
#Allison Bailey
 +
#Greg Corradini
 +
#Matt Dunbar - UW Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology (CSDE)
 +
#Jared Erickson
 +
#Chris Fowler
 +
#Michael P. Gerlek (mpg) - Flaxen Geo
 +
#Holly Glaser
 +
#Kit Na Goh
 +
#Jubal Harpster
 +
#Joanne Ho - American Red Cross, Seattle Chapter
 +
#Phil Hurvitz
 +
#Matthew Kenny - RIDOLFI Inc.
 +
#Peter Keum - King County DNRP - Wastewater Treatment Division  
 +
#Emilio M.
 +
#Aaron Racicot - Z-Pulley Inc.
 +
#Ruben Rodriguez
 +
#Leah Saunders
 +
#E. Ryan Small
 +
#Dane Springmeyer
 +
#Karsten V.
 +
#&lt;insert your name here&gt;<br>
  
Greg Corradini
+
<br>
 
 
E. Ryan Small
 
 
 
Ruben Rodriguez
 
 
 
Aaron Racicot - Z-Pulley Inc.
 
 
 
Matthew Kenny - RIDOLFI Inc.
 
 
 
Matt Dunbar - UW Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology (CSDE)
 
 
 
Holly Glaser
 
 
 
Leah Saunders
 
 
 
Kit Na Goh
 
 
 
Joanne Ho - American Red Cross, Seattle Chapter
 
 
 
&lt;insert your name here&gt;<br>
 

Revision as of 08:23, 15 April 2011

On April 20th, 2011, CUGOS (www.cugos.org,[1]) will be holding a special all-day "spring fling" event at University of Washington Seattle Campus in place of our regular monthly meeting. We will provide FREE food and drinks, thanks to following sponsors: TerraGIS([2]), Spatialdev([3]), Zonar System([4]) & UW Geospatial Club.


The basic idea of this event is to come in the morning to learn something new (tools and real workflows)... stick around and apply it in the afternoon on some semi-structured hack sessions... and then learn some high level stuff in the evening.  As such, the day will be broken up as follows:

  • 9-12: morning session -- "speed" workshops
  • 12-1: lunch
  • 1-4: afternoon session -- open hacking
  • 4-6: dinner
  • 6-8: evening session -- regular meeting


Details are given below, but be aware that all agendas and times are approximate -- we'll be loose and agile and nimble and react to changing events and schedules as our whimsies take us.


All skill and interest levels are welcome! -- please join us for as much of the day as you can.


Morning Session: Workshops (9am to 12pm)

Sponsor by TerraGIS & Spatialdev

Venue: Forest Club Room, Anderson Hall

12 - 10 minute slots (10 min lightning instruction, 5 minutes Q&A each):
Idea is a progression from server to desktop to web... hopefully utilizing common test data

4 slots on server side tools:

  1. Install and setup of PostgresSQL/PostGIS on Linux system - RogerA
  2. R, PostgreSQL, and PostGIS: techniques for processing large data sets - Phil Hurvitz
  3. Data processing for watershed water quality analysis (Python+GDAL) - EmilioM
  4. "Epic GDAL battles of History: AaronR vs. RogerA"


4 slots on desktop tools:

  1. gvSIG spatial analysis basics - Karsten
  2. Subverting the dominant paradigm: a critical look at the concept of Neo-postcounterhegemonic source using C#/.NET - mpg
  3. Workflow Migration from ESRI to Open Source (python scripting) - Allison Bailey
  4. Introduction to GeoScript - Jared Erickson


4 slots on web tools:

  1. OSM rendering (comparison of rendering tools and OpenLayers setup for OSM) - Matt K
  2. How to style maps with TileMill and deploy them with TileStream - Dane Springmeyer
  3. jQuery and AJAX foo... - AaronR
  4. GitHub, Git, and the CUGOS repo - GregC



Meal Session: Lunch (12pm to 1pm)

Venue: Forest Club Room, Anderson Hall

Lunch is sponsor by Zonar System& UW Geospatial Club.


Lunchtime roundtable: mpg will lead a spirited discussion entitled "Does the World Need an Open Source Server Framework for Lidar Data, and If So, How Would We Build It?"

Afternoon Session: Open (yet organized!) Hacking (1pm to 4pm)

Venue: Forest Club Room, Anderson Hall


Idea is to have 2-3 pre-planned projects (topics) that small groups can self organize and hack on some code. There would be a group leader that will have much of the infrastructure set up ahead of time (test data, code repo, etc). Here are some ideas::


  • OSM rendering test framework:: Leader MattK and GregC
- Idea is to create as many rendering instances of OSM data as posible on the OBM server
- Come up with test cases that will stress all rendering engines
- Come up with jMeter test suites to run
- Maybe a django project to run tests, visualize results, and even add and remove tests.


  • Restful interface to all OBM services:: Leader AaronR
- Idea is to create a django project to wrap all OBM services (NAIP images, OSM rendering, etc) into a logical restful interface
- Sub-projects include coming up with URL structures, implementing the restful interface, and finally implementing the pages (metadata, tests, examples, etc)


Dinner Session (4pm to 6pm)

We will be walking over to the University Ave for a no-host dinner sometime after 4pm, returning around 6pm.  Exact venue to be determined on the fly; this session might even split into parallel tracks.

Evening Session: Monthly Meeting and prepared talks (6pm to 8pm)

Venue: 121 Raitt Hall

First 10 minutes will be CUGOS intro and mini meeting::

  • Aaron intro the group and what we are and invite new folks to participate as well as recap of rest of day
  • MPG will be be presenting a short (~5 min) recap of last month's Montreal codesprint and suggest CUGOS to host the 2012 event
  • Discussion of forming a nonprofit


2 hours of talks -> 6 - 20 minute talks (hard stop on timing)::

  1. "Open Data Kit project (http://code.google.com/p/opendatakit)" -Yaw Anokwa of UW
  2. "Publishing Data to GeoNetwork/GeoServer from ArcGIS using GeoCat bridge" from Jubal Harpster.
  3. "ArcGIS, OpenGeoData, and R or Why I use the tools I do: the sordid life of a spatial statistics post doc" - Chris Fowler
  4. "Open Source Lidar State of the Union" - MPG
  5. "OSM in Disaster Response - Humanitarian OpenStreetMap (HOT)" - Dane Springmeyer
  6. "ERMA and the Gulf Coast - Open Source tools in government disaster response" - Aaron Racicot



Directions and Transportation

Parking: www.washington.edu/facilities/transportation/commuterservices/parking/daily

Driving: www.washington.edu/facilities/transportation/commuterservices/drive

Walking: www.washington.edu/facilities/transportation/commuterservices/walk

Bus/Train: www.washington.edu/facilities/transportation/commuterservices/bus-train and www.washington.edu/facilities/transportation/commuterservices/bus-train/routes


One person noted that "my personal experience is that one can find street parking north of 50th, west of I-5, and down by University Village shopping center, if one is willing to walk 30 to 45 minutes () . But many of those areas were also being converted to resident restricted zones. Bus is really easy."

Another noted that "There are a ton of routes which stops near Anderson hall (Forest Club Room): bit.ly/eKKmHE (OneBusAway pointing to nearest bus stops north of Anderson)


Maps of event locations:


If you are interested in an Olympia-based carpool, contact Webb Sprague (webb.sprague=AT=gmail.com)


Contacts

Local arrangements chair: Matt Dunbar -- dunbar.matt(AT)gmail.com

Wiki chair: mpg -- mpg^AT^flaxen.com



Attendees

(alphabetical by last name)

  1. RogerA
  2. Yaw Anokwa
  3. Allison Bailey
  4. Greg Corradini
  5. Matt Dunbar - UW Center for Studies in Demography and Ecology (CSDE)
  6. Jared Erickson
  7. Chris Fowler
  8. Michael P. Gerlek (mpg) - Flaxen Geo
  9. Holly Glaser
  10. Kit Na Goh
  11. Jubal Harpster
  12. Joanne Ho - American Red Cross, Seattle Chapter
  13. Phil Hurvitz
  14. Matthew Kenny - RIDOLFI Inc.
  15. Peter Keum - King County DNRP - Wastewater Treatment Division
  16. Emilio M.
  17. Aaron Racicot - Z-Pulley Inc.
  18. Ruben Rodriguez
  19. Leah Saunders
  20. E. Ryan Small
  21. Dane Springmeyer
  22. Karsten V.
  23. <insert your name here>