Difference between revisions of "Board Member Nominations 2024"
(Adding Tom nomination) |
(Adding Ariel's Nomination) |
||
Line 39: | Line 39: | ||
* Wiki: [https://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/User:Tomkralidis Tom Kralidis] | * Wiki: [https://wiki.osgeo.org/wiki/User:Tomkralidis Tom Kralidis] | ||
| [https://www.osgeo.org/member/paul/ Paul van GEnuchten] | | [https://www.osgeo.org/member/paul/ Paul van GEnuchten] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |- valign="top" | ||
+ | | <span id="2">3</span> | ||
+ | | Ariel Anthieni | ||
+ | | Argentina | ||
+ | | Ariel is an entrepreneur and a passionate advocate for the transformative potential of geospatial technologies as key enablers of sustainable development, particularly in emerging economies. | ||
+ | |||
+ | He has held key roles in numerous geospatial events, including chairing FOSS4G Argentina 2016 and organizing subsequent editions in 2017 and 2019, as well as SOTM Argentina 2017 and SOTM LATAM 2018. In 2018, Ariel co-founded the Geolibres Association, which supports geospatial communities in Argentina, and he currently serves as its President. As one of the main organizers of FOSS4G 2021 Buenos Aires and FOSS4G 2024 Belém, Ariel has played a pivotal role in expanding OSGeo’s integration with global regions. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Beyond organizing events, Ariel is an active speaker at international conferences such as FOSS4G Bucharest, Firenze, and Kosovo, where he focuses on bringing Open Source geospatial technologies closer to Spanish-speaking audiences. He also manages local OpenStreetMap (OSM) and QGIS chapters in Argentina and actively promotes open-source applications in areas such as cadastre, urban management, Smart Cities, and Digital Twins technology. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Ariel’s continued presence on the Board is essential for strengthening the connection between Latin American communities and the global ecosystem. He is deeply committed to fostering opportunities that drive the adoption of technologies to enhance regional integration. By challenging the prevailing belief that proprietary software is the only solution for specific needs, Ariel advocates for the inclusion of open-source alternatives as viable options supported by communities and businesses—an approach already widely adopted in other parts of the world. | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | * Profile: [https://www.osgeo.org/member/anthieni/ Ariel Anthieni] | ||
+ | | [https://www.osgeo.org/member/bernasocchi/ Marco Bernasocchi] | ||
+ | |||
|} | |} |
Latest revision as of 12:20, 25 November 2024
# | Nominee Name | Country | Statement | Nominated by |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Angelos Tzotsos | Greece | Angelos has been a charter member since 2012.
He has participated on the OSGeoLive project in the PSC and acts as project the officer. He is also a member of the PSC of the following projects: pycsw, pyogcapi and ZOO-project. Member of the Incubator Committee has mentored the pgRouting project. He participates representing OSGeo in many conferences. His involvement and commitment in OSGeo is undeniable During his participation in the Board, he has shown dedication and respect. Keeping Angelos on the Board of Directors would mean a continuation without disruption on the work within the organization and with other entities like OGC.
|
Vicky Vergara & Rajat Shinde
|
2 | Tom Kralidis | Canada | Tom has been an OSGeo charter member since 2007 and has served on the Board since 2018. He has contributed to numerous OSGeo software packages, such as MapServer, GeoNode, QGIS, PyWPS and OWSLib. He is the creator of pycsw and pygeoapi. He is also on several Project Steering Committees (PSCs)
Tom is a longtime contributor to the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC), where he has been involved in the development of several specifications. More recently you may have heard him talk about the new OGC API, or even used his latest contribution to our ecosystem: the pygeoapi project, a Python implementation of the OGC API suite of standards which is also an OGC Reference Implementation. Tom is a lead architect of the UN World Meteorological Organization Information System (WIS2), WMO's new platform for weather/climate/water data exchange, which leverages open source software and open standards. He has recently been appointed as the Chair of the WMO Task Team on Open Source Software, to help shape and define the role and use of open source software for WMO activities. Tom currently works at the Meteorological Service of Canada where he and his team leverage the power of OSGeo software and OGC standards for mission critical applications. Tom is a people person, he understands the need to have an active community around a software project, so he puts considerable effort in community building and activation. I appreciate that very much, for that reason I nominate him for OSGeo board
|
Paul van GEnuchten |
3 | Ariel Anthieni | Argentina | Ariel is an entrepreneur and a passionate advocate for the transformative potential of geospatial technologies as key enablers of sustainable development, particularly in emerging economies.
He has held key roles in numerous geospatial events, including chairing FOSS4G Argentina 2016 and organizing subsequent editions in 2017 and 2019, as well as SOTM Argentina 2017 and SOTM LATAM 2018. In 2018, Ariel co-founded the Geolibres Association, which supports geospatial communities in Argentina, and he currently serves as its President. As one of the main organizers of FOSS4G 2021 Buenos Aires and FOSS4G 2024 Belém, Ariel has played a pivotal role in expanding OSGeo’s integration with global regions. Beyond organizing events, Ariel is an active speaker at international conferences such as FOSS4G Bucharest, Firenze, and Kosovo, where he focuses on bringing Open Source geospatial technologies closer to Spanish-speaking audiences. He also manages local OpenStreetMap (OSM) and QGIS chapters in Argentina and actively promotes open-source applications in areas such as cadastre, urban management, Smart Cities, and Digital Twins technology. Ariel’s continued presence on the Board is essential for strengthening the connection between Latin American communities and the global ecosystem. He is deeply committed to fostering opportunities that drive the adoption of technologies to enhance regional integration. By challenging the prevailing belief that proprietary software is the only solution for specific needs, Ariel advocates for the inclusion of open-source alternatives as viable options supported by communities and businesses—an approach already widely adopted in other parts of the world.
|
Marco Bernasocchi
|