Name
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Notes
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Andrew Ross
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- In a brief period of just over one year, Andrew has become one of the leaders in the open source geospatial community. Andrew has been involved in a number of activities in the past year that have demonstrated his commitment to the foundation. This includes playing a critical role in the early stages of incubation of GEOS into the OSGeo Foundation, encouraging Ingres to become a supporting sponsor of OSGeo, and most recently - organizing the "Geospatial OSBootcamp - Geospatial Software" in Ottawa, Canada in collaboration with OSGeo. As the technical lead for the geospatial component of the Ingres database, Andrew also play an important technology development role within the open source geospatial ecosystem.
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Geoff Zeiss
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- He has been involved with OSGeo from early on and supports the work of the foundation in several significant ways. Geoff continually gives OSGeo good promotion by including it as a success story in his many keynote presentations around the world. He also helps find new and meaningful connections between groups and individuals sharing common interests in OSGeo-related subjects. His enthusiasm, long-term ideas, industry experience, moral support and practical assistance have been a great encouragement to our mission.
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Charlie Schweik
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- Charlie is chair of the OSGEO education committee and an effective advocate for the use of open source geospatial software in academia. He is an Associate Professor with a joint appointment shared between the Department of Natural Resources Conservation and the Center for Public Policy and Administration at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He is also the Associate Director of the National Center for Digital Government, and an affiliated researcher with the Science, Technology, and Society Initiative at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His research focuses on environmental management and policy, public-sector information technology, and the intersection of those domains. His recent peer-reviewed publications focus on free and open source software and the social frameworks and institutions that drive their development and use. A year ago he offered a college-level introductory GIS course using only open source software. The initial course was offered as a distance learning course and included participants from Nigeria, Uganda, Brazil, and the United States. Those materials are now available via the OSGeo Education web site. He is actively developing another course focused on remote sensing. It was through Charlie's hard work and persistence that the content for these courses will be openly distributed with a creative commons license. Charlie's formal training and experience as a computer programmer with academic interests in studying the open source movement and promoting the use of open source geospatial tools makes him well qualified to be a charter member of OSGEO.
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Jorge Gaspar Sanz Salinas
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- Jorge is a gvSIG committer and community member and an organiser within the "hispano-hablante" OSGeo community. He is on the PSC for the Libro SIG, the Spanish-language Free GIS book, and has also worked on Spanish translations of the OSGeo website and the OSGeo Journal. Through active blogging at http://geomaticblog.net/ he has helped promote OSGeo events and projects through Spanish-speaking communities.
- Jorge has an important role inside the development of gvSIG. From the
beginning has been the most active contributor of the Spanish Local
Chapter. He's participating in the Free Gis Book too.
Jorge is supporting the WebCom in many ways and he's the author of most of
the translation into Spanish of the OSGeo portal.
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S. Naarendra Prasad
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- Secretary of OSGeo India. He has visualized and made the first ever project of GIS for the City of Rajahmundry, A.P, India. This project is going to serve as a model for emulation through out the country. The project is sustainable as the students of Geoinformatics of the same city are involved in data collection. He is also an environmentalist working as principal scientist in Salim Ali Centre for Ornithology and Natural History, Hyderabad.
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K. S. Rajan
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- He is the treasurer of OSGeo India chapter. He teaches Open Source GIS in his institute and is mentoring several students pursue projects using Open Source GIS. He has planned a one day Open Source GIS workshop in INCA international congress to be held in November 2008.
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Julien-Samuel Lacroix
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- Julien has been involved with open source geospatial software since 2002
when he joined DM Solutions Group, and now at Mapgears where he plays a
key role in the support and development of open source technologies. He is
a member of OSGeo's incubation committee and is involved with the
following projects: MapServer (committer), GDAL/OGR (committer), Chameleon
(committer and one of the project leads), Fusion (committer and PSC
member), ka-Map!, OpenLayers, FGS, and I'm sure I forgot some. In summary
he has been very active with OSGeo since its creation and would make an
excellent Charter Member.
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Victor Olaya
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- Main programmer and director of SEXTANTE GIS, he's also the author of the
plug-in of Sextante into gvSIG.
A very important role is played by Victor on the Free GIS Book where he
wrote most of the text already available.
He has always been very active in the Spanish Local Chapter.
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Yves Jacolin
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- Yves is the president of the Francophone (French language) local chapter
(a.k.a. OSGeo-fr). In this role he is actively involved in most (all?) OSGeo-fr activities, coordinating the efforts of the French speaking community and representing OSGeo at various events. His contributions to the community also include the translation ofdocumentation to French for several OSGeo packages
(http://softlibre.gloobe.org/doku.php).
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Thierry Badard
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- Thierry is professor and researcher at the Department of geomatic sciences
of Laval University (Quebec, Canada) and is a strong supporter of OSGeo in
everything that he does. As part of his classes, he teaches the use of open
source geospatial technologies to his students: MapServer, GeoServer,
PostGIS, JTS, Geotools, OpenLayers, GeOxygene, SharpMap, CartoWeb, etc. He
has been a member of OSGeo's conference committee since 2006, is an active
member of OSGeo's Francophone (French language) local chapter, and just
recently has initiated discussions with a few other OSGeo members for the
coordination of OSGeo's presence in Quebec. Thierry is also mentor for one
of OSGeo's Google Summer of Code projects and is the lead developer and
coordinator of the GeOxygene project
(http://oxygene-project.sourceforge.net/). To make a long story short,
Thierry is a highly motivated individual who truly believes in OSGeo and as
a Charter Member would represent the combination of educational, research
and hobbyist interests, and could help bridge the gap with the corporate
world given his dealings with the industry in the context of technology
transfers.
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Andrew Turner
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- Andrew Turner is an geospatial Web architect and developer involved in
several Open Source projects such as GeoPress, Mapstraction and works for
Mapufacture, building a geospatial aggregation and search service. He
participates in the formulation of light-weight geospatial standards like
GeoRSS and KML as well as several OSGeo Foundation initiatives. Andrew is
also a recognized speaker attending key geospatial tech events and is the
author of O'Reilly's Introduction to Neogeography.
Andrew has been active member of the OSGeo Foundation community from
early.
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Bruce Bannerman
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- Bruce's years of commercial and government experience ensures his Open
Source evangelism is aligned with commercial reality from an OSGeo
user's perspective. He regularly contributes thoughtful insight into
drivers for Government purchasing decisions and provides valuable
suggestions (and actions) to help increase OSGeo adoption.
Bruce has been both effective and hard working within the
Australian/New Zealand's local chapter of OSGeo. He has been voted onto the
OSGeo-Aust/NZ board, is a regular evangelist at conferences and he has
been central in building the FOSS492009 conference in Sydney.
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