20221201-Nashville-foss4g

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Date

November 30th-December 2nd 2022

Description

This is a FOSS4G meeting in Nashville TN hosted at Vanderbilt University. It's an opportunity for Free and Open Source Software for GIS users in the area to get together and discuss projects, software, and get to know one another.

  • Do you want to present?
  • Meet other FOSS4G Enthusiasts?
  • Curious about Open Source GIS?

Register Below. Tickets will remain cheap. Can't afford a ticket? We can help.

Schedule

November 30th - Field trip around Nashville showing historical mapping project

December 1 - Talks

December 1 Night - Social

December 2nd TBA

Location

Vanderbilt University

101 19th Avenue South,

Nashville, TN 37212

Accomodations

  • Option 1: Scarritt Bennett

https://scarrittbennett.org/lodging/

First come first serve. Rooms start at $105.07 per night (that is for a single twin bed with a shared bathroom)

Every two rooms share an adjoining restroom.

To reserve call: 615-340-7469

  • Option 2: Aertson Hotel

$189 per night

Block of Rooms (50)

Reserved under: Vanderbilt Law Library & Special Collection

To reserve call: (877) 239-2269

https://www.aertsonhotel.com/

Tickets

Eventbrite Link: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/foss4g-nashville-tickets-392509254747

Tickets are $25 for on site

We have Free Tickets if you are attending Virtually - you can also donate money to support the event through the free tickets.

November 30th Fort Negley

Time: TBA

Tour of an historic Nashville site and an introduction to Mapping techniques being used at the site.

Speakers Dec 1st and 2nd

Link for Presentations: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSf1QZ1VkeTGVL9mfhGZdl8lX6K2dDC83vLDoS1Tf7oDpA5Ejw/viewform

Serve Data, Not Services - Howard Butler - Hobu, Inc

Gone are the days of buying a 2U server and sticking it in a rack in a closet next to an air conditioner. What was once organizational excess compute capacity to provide on-demand network services is now metered and measured in the cloud by the same administration that inventories the office supply cabinet. Excessive middleware is decidedly out of fashion, and concepts like Cloud Native Geospatial, with its focus on cloud optimized formats and JSON metadata to drive desktop and cloud applications alike are taking hold. Howard Butler, president of Hobu, Inc. and leader of the PDAL software project, will talk about formats, organization, federation, archive, and frustration in the process of getting data to and from the cloud.

Howard Butler is the founder and president of Hobu, Inc., an open source software consultancy located in Iowa City, Iowa that focuses on point cloud data management solutions. He is an active participant in the ASPRS LAS Committee, a Project Steering Committee member of both the PROJ and GDAL open source software projects, a contributing author to the GeoJSON specification, creator of the Cloud Optimized Point Cloud format, and a past member of the OSGeo Board of Directors. With his firm, Howard leads the development of the PDAL and Entwine open source point cloud processing and organization software libraries.


TBA - Randal Hale - NRGS


State of Geoserver - Andre Aime - Geosolutions

GeoServer is a web service for publishing your geospatial data using industry standards for vector, raster and mapping, as well as to process data, either in batch or on the fly. GeoServer powers a number of open source projects like GeoNode and geOrchestra and it is widely used throughout the world by organizations to manage, disseminate and analyze data at scale.

This presentation provides an update on our community as well as reviews of the new and noteworthy features for the latest releases. In particular, we will showcase new features landed in the past year, including the newly released GeoServer 2.22, and glimpse of what’s in store for GeoSever 2.23.

Attend this talk for a cheerful update on what is happening with this popular OSGeo project, whether you are an expert user, a developer, or simply curious what GeoServer can do for you.


What's new in the Second Edition of Discovering QGIS 3.x - Kurt Menke

The Second Edition of Discover QGIS 3.x was published in August of 2022. The book is current to QGIS 3.26, includes 7 new chapters and a lot of new material. In this talk I will go through all the changes and what you will find in the Second Edition!


Using Open Source GIS in Real Estate Marketing - Erich Purpur

Boone Real Estate is a real estate firm in Boone, North Carolina and operates in an 8 county region in and around North Carolina's "High Country". In 2017, the firm decided to re-vamp its marketing campaign which involves sending direct mail marketing content to potential customers. Through the use of open source GIS technologies such as QGIS, PostgreSQL/PostGIS, and Python Boone Real Estate has updated and improved its marketing campaign. This FOSS technology has allowed increased levels of detail, customization, automation, and return on investment than previous marketing campaigns. This is an ongoing effort and is continuously evolving.


OSGeoLive Tour Q&A - Brian Hamlin

OSGeoLive is a self-contained bootable DVD, USB thumb drive or Virtual Machine built on Lubuntu/GNU Linux, that allows you to try a wide variety of open source geospatial software without installing anything. It is composed entirely of Libre software, enabling it to be openly distributed, duplicated and passed around. Source code is available.OSGeoLive provides pre-configured applications for a range of geospatial use cases, including storage, publishing, viewing, analysis and manipulation of data. It also contains sample datasets and documentation.


Mapping Social Determinants of Health with TidyCensus - Dr. Dottington Fullwood

US Census data provides a multitude of variables to describe population-level characteristics at various geographic entities. Tidycensus developed by Kyle Walker allows data scientists to get simple feature geometry in a tidyverse-ready dataframe to visualize a select number of US Census Bureau's data. This presentation purpose will provide a broad overview of how to use pre-pared Census data for data exploration across census tracts, counties, and block groups.


Building a modern cloud GIS with the power of Open Source - Daniel Anselmo

Configuring an online GIS solution can be challenging. Even though all the tools to do so are readily available. Bernie Drahola and his team want to provide GIS users around the globe a shortcut to using Open Source technology in the cloud at a low cost.Based on components like Openlayers, GDAL, GeoServer, and more they built yey'maps - a ready-to-use cloud GIS solution.In this presentation, you will learn about the journey of building yey'maps and its success story.

Using tippecanoe to create scale-independent vector tiles - Matt Travis

At addresscloud we needed to provide a scale dependent view of flooding data to our UK customers. To do this we leveraged the awesome power of tippecanoe, a simple yet effective command line tool that creates vector tiles from a range of different sources. This presentation will talk about what's possible with tippecanoe and demo it's capabilities.


Utilizing Geospatial Techniques and QGIS for Biology Research - Rusti Liner

Dillard University in New Orleans, LA is a historically black college/university and prides itself in utilizing innovative technology and tools in the classroom. The Biology Special Topics course (BIO 300) has been partnering with a professional Geographic Information Systems professional for the past two years to demonstrate this concept. The course is taught by Dr. Ruby Broadway, who is the principal investigator for the Interdisciplinary Urban Environmental Institute funded by the National Science Foundation, the Young Scholars Environment Institute, and the Integration of Technology and Virtual Laboratories. Dr. Broadway co-teaches with Professor Rusti Liner, a GISP and 27-year veteran of geospatial technologies and emergency management. Together, these partners form a dynamic duo of STEM and Social Sciences that offer students a unique perspective on how to accomplish Biology research, and QGIS is the centerpiece of this effort.

TiPG: Composable application for serving OGC Features and Vector Tiles from PostgreSQL - David Bitner

This presentation will introduce TiPG (previously separate packages TiMVT/TiFeatures) a minimal configuration Postgres based OGC Features and Vector Tiles server. TiPG can be placed in front of any PostgreSQL instance automatically exposing tables, views, and functions through the OGC API. Being build on FastAPI, TiPG can be either used directly as an application, or it can be incorporated as routes within any FastAPI application allowing to leverage the full FastAPI ecosystem for functionality such as Authentication or to extend the API with business specific needs.

Sponsors

Gold Sponsors

Hobu Inc

Development Seed

Vadose Industries

North River Geographic Systems, Inc

Locate Press

Vanderbilt Institute for Spatial Research

Drahola Technologies