Entre os dias 20 e 23 de novembro aconteceu em Melbourne (Austrália) o FOSS4G SoTM Oceania um evento regional que cria um link focado na Oceania em uma comunidade global, apoiada pela OSGeo Foundation e pela OpenStreetMap Foundation (OSMF).
No evento foram abordados diversos assuntos interessantes, e vale a pena dar uma olhada nas apresentações, que estão disponíveis gratuitamente no YouTube. Veja:
1. Apresentação (Boas Vindas)
2. Keynotes
- Jane Elith: Using spatial data to model biodiversity
- Paul Ramsey: Why we code
- Nyall Dawson: Keynote
- Alyssa Wright: What are your salary requirements?
3. Sessões especiais
4. Palestras
- Raster tiles to vector tiles: how to cross the gulf – Steve Bennett
- Who actually uses geospatial data? – Hamish Campbell
- Open Data for Australia’s mining, oil, and gas sector – Jessie Cato
- State of the a-R-t – Advances in mapping in R – David Cooley
- Moving Through Country: A Community Based Project to Map and Share Indigenous Cultural Perspectives – Kate Crawford
- Laying the Foundations for a National Building Outlines Dataset – Megan Davidson
- QGIS for Exploratory Data Analysis and Visualisation – Nyall Dawson
- Falling off the edge of the world: Dealing with the antimeridian in spatial software – Craig de Stigter
- QGIS Sorceress in Training: A QGIS User’s Story – Hannah Dormido
- Using open source mapping tools to understand indoor navigation routes suitable for vision impaired users – Nimalika Fernando
- Free satellite imagery and DEM analyses enabling natural resource management in the developing world – Rohan Fisher
- How to create a fast and cost effective serverless geospatial analysis pipeline using AWS (Lambda) – Mila Frerichs
- Cloud Web Services for the Open Data Cube – Paul Haesler
- Our journey adopting QGIS in a corporate environment – Emma Hain
- GeoPackage and the Related Tables Extension – Brad Hards
- The future of open data – Anne Harper
- BeyondTracks: an OpenStreetMap case study – Andrew Harvey
- The Road Less Travelled: A corporation’s journey to an open source enterprise geospatial platform – Ed Haverkamp
- TerriaJS: An open-source framework for 3D geospatial data explorers on the web – Mats Henrikson
- WMS-V – Video Map Tiles for the 3rd or 4th Dimension – Tim-Hinnerk Heuer
- GeoBI: A data visualisation platform using D3, leaflet, Geoserver, PostGres and php – Neal Johnston
- Dotloom – Next Generation Point-cloud Platform – Daniel Kastl
- Bootleaf, an open-source web-map framework – Stephen Lead
- The Open Data Cube in a Box – Alex Leith
- Secrets of Antony Green: Calculating notional margins for electoral redistributions – Alex Lum
- Dr. Strangedata or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love the_geom – Tom Lynch
- Establishing a Serverless Dynamic Tile Generation Workflow – Callum Lynch
- When data can’t be open – securing sensitive spatial data with open source software – Angus MacAulay
- pgFaaS: Geo-Processing made simple with Serverless technology – Luca Morandini
- Mapping the Census with PostGIS, Python, and a whole lot of stubbornness: A Vector Tiles Story – Keith Moss
- Australia to Vanuatu: A visual exploration of the mapping challenges in Asia and the Pacific – Edoardo Neerhut
- Open Source Spatial Tools for Biodiversity and Environmental Data in the Atlas of Living Australia – Peggy Newman
- Tupaia – Health resource mapping in Asia-Pacific – Michael Nunan
- Geospatial on a shoestring – my experiences in Native Title – Cameron Poole
- Does our choice of open data sets matter: a case study analysing public open space policy in Melbourne – Julianna Rozek
- Choosing Tegola to create vector tiles – Angus Scown
- 10 Things I’ve Learnt About PostGIS – Daniel Silk
- GeoAI: a feature extraction tool set using Tensor Flow and Keras to classify features using RGB imagery – Sagar Soni
- Meshes are needed for geospatial work – Michael Sumner
- Māori Maps: layering of people and place – Hirini Tane
- UAV Change detection using FME and QGIS – Anton van Wyk
- Is the turf(js) greener on the other side? Lessons learnt from maintaining a FOSS4G library – Rowan Winsemius
- My Victoria – Big Data for Small Business – Leon Woodhouse
- The evolution of a homegrown QGIS developer – Nathan Woodrow