Press release

OGC leads Geospatial Track at ApacheCon NA 2019

The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) is pleased to announce that, after a successful geospatial track at last year’s ApacheCon North America, OGC will once again lead a conference track concerning geospatial data and processing at ApacheConNA 2019, to be held in Las Vegas on September 9-12.“We are delighted to collaborate once again with the Open Geospatial Consortium on the Geospatial Track at ApacheCon,” said Rich Bowen, ASF Vice President Conferences and Event Chair for ApacheCon North America.The geospatial track will foster discussions that will reduce development effort through the reuse and increased quality of geospatial information handling.2019 marks the third time OGC has lead the Geospatial Track at ApacheConNA, with previous tracks being run in 2016 and 2018.To submit a presentation for the ApacheConNA 2019 Geospatial Track, follow the instructions on the ApacheConNA 2019 Call For Presentations page, and select ‘Geospatial software’ as your topic on the submission form.

Organizations are invited to provide feedback on the draft Earth Observation Cloud Applications architecture, and express their interest in joining the upcoming evaluation Pilot

The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC), in collaboration with The European Space Agency (ESA), is seeking industry feedback on its draft Earth Observation Big Data Architecture and a planned Earth Observation Big Data Analytics Market Enablement Initiative coming up later this year.

Over the last two years, as an outcome of OGC's Testbed-13 and Testbed-14 Interoperability Initiatives, OGC, in collaboration with ESA and other OGC member sponsors, developed a software architecture that allows deploying and executing applications close to the physical location of big data, such as Earth Observation data (e.g. remote sensed images), model outputs (e.g. climate forecasts), and other in situ data. The architecture features a set of emerging specifications that will standardize the full data-analysis life cycle.

The cloud-hosted data-analysis life cycle includes: application development and description; containerization; registration at app stores; discovery and on-request deployment in cloud environments; parameterized execution and final result access. This life cycle occurs in harmony with business functions such as quoting and billing.

Developed in a rapid prototyping research environment, the software architecture is now ready for real world testing and exploitation. OGC, together with its sponsoring organizations ESA and Telespazio Vega, is therefore organizing a major maturity evaluation Pilot that is open to the whole geospatial community. OGC invites other organizations to sponsor the pilot.

For this reason, organizations are invited to provide feedback on the current architecture, and express their interest in joining the new pilot scheduled tentatively for the second half of 2019. Links to conference publications and Engineering Reports that describe the details of the architecture are available in the RFI.

Organizations are additionally invited to describe their possible contributions, data sets, service offerings, platforms, standards, and architectures to allow the pilot organizers to include all aspects early in the planning phase. The pilot plans to provide cost-share opportunities to participants.

The Earth Observation Big Data Architecture Request For Information document is available online or for download as a PDF from the OGC Portal. Information on how to submit a response is contained within the RFI. Responses are requested by April 28, 2019.

 

About OGC

The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) is an international consortium of more than 525 companies, government agencies, research organizations, and universities participating in a consensus process to develop publicly available geospatial standards. OGC standards support interoperable solutions that ‘geo-enable' the Web, wireless and location-based services, and mainstream IT. OGC standards empower technology developers to make geospatial information and services accessible and useful within any application that needs to be geospatially enabled. Visit the OGC website at www.opengeospatial.org.