LimeWire Creator Brings Open-Source Approach to Urban Plannin...
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Saved by 12 people (-5 private), first by anonymouse user on 2009-01-30
- Jgatlin on 2009-03-04 - Tags sustainability , urban planning , open source , web 2.0
- Mbauwens on 2009-02-12 - Tags P2P-Cities , P2P-Transportation , P2P-Urbanism , P2P-Architecture , P2P
- Mpstaton on 2009-02-03 - Tags grassroots , public planning , open , planning , project , limewire
- Pollote on 2009-02-03 - Tags ideas , opensource
- Mailforlen on 2009-02-02 - Tags no_tag
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Highlighted by lampertina
Highlighted by lampertina
Highlighted by lampertina
Highlighted by lampertina
on 2009-02-01 by lampertina
Yes!
The quest to bring open-source software to real-world urban planning continued, following the clearance of a key hurdle: Before you can build a transportation model, you need to know where the roads are.
While public, that data was locked by private software used by public organizations and suffered from an overall lack of standards. Thus was born GeoServer, an open-source, Java-based software server that lets anyone view and edit geo-spatial data. Road information can now be painstakingly imported once from proprietary systems or entered from scratch, double-checked by other users, and rolled out to anyone who needs the data.
"It didn't really exist before," said Gorton. "Most of the data was run on software from a company called Esri. Government agencies have this data, but it's all running on proprietary systems and you couldn't get access to it, or it was very hard to get access to it." GeoServer now runs in thousands of places around the world for all sorts of reasons, according to Gorton, whenever an online app needs to know where roads are.
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