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Abbreviation | OSGeo |
---|---|
Founded | February 4, 2006 |
Founders | Arnulf Christl, Chris Holmes, Gary Lang, Markus Neteler, Frank Warmerdam |
Founded at | Chicago, US |
Type | NGO |
Purpose | Open source geospatial software and data |
Region served
|
global |
President
|
Angelos Tzotsos[1] |
R.O.R. Id | https://ror.org/00cjqbk89 |
Volunteers
|
30000+ |
Website | www.osgeo.org |
.Open Source Geospatial Foundation (OSGeo), bụ ọgbakọ anaghị akwụ ụgwọ na-abụghị nke gọọmentị nke ebumnuche ya bụ ịkwado na ịkwalite mmepe mmekorita nke teknụzụ geospatial mepere emepe na data. E hiwere ntọala ahụ na February 2006 iji nye nkwado ego, nhazi na iwu nye obodo geospatial n'efu na mepere emepe.[1] Ọ na-ejekwa ozi dị ka ụlọ ọrụ iwu kwadoro nke ndị otu obodo nwere ike itinye koodu, ego na akụrụngwa ndị ọzọ.
The OSGeo Foundation is community driven and has an organizational structure consisting of elected members and nine directors, including the president. Software projects have their own governance structure, by requirement. see FAQ. The OSGeo community collaborates via a Wiki, Mailing Lists and IRC.
OSGeo projects include:
OSGeo runs an annual international conference called FOSS4G – Free and Open Source Software for Geospatial. Starting as early as 2006, this event has drawn over 1100 attendees (2017 Boston) and the tendency is to increase this number every year. It is the main meeting place and educational outreach opportunity for OSGeo members, supporters and newcomers - to share and learn from one another in presentations, hands-on workshops and a conference exhibition. The FOSS4G ribbon, part of every FOSS4G event logo, symbolizes the flow of ideas, innovation, and sharing within the Open Source geospatial community. The event history dates back to an important face-to-face meeting of the 3 original founders of the event (Venkatesh Raghavan, Markus Neteler, and Jeff McKenna), who met initially in Bangkok Thailand in 2004, and planned to create a new annual event for the whole Open Source geospatial community, with the event named "FOSS4G"; the event would go on to help change the history of the geospatial industry.