I just spent three really exciting days at the Location Intelligence 2006 conference in San Francisco. This has been one of the most fascinating geospatial conferences of the year because it confirmed to me what I suggested in my last blog, that the geospatial industry is undergoing a period of major transformation.
Geospatial is mainstream
To many it is obvious that, as Dave Sonnen foresaw, geospatial has become mainstream. As a result It is benefiting from mainstream IT technologies, such as XML and RSS. As an example, one of several genuine surprises at the conference and which I believe surprised even Carl Reed of the OGC, was Microsoft's announcement of their intention to support GeoRSS, something that Carl has been involved with from its inception.
Mass market geospatial
The mass market geospatial sector was very well represented at the the conference including Google Earth/Maps, Microsoft Virtual Earth/Windows Live Local, Yahoo ! Local/Maps/Flickr, MapQuest, and others. Google announced the release of the Maps 2.0 API at the conference and Steve Lombardi of Microsoft was chomping at the bit to introduce V3 of Microsoft's Virtual Earth API.
Open source geospatial
A third trend that was actually well represented, but not as obvious, was open source geospatial. Several members of the Open Source Geospatial Foundation including Dave McIlhagga of DMSolutions, Chris Holmes of GeoTools/GeoServer, and Gary Lang of Autodesk were present. Adena Schutzberg, who I consider to be the first of the mainstream geospatial media to recognize the open source geospatial phenomenon, moderated a very interesting panel discussion on open source geospatial and why the CXO should care about it. But in addition a surprising number of the vendors present at the conference rely on open source including geospatial tools such as MapServer to run their geospatial web applications.
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