I blogged previously about open data access provided by the Cities of Vancouver, Edmonton and Toronto. These are all examples where city governments have opened public data to the public.
Saturday, April 24th in Ottawa there is going to be something intriguing called an Open Data Ottawa Hackfest. It will happen at City Hall (110 Laurier Avenue West), but even though it is happening at City Hall, neither the event nor its organizers are affiliated with the City of Ottawa. The event is targeted on developers, designers, librarians, statisticians and citizens.
The idea is that developers will show up with running applications (90%
completed) and demonstrate their applications using publicly
available, but not easily accessible, data such as bus schedules, restaurant inspection reports, childcare locations, crime statistics, special event license lists, and other types of public data.
The Hackfest seems to be inspired by the Apps for Democracy and New York City’s Big Apps contests.
Thanks to Jevin Maltais for pointing me to this.
Thanks Geoff and Jevin!
Geoff, We'd love to have you and your readers attend the event. We've already got one application http://ottawatrash.ca up and running, ready to be tested and used.
Posted by: Mary Beth | April 06, 2010 at 12:40 AM