The View from Here
By: Adena Schutzberg
| (Mar 21, 2006) |
AAG: In the Groove?
I was jazzed when the folks at Very Spatial announced last year they'd
be doing a session on new media
at the AAG Conference. Then I heard there'd be a session on virtual globes (“Geography
v2.0: Internet-based Virtual Globes”). I thought perhaps the academic
focus of AAG was finally melding with the realities of geospatial and
media technologies. Just the other day Jeremy Crampton, from Georgia
State, who blogs with us, noted that his colleague "John Krygier just
organized three sessions at the AAG on "Post-Cartographic Map Design"
which struggle with some of these new mapping possibilities afforded by
map mashups, map art, locative technologies etc. etc. (we really need
some kind of name for all this!)."
Despite these efforts, I still feel AAG is "staying its course" as an
academic organization. The Very Spatial folks offered several podcasts
from the event, but the session on new media (which I could not find in
the online program) was described as "thin." The virtual globes session
was covered quite a bit,
including by
one of its speakers, David Maguire, who used the opportunity to
define the Geographic
Exploration System, something ESRI had, to my knowledge, not done
before, though the term had been used.
I was amused to find coverage
from a USGS staffer from Rolla on the conference. He reviewed his
GPS, rather than the event. I wonder if the technology was more
memorable, for better or worse? Another reviewer noted two
excellent papers from folks at West Point. The titles exude
relevance: "A Geographical Analysis of Ungoverned Spaces" and "The
Future of NATO and the EU." The writer seemed embarrassed to note the
rudeness of many attendees (ringing cell phones, coming and going
during papers, etc.). Another attendee noted the lack of
networking: "I didn't really come to this AAG with any goal in
mind. I guess I was initially rather reluctant to attend - it felt like
I was doing it simply to pad the CV, but I guess it was nice to meet up
with people I know. Minimal networking going on here, there haven't
been a lot of cultural/urban sessions interesting enough (maybe the
sessions on public washrooms?), but it also seems like the interesting
sessions clash with mine, on Saturday morning."
The AAG offers a quite limited "press page" which suggests to me that
it has yet to embrace the new media, including the Web. I found but one
press release noting the meeting this week which detailed
papers given by USGS staffers. Clearly, these outside players
(bloggers, podcasters, even the US government) are trying to create
buzz about the value of the AAG. The challenge to AAG is to pick up on
it and grow it. How? How about a full-time blogger? ESRI, for example,
had a terrific blog covering its User Conference, which nicely
complemented those of the "unofficial bloggers." Maybe find a sponsor
for such a post? How about capturing some of the "hot topics" as
podcasts? How about a real press page highlighting "interesting to the
public" papers that might spark the traditional media to cover the
meeting?
Who Leads?
A number of years ago I attended a big industry event and after
attending a number of sessions, I was, frankly, bored. I asked one of
my more experienced colleagues why the presentations were so, I believe
I used the term, "lame." He replied that it was because we, the
software vendors, were leading the industry. He was quite correct. Most
GIS presentations at the time were something on the order of "Here's
what I did, and oh, maybe I'll not mention the fact that it's what the
vendor told me to do." And, from a vendor standpoint, that was just
fine; users spread the word to other users. Vendors had to simply go
back home and think up the "next thing" for users to need/do.
So, here we are some 10 years later. Are geospatial software vendors
leading the way, as they did? I'll take the easy way out and say the
vendors are trying to lead the way, but users/developers (are they one
in the same?) are getting in the way. Some data points for your
approval.
- ESRI offers The Geography Network and
Geodata.gov. Jeremy Bartlett offers Mapdex.
(Did you know it's now integrated
with Cadcorp SIS?)
- Google offered Google Maps and maintains it had no part in the mashups that followed (I don't know if I buy that or not). In any case, the mashups from users are leading the way. Clearly, other vendors want that same sort of community, which is why they are sponsoring those contests.
- Many vendors and publishers offer formal
conferences on geospatial and IT topics. What's perhaps the hottest
event this year? MashUp Camp!
It included presentations by, well, users. And word is, they are not
lame, since they are leading not being led.
- The MapServer Foundation, which at one time seemed to be Autodesk "swooping in" on an existing open source community, is now the Open Source Geospatial Foundation, a developing, open, responsible organization - run by the "inmates of the asylum" some might say.
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