1 / 12

GeoAtom, OGC, and the Geospatial Enablement of Everything

GeoAtom, OGC, and the Geospatial Enablement of Everything. Joshua Lieberman, Traverse Technologies & Open Geospatial Consortium. Scope. Georeferencing is not just measurement, but representation (geometry, scale, reference system, attribute, authority)

Download Presentation

GeoAtom, OGC, and the Geospatial Enablement of Everything

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GeoAtom, OGC, and the Geospatial Enablement of Everything Joshua Lieberman, Traverse Technologies & Open Geospatial Consortium

  2. Scope • Georeferencing is not just measurement, but representation (geometry, scale, reference system, attribute, authority) • Features are a discernment and representation of real world / geographic phenomena, but not of all reality or all knowledge. • Multiple, even conflicting features may be asserted to represent a given information artifact depending on circumstances, authority, application, intention. • In whatever form it is encoded, reliable metadata is critical for giving and retaining meaning in any georeferencing process. • GeoRSS / GeoAtom is a Web-compatible form of geospatial “reification” which can support multiple / related feature assertions.

  3. General feature Model Model presumes all is shared within an information community What if features are created and consumed by different communities? What if phenomena have already been observed for a different, non-geographic application?

  4. Human-centric Intention description, navigation Perception visual - aural - tactile Theory persistence, consequence Discernment feature, context Application discovery, analysis Representation geometry, raster Ontology upper, domain, foundation Machine-centric (Geo)semantic interoperability stack

  5. OGC Tools + • GML & Simple Features • Geometry is not the feature itself, but a property of the feature • Geometry is meaningful within a defined coordinate reference system • Georeferenced information is represented as “other” feature properties • Observations and Measurements • Separates the O&M “event” artifact from the “Feature of Interest” • Links from the existing information to the georeferencing feature. • Observation artifact represented as a feature, with or without a geometry property • GeoRSS / GeoAtom • Provides a lightweight model and encodings (XML, GML, OWL) for adding feature properties to “other” information • Links from the new feature assertion to the existing information without necessarily modifying the information itself

  6. OGC Service Tools • WFS Gazetteer Profile • Specialized feature type for Web Feature Service • Update work: feature type & operations • Not well suited for either relationships or metadata • OGC Catalog • “Intended” for metadata records • ebRIM profile provides a rich relationship model and soft typing • Complex filter interface for full search capabilities

  7. Trust, Lies, and Metadata • Meta-data is(not necessarily)objective data about data. • Meta-data for a resource is (not necessarily)produced only once • Meta-data must (not necessarily)have a logically defined semantics. • Meta-data can (not always)be described by meta-data documents. • Meta-data is (not necessarily)the digital version of library indexing systems. • Meta-data is (not necessarily)machine-readable data about data. ...Semantic Web Metadata for e-Learning - Some Architectural Guidelines Mikael Nilsson, Matthias Palmér, Ambjörn Naeve

  8. GeoRSS / GeoAtom • Day job: tag news feeds and other Web resources with geographic location, for discovery and visual browsing • Evening gig: “featurize” resources, a new and independent geographic view of existing information • Midnight oil: news about or annotations of existing features, eventful output of Web feature servers, story graphs, links to well-known features

  9. GeoRSS 1.1 Content “Featurizing” Model

  10. GeoRSS Examples <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/"> xmlns:geo="http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/geo/2007/"> <channel rdf:about="http://www.xml.com/xml/news.rss"> <title>XML.com</title> <link>http://xml.com/pub</link> <description> XML.com features a rich mix of information and services for the XML community. </description> <items> <rdf:Seq> <rdf:li resource="http://xml.com/pub/2000/08/09/xslt/xslt.html" /> <rdf:li resource="http://xml.com/pub/2000/08/09/rdfdb/index.html" /> <geo:point>45.256 -71.92</geo:point> </rdf:Seq> </items> </channel> <?xml version="1.0"?> <rss version="2.0" xmlns:georss="http://www.georss.org/1.0/"> <channel> <title>Liftoff News</title> <link>http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/</link> <description>Liftoff to Space Exploration.</description> <language>en-us</language> <pubDate>Tue, 10 Jun 2003 04:00:00 GMT</pubDate> <lastBuildDate>Tue, 10 Jun 2003 09:41:01 GMT</lastBuildDate> <docs>http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss</docs> <generator>Weblog Editor 2.0</generator> <managingEditor>editor@example.com</managingEditor> <webMaster>webmaster@example.com</webMaster> <item> <title>Star City</title> <link>http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/news/2003/news-starcity.asp</link> <description>How do Americans get ready to work with Russians aboard the International Space Station? They take a crash course in culture, language and protocol at Russia's Star City.</description> <pubDate>Tue, 03 Jun 2003 09:39:21 GMT</pubDate> <guid>http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/2003/06/03.html#item573</guid> <geo:point>45.256 -71.92</geo:point> </item> </channel> </rss> • GML • <georss:where> • <gml:Point> • <gml:pos>45.256 -71.92</gml:pos> • </gml:Point> • </georss:where> • <georss:where> • <gml:Polygon> • <gml:exterior> • <gml:LinearRing> • <gml:posList> • 45.256 -110.45 46.46 -109.48 43.84 -109.86 45.256 -110.45 • </gml:posList> • </gml:LinearRing> • </gml:exterior> • </gml:Polygon> • </georss:where> • Simple • <georss:point>45.256 -71.92</georss:point> • <georss:line>45.256 -110.45 46.46 -109.48 43.84 -109.86</georss:line> • <georss:polygon> • 45.256 -110.45 46.46 -109.48 43.84 -109.86 45.256 -110.45 • </georss:polygon> • <georss:box>42.943 -71.032 43.039 -69.856</georss:box><georss:featuretyeptag>city</georss:featuretypetag><georss:relationshiptag>is-contained-within</georss:relationshiptag> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:georss="http://www.georss.org/1.0/"> <title>Example Feed</title> <link href="http://example.org/"/> <updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated> <author> <name>John Doe</name> </author> <id>urn:uuid:60a76c80-d399-11d9-b93C-0003939e0af6</id> <entry> <title>Atom-Powered Robots Run Amok</title> <link href="http://example.org/2003/12/13/atom03"/> <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a</id> <updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated> <summary>Some text.</summary> <geo:point>45.256 -71.92</geo:point> </entry> </feed> (GeoRSS Simple maps directly onto GeoRSS GML)

  11. CGDI “Update” Entry <entry> <title>Update to Brisbane placename feature</title> <author> <name>John Doe</name> <uri>http://www.johndoe.com</uri> <email>jdoe@johndoe.com</email> </author> <category scheme="http://www.geobase.ca/feedtype" term="update"/> <category scheme="http://www.geobase.ca/domain" term="Tasmania"/> <category scheme="http://www.geobase.ca/featuretype" term="placename"/> <category scheme="http://www.geobase.ca/action" term="update"/> <category scheme="http://www.geobase.ca/status" term="published"/> <link rel="http://www.geobase.ca/linktype/sourcefeature" href="http://wfs.geobase.ca?request=GetFeature..."/> <link rel="http://www.geobase.ca/linktype/feedback" href="urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6a"/> <link rel="alternate" href="http://www.geonames.org/Brisbane"/> <id>urn:uuid:1225c695-cfb8-4ebb-aaaa-80da344efa6b</id> <updated>2003-12-13T18:30:02Z</updated> <summary>Update of Brisbane placename feature</summary> <content>Extended description of update action</content> <georss:where> <gml:Point> <gml:poslist>143.5165125 -42.13445</gml:poslist> </gml:Point> </georss:where> </entry>

  12. Thoughts • Application matters: index, search, visualization, analysis, money • Georeference is assertion: trust, authority, time-space validity, diversity • Sense of place: culturally applicable representation, local usage, general understanding • Multiple service levels: simple authorities vs. rich Web mining

More Related