2006 Year in Review
General Thoughts
OSGeo bootstrapped itself from the crumbled MapServer Foundation announcement at the end of 2005. Considerable energy and leadership from people like Frank Warmerdam, Jo Walsh, Gary Lang, and Tyler Mitchell have kept it moving forward and working to attain the goals which it set forth to accomplish. I expect that it will continue to gather momentum in 2007, despite Sean and other’s continued hating on it, because the benefits it provides are already starting to be realized in terms of visibility, cross-project collaboration, and financial stewardship.
ESRI had their Vista release. I’ve been mostly out of the ESRI loop the past couple of years, due to my involvement with open source stuff and the fact that the ESRI stack is too stovepipe-like for my development group’s taste. From my small business/local government perspective and GIS weblog perspective, it is clear that many are looking at open source/cheaper alternatives to accomplishing the same tasks. Integrated and polished open source solutions will have a real opportunity over the next 18 months (obviously in the web space with Mapguide, MapServer, GeoServer, and OpenLayers, but there are other areas too).
Apple continues to clean house. I so wish I would have bought stock after recovering buying my first Mac three years ago. 2007 should be exciting in the Apple world with a new OS release for Microsoft to attempt to copy and continued hardware releases from Apple’s wise decision to hop on the i386 bandwagon. Hobu, Inc. is completely an Apple shop now as far as workstations and laptops. Apple’s servers are interesting and nice from a management perspective, but their cost does not justify their existence when compared to commodity pizza boxes and a solid Linux distribution.
Review
February 4th
I was in an O’Hare hotel for the birthing of OSGeo.
February 12th
I completed the MySQL driver for OGR. This was my first experience developing for OGR, and it was straightforward. Maybe someday MySQL will realize that they need to beef up their spatial support. Currently for most, it is but a speedbump on the way to implementing PostGIS, I think.
Late February
I released the first version of the MapServer Buildkit. The Buildkit is a big ball of wax that has everything pre-configured for you to build MapServer on Windows with MSVC2003. The Buildkit has been the base from which MS4W has been built on, and its use has eliminated my need to release an independent set of MapServer windows binaries for ArcSDE and Oracle Spatial support.
March 5th
My wife accepted a job at the University of Iowa, and I found out I’ll be moving to a new town.
April
I was busy setting up Buildbots for GDAL, MapServer, and GEOS. They have been an excellent way to keep track of developments in these projects, and Mateusz has taken up the torch of helping to implement them for all OSGeo projects that want them.
June 1st
I was at MetroGIS explaining to Clint Brown of ESRI that it makes sense to release the ArcSDE C API because third party developers building software with it will *sell them more software.* It had no effect…
June 26th
LizardTech releases their latest SDK with input from Frank Warmerdam and myself about the licensing agreement. I also did some testing to make sure it worked as a universal binary. I earned a LizardTech polo shirt for my efforts.
August 29th
I headed off to FOSS4G in Lausanne, Switzerland after honeymooning in Italy for a couple of weeks.
Sept 18th
Returned home from the conference to a broken toilet, flooded house, and wet and trashed computers. Most of the damage was contained to my office, the bathroom above, and the basement below. One silver lining was a Mac Pro to replace my dual G5, but other than that, it’s been pretty miserable.
End of November and Early December
During this timeframe, I was working on numpy bindings for GDAL, I was closing bugs in preparation for GDAL’s release, and I received a commitment for funding to support the development of ArcSDE Raster support for GDAL.
December 10th
I created a new website to revive PySDE. I will provide more detail about that in a future post.
2007 and Beyond
As I noted in my review section, my wife has accepted a job at the other university in Iowa. Telecommuting back to my job at the Center for Survey Statistics and Methodology at Iowa State is not an option, and I will be striking out on my own to try my hand at consulting full time. The exact date has not been set yet, but it will coincide with the repairs to the house in Ames from the flood and our ability to sell it. So far, my prospects look fairly good, but in a couple of months I’ll be looking to take on more. Here’s your chance to get in line to hire me ![]()