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Monday, May 19, 2008

FME On Stage in Vegas. Feature Act: Data Accessibility

- posted by Tyson Haverkort

We’re heading to Vegas! MapWorld 08 is live in Las Vegas this week, and FME will be performing.

The first day of the conference, I’ll be presenting on “Accessing Data Where it Lives,” showing how FME technology allows you to connect to a wide range of formats, directly from within MapInfo.

FME will also be ‘on stage’ at our Safe Software booth, #303 during exhibit hours. I’ll be giving demonstrations and am glad to customize them for anyone who asks.

Hope to see you May 21 – 23, 2008 at the RIO!

Thursday, May 08, 2008

KML is an OGC Open Specification!

- Posted by Dale Lutz

It has been twenty years since The Trade — the day Wayne Gretzky left Edmonton for Los Angeles — and like every other Oilers hockey fan, I remember exactly where I was when I heard the news. The day I first saw KML in action is just as vivid: standing at our customer’s site, watching him demo his own data in Google Earth, we all knew we were witnessing great history in the making.

In the beginning, a big part of the KML magic was its close tie to the platform it was designed to serve – Google Earth. I think it is fair to say that without Google Earth, there would have been limited interest in KML. That platform was arguably more revolutionary than KML in that overnight it made vast quantities of spatial data dramatically more accessible than anyone had previously envisioned. At first, for most people it was just gravy that there was a documented format for adding one’s own content to Google Earth; but for those of us inside the spatial industry, the possibilities were truly mouth watering.

The one-two punch of Google Earth and KML meant that otherwise non-spatially-interested folks in any walk of life could quickly understand the power of spatial data and begin asking to see items they cared about, overlaid on top of the rest of the imagery. And thus the push to bring more and more spatial data to KML.

One of the first files I pushed through FME to KML was a sample dataset we’d been using here at Safe Software for more than five years. Because I’d always been viewing it in traditional tools, I simply knew the data as a map of an oil field somewhere in Alberta. Was I ever surprised when I opened up the freshly minted KML file in Google Earth and saw that the site was located right where I grew up! One of the great benefits of KML was that when you viewed it, you got context. For free!

Now here we are, not quite 3 years later, and the OGC has accepted KML into their fold, essentially cementing KML into the record books as a powerful format for spatial communication. You can see the OGC’s press release of their announcement
here to read their perspective on the importance of this decision. KML has grown from being used only by Google Earth to being supported by Microsoft Virtual Earth, Google Maps, ArcGIS Explorer, and many, many other spatial applications. Having KML as a standard will ensure interoperability between these platforms.

In the work that we do at Safe, we’ve seen a lot of different formats — including the impacts of the other main XML format of our time, GML — so it wasn’t hard to tell that KML would also carry
great influence. Ironically, we still get asked the same question as we did when KML first came out – isn’t it the same thing as GML? As we somewhat clumsily pointed out in our interview with Directions Magazine, they are not the same thing at all. They may share some commonalities under the covers, but they really do target different things. While GML is about content, KML is about display. There is quite a difference – I think Chris Schmidt’s recent posting on this is worth reading if you, like me, find spatial data formats a captivating topic.

Looking back, we’re glad that we at Safe jumped to provide support for this format as quickly as we did, because KML has filled this visualization need for many of our customers. While we immediately sensed KML’s value, we didn’t realize is that KML would make celebrities of our friends at the
City of Nanaimo, who pioneered the way in bringing the capabilities of KML to the city context. More recently at our FME Worldwide User Conference, our friends from Burns and McDonnell explained how they use FME to create a spatial project dashboard in Google Earth. The opportunities for KML continue to grow as the technology takes hold.

Losing The Great One was a negative turning point for fans of the Edmonton Oilers, but the introduction of KML and the free viewers for it (like ArcGIS Explorer, Google Earth, Google Maps, Microsoft Virtual Earth) to the GIS industry has been a powerful, positive disruption which has tossed us into a whole new era of spatial data. These last few years have been a great time to be part of the GIS industry. I look forward to the future growth of KML as an open specification, and to watch the impact that OGC’s standardization of KML will have on the format and the geospatial ecosystem.

Monday, April 07, 2008

3D and BIM Data Integration: What’s the Hurry?

- posted by Don Murray

3D and BIM are causing more than a stir in geospatial technology. They’re affecting the way construction is doing business and the way cities are planning their infrastructure and emergency response. The growing demand for 3D and BIM data is making an impact in these areas, creating a desire to join together 3D, BIM, and traditional spatial information for a more integrated data view. As part of this wave, increasing pressure for organizations to plan for a greener future is further encouraging critical infrastructure planning to turn to 3D and BIM data assets to help them achieve their goals.

Joe Francica of Directions Magazine recently examined this movement in his article entitled “3D, BIM and Going Green: Cities Are Challenged by a New Geospatial Revolution.” During his research for the article, he spoke with Geoff Zeiss who moderated a panel at the GITA Conference on Emergency Response and CAD, GIS, BIM Convergence. He validated the increased demand for 3D and BIM data and explained some of the challenges surrounding integrating this data.

At Safe Software, we are seeing exactly what Joe talks about. Anticipating this market shift, both ESRI Geodatabase and Oracle Spatial now support 3D data, enabling them to directly store BIM data. More of our clients are inquiring for a single tool that is capable of loading both traditional geospatial data (vector, raster) and building (BIM) data. This is exciting as more cities will now be able to use a single data store to hold all of their location information, opening the door to a whole new class of applications which can take advantage of this new “integrated data view.”

Take a read through his article, and leave a comment. Let us know what you think of the use of 3D and BIM data in critical infrastructure planning and other areas. In what ways are 3D and BIM data being integrated into your world?