I was abroad last week. I'll catch up the recent geonews in the coming days.
The open source library at the core of most open source geospatial software and numerous commercial geospatial software just got better, version 1.10.0 of GDAL/OGR has been released a week ago. The previous major version 1.9.0 was released about 16 months ago.
From the release notes: "

This is an abnormally long version of our 'batch geonews' edition, covering the news since the holiday break.
On the open source & open data front:
On the Esri front:
In the miscellaneous category:
A bunch of minor geo-related stories discussed over Slashdot:
In the maps category:

Here's the recent geonews in batch mode.
On the open source front:
In the miscellaneous category:
In the maps category:

Here's the recent geonews in batch mode. Again an unusually long edition.
From the open source and open data front:
From the Esri front:
From the Google front:
From the Microsoft front:
In the miscellaneous category:
In the maps category:
Here's the recent geonews in batch mode.
From the open source and open data front:
In the everything-else category:
MapQuest Releases Native Mobile Mapping APIs for Android and Apple iOS, and yes, you can use OpenStreetMap data with it
SS shares a nicely done 2-minutes video of the OGC on the value of geospatial and standards
DM shares more information on Pitney Bowes's Geosk geodata platform, we mentioned Geosk last december. From the article: "Geosk is a platform for finding and using geospatial data. It combines a data as a service (DaaS) offering with a data management product. At its heart, Geosk is a completely scalable data management system that allows our customers to share their data with any user they choose, including their customers. Around this data management system we wrap an e-commerce engine to help our customers buy and sell premium geospatial data."
In the maps category:
The OSGeo announced the release of GDAL/OGR 1.9.0. It's hard to ignore GDAL/OGR, which is at the core of many open source and commercial geospatial software. We mention it quite often. Version 1.8.0 was release a year ago. For the curious ones, ESRI's FileGeodatabase format is now officially supported by GDAL/OGR.
The summary of what's new: "This is a major new release including the following major new features:
Here's the recent open source geospatial news.
Here's the recent geonews in batch mode. Some of those news seem important enough to deserve their own entries, but I dare share them in a single one. Yes, that's another unusually long post. Normal posting frequency should resume next February!
From the open source / open data front:
From the Esri front:
From the Google front:
From the Microsoft front:
In the miscellaneous category:
Slashdot discussed a few geospatial-related stories:
In the maps category:
In the coming days, I'll be at Géomatique 2011, the major geospatial event in the province of Québec. Slashgeo is a media partner of the event.
Ogre is a web client (service) that translates spatial files into GeoJSON and now from GeoJSON using the ogr2ogr command line tool for use in JavaScript web applications and frameworks (like OpenLayers). Built on NodeJS.
This release adds:
[Editor's note: we introduced Ogre last year, another tool on the same theme is named OGR2GUI]
Here's the recent geonews in batch mode, covering the last 10 days.
From the open source front:
From the Esri front:
From the Google front:
In the miscellaneous category:
In the maps category:
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