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Poll Results on Geoprofessionals and New Poll on REST
posted by Satri
on Wednesday August 15, @04:09PM
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from the everybody-needs-rest dept.
from the everybody-needs-rest dept.
The previous poll regarding who's doing geospatial work at your office gave these results, out of 54 votes: 42% of geospatial tasks are done by geospatial professionals, 25% are done by a diversified mix of professionals, 11% from computer scientists which learned geospatial stuff, other interesting results include only 3% from certified geospatial professionals and 5% by someone not qualified!
The new poll ask you about REST and GIS, a hot topic in the geospatial world this summer, and no, we're not talking about that kind of rest.
The new poll ask you about REST and GIS, a hot topic in the geospatial world this summer, and no, we're not talking about that kind of rest.
Related Stories
New Poll on Who Gets the Geospatial Work Done at Your Office
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The previous poll asked our users if they would contribute to Slashgeo probably gave unreliable results. Out of 46 people, 17% said they're all in, which makes sense because the poll followed the call for collaborators, 17% said they'll submit stories from time to time, 17% said they'll contribute through comments, 32% may eventually contribute while 14% just don't have the time or the will. The new poll asks you about who is doing geospatial work at your office. This poll is directly related to this story about certified geoprofessionals and the problem of low availability of geospatial professionals.
Technology: Geospatial Web Services and REST 1 comment
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Geoblogs have been regularly covering REST technology and geospatial applications lately, see the related stories below. Directions Mag offers an informative article named Emerging Technology: Geospatial Web Services and REST which reduces the confusion with REST, SOAP, GET and POST. From the article's introduction: "However, when considering the evolution of geospatial Web services, it turns out that explaining REST and clarifying the discussion suggests the need for a proposal of how to apply REST to geospatial Web services. Such a proposal might help the open source and open standards communities establish better techniques to make geospatial Web services more open and accessible." Meanwhile, you have import cartography explaining how KML could be published in a RESTful manner, and the same blog also suggests serious (?) corrections to the DM article.
Technology: REST and GIS Explained 5 comments
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Anonymous Voxel writes "From rajsingh.org blog: REST has been a hot topic this year in the geo world. There’s a discussion group, a geographic data server, many blog posts, and email discussions. I’ve been mulling over what this means to OGC over the last couple months, reading RESTful Web Services, and discussing with the various advocates around the community. After all this, I think I know what’s going on, but I don’t think there’s any one clear explanation (despite some nice pieces of the puzzle here and here) available, and there has certainly been little effort to analyze the REST architecture in relation to geographic information systems theory, so that’s what I’ll try to do now." See related stories below.
REST Poll Results and New Poll on Geospatial Presence
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Despite regular REST coverage this summer (see related stories below), 48% of the 60 answers clearly show how REST is not understood by most geospatial professionals. Of the other half, 26% claim RESTful approaches will prevail, and 16% are waiting for the Open Geospatial Consortium to join the bandwagon. 8% say they don't need REST themselves and no one said REST will have no impact, probably meaning REST is really important. Our new poll ask you about your feelings on the extent of geospatial technology presence on the web. Unrelated, I'll now try to catch up the 1000+ geonews item I missed in the last two weeks due to my accident, expect more stories.
Poll Results on Geoprofessionals and New Poll on REST
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