WebGIS-based approach for Street Addressing in Kosovo - Braun & HoseggenTony Braun
Enabling distributed expert input together with centralised data management using a WebGIS-based approach in the implementation of a National Address Register Information System in Kosovo
This is an introduction about the Western province of Sri Lanka that was prepared to fulfill the requirement of a course unit of Master of Natural Environmental Studies, Utokyo.
Building smart green mobility in South Tyrol through an open data hubSpeck&Tech
ABSTRACT: For decades the traditional approach for solving mobility and transportation challenges has been based on the idea of creating new road or rail infrastructures. Thanks to the impressive enhancement of intelligent transportation systems (ITS) technologies, in the last years this approach is going into the direction of rather improving the efficiency of how available transportation infrastructure is used. New digital infrastructures allow all mobility actors (vehicles, pedestrians, sensors, traffic management centers) to cooperate together to achieve the ambitious goal of improving mobility, enhancing safety, reducing congestion and environmental impacts. But how can we achieve this and ensure that public and private actors efficiently work together? In South Tyrol we have tried to give an answer to these challenges through the implementation of an open data hub, which enables the real-time data / information exchange among all interested parties and fosters the multiplication of development of research & innovation projects between local companies, research centers and public organizations. After years of implementation, the Open Data Hub South Tyrol is now creating the premises for a new historical phase for mobility in the region, with concepts like Mobility-as-a-Service or environmental traffic management that are finally moving from research to deployment.
BIO: Roberto Cavaliere is an ITS Project Manager at NOI Techpark Südtirol / Alto Adige, a public-owned organization in the Italian alpine region of South Tyrol coordinating the NOI Tech Park and with the mission to drive and foster research & innovation in the region. Roberto is the reference person in NOI for all initiatives in the field of ITS and smart mobility and in the last 10 years has coordinated a relevant number of EU-funded projects in this field. His main interests cover cooperative systems, autonomous driving, ITS for the environment, mobility-as-a-service and sharing mobility, road weather information systems (RWIS).
WebGIS-based approach for Street Addressing in Kosovo - Braun & HoseggenTony Braun
Enabling distributed expert input together with centralised data management using a WebGIS-based approach in the implementation of a National Address Register Information System in Kosovo
This is an introduction about the Western province of Sri Lanka that was prepared to fulfill the requirement of a course unit of Master of Natural Environmental Studies, Utokyo.
Building smart green mobility in South Tyrol through an open data hubSpeck&Tech
ABSTRACT: For decades the traditional approach for solving mobility and transportation challenges has been based on the idea of creating new road or rail infrastructures. Thanks to the impressive enhancement of intelligent transportation systems (ITS) technologies, in the last years this approach is going into the direction of rather improving the efficiency of how available transportation infrastructure is used. New digital infrastructures allow all mobility actors (vehicles, pedestrians, sensors, traffic management centers) to cooperate together to achieve the ambitious goal of improving mobility, enhancing safety, reducing congestion and environmental impacts. But how can we achieve this and ensure that public and private actors efficiently work together? In South Tyrol we have tried to give an answer to these challenges through the implementation of an open data hub, which enables the real-time data / information exchange among all interested parties and fosters the multiplication of development of research & innovation projects between local companies, research centers and public organizations. After years of implementation, the Open Data Hub South Tyrol is now creating the premises for a new historical phase for mobility in the region, with concepts like Mobility-as-a-Service or environmental traffic management that are finally moving from research to deployment.
BIO: Roberto Cavaliere is an ITS Project Manager at NOI Techpark Südtirol / Alto Adige, a public-owned organization in the Italian alpine region of South Tyrol coordinating the NOI Tech Park and with the mission to drive and foster research & innovation in the region. Roberto is the reference person in NOI for all initiatives in the field of ITS and smart mobility and in the last 10 years has coordinated a relevant number of EU-funded projects in this field. His main interests cover cooperative systems, autonomous driving, ITS for the environment, mobility-as-a-service and sharing mobility, road weather information systems (RWIS).
Km4city: Open Urban Platform for a Sentient Smart CityPaolo Nesi
Km4city: Open Urban Platform for a Sentient Smart City, presented at Smart City Expot World Congress.
Produce value from data enabling to
– Stimulate virtuous behavior, influence City Users!
– Increase efficiency in energy consumption
– Reduce pollution and traffic congestion
– Improve quality of service, quality of life
– Create an ecosystem for innovation and punt in action any smart city solutions
and services.
• Perform integrated and unified data management and data analytics by a set
of tools at service of city operators and city users, to:
– Perform predictions, reasoning, business intelligence, city users behavior analysis,
..;
– Control Room, Real Time Monitoring tools, ….
• Aggregate & integrate data and streams of any urban system, operator,
provider, user, .., exploiting
– open data, IOT, sensors, internet of everything,
– cloud, mobile devices, Wi‐Fi, social media,
– big data analytics, ecc;
1. keep city under control via personalized dashboards
2. transform data in value for the city, influence city users
3. Technical details: dashboard development and data aggregation
4. improve city resilience, reducing risks and decision support
Approaches to representing and delivering geospatial data in the semantic Web...Paul Box
To address many real world challenges, multi-disciplinary data is required. In the earth sciences, EO together with feature based geospatial representations of spatial objects, such as administrative reporting geographies, topographic features and in-situ sensor assets, typically need to be accessed and integrated to support analysis. Currently, coordinates are the primary linga franca for operating across both types of data. However, human users refer to spatial objects using spatial identifiers such as place names or well know codes such as the postcodes, Local Government Area (LGA) codes or hydrological catchment codes. These identifiers provide a critical data integration mechanism as they are used to reference and access observations and measurement data about spatial objects, such as time series water levels for a catchment or demographic data for a Local Government Area (LGA) held in numerous systems.
With the emergence of the semantic Web, current geometry and coordinate oriented approaches to geospatial data need to change. More non-GIS users need to access reliable identifiers for places (spatial identifiers), rather than their geometries. Consequently, there is a need to develop approaches that enable us to manage and share the identity of spatial object e.g. Lake Arthur and link spatial identities to available geometric representations for use when required.
Emerging approaches to representing and using geospatial data in the semantic Web have some implications for earth observation data. These include the potential use of spatial identifier sets as vocabularies for the spatial dimension of EO data cubes, enabling users to reliably query EO data using these identifiers. If identifiers sets are applied across data cubes, consistent identifier based queries are possible across distributed information sources.
This presentation will highlight some emerging approaches to delivering geospatial data into the semantic web, together with implications for improved integration of EO and feature based representations of spatial objects.
27.05.2015 - INSPIRE Geospatial World Forum Conference 2015, Lisbon, Portugal
- building GIS in Polish official statistics
- geospatial aspect of the nationwide censuses
- dissemination of georeferenced statistics (Geostatistics Portal - geo.stat.gov.pl)
- spatial datasets and network services (INSPIRE)
Overview of SK INSPIRE transposition and implementation
04.07.2013, TAIEX 53350 Macedonia Study visit on INSPIRE interoperability data sets and services @ Slovak environmental agency, Banská Bystrica, Slovakia
Predictive Analytics for IoT Network Capacity Planning: Spark Summit East tal...Spark Summit
The Internet of Things (IoT) is a growing network, supporting a wide variety of service types with specific network requirements that differ from traditional human type communications. This has led to emergence of dedicated IoT network standards. To optimize investments for dedicated network infrastructures, we’re investigating a dynamic approach in network capacity planning to accommodate multiple IoT traffic types over a cellular network, while maintaining their specific requirements.
We studied models of IoT traffic and used machine learning in prediction and scheduling of future workload under heterogeneous and variable traffic conditions when human-type and machine-type communications are mixed.
An integrated analytics framework including Hadoop and Spark were deployed for experimentation and a number of capacity planning use cases were implemented to verify the accuracy of the method.
Km4city: Open Urban Platform for a Sentient Smart CityPaolo Nesi
Km4city: Open Urban Platform for a Sentient Smart City, presented at Smart City Expot World Congress.
Produce value from data enabling to
– Stimulate virtuous behavior, influence City Users!
– Increase efficiency in energy consumption
– Reduce pollution and traffic congestion
– Improve quality of service, quality of life
– Create an ecosystem for innovation and punt in action any smart city solutions
and services.
• Perform integrated and unified data management and data analytics by a set
of tools at service of city operators and city users, to:
– Perform predictions, reasoning, business intelligence, city users behavior analysis,
..;
– Control Room, Real Time Monitoring tools, ….
• Aggregate & integrate data and streams of any urban system, operator,
provider, user, .., exploiting
– open data, IOT, sensors, internet of everything,
– cloud, mobile devices, Wi‐Fi, social media,
– big data analytics, ecc;
1. keep city under control via personalized dashboards
2. transform data in value for the city, influence city users
3. Technical details: dashboard development and data aggregation
4. improve city resilience, reducing risks and decision support
Approaches to representing and delivering geospatial data in the semantic Web...Paul Box
To address many real world challenges, multi-disciplinary data is required. In the earth sciences, EO together with feature based geospatial representations of spatial objects, such as administrative reporting geographies, topographic features and in-situ sensor assets, typically need to be accessed and integrated to support analysis. Currently, coordinates are the primary linga franca for operating across both types of data. However, human users refer to spatial objects using spatial identifiers such as place names or well know codes such as the postcodes, Local Government Area (LGA) codes or hydrological catchment codes. These identifiers provide a critical data integration mechanism as they are used to reference and access observations and measurement data about spatial objects, such as time series water levels for a catchment or demographic data for a Local Government Area (LGA) held in numerous systems.
With the emergence of the semantic Web, current geometry and coordinate oriented approaches to geospatial data need to change. More non-GIS users need to access reliable identifiers for places (spatial identifiers), rather than their geometries. Consequently, there is a need to develop approaches that enable us to manage and share the identity of spatial object e.g. Lake Arthur and link spatial identities to available geometric representations for use when required.
Emerging approaches to representing and using geospatial data in the semantic Web have some implications for earth observation data. These include the potential use of spatial identifier sets as vocabularies for the spatial dimension of EO data cubes, enabling users to reliably query EO data using these identifiers. If identifiers sets are applied across data cubes, consistent identifier based queries are possible across distributed information sources.
This presentation will highlight some emerging approaches to delivering geospatial data into the semantic web, together with implications for improved integration of EO and feature based representations of spatial objects.
27.05.2015 - INSPIRE Geospatial World Forum Conference 2015, Lisbon, Portugal
- building GIS in Polish official statistics
- geospatial aspect of the nationwide censuses
- dissemination of georeferenced statistics (Geostatistics Portal - geo.stat.gov.pl)
- spatial datasets and network services (INSPIRE)
Overview of SK INSPIRE transposition and implementation
04.07.2013, TAIEX 53350 Macedonia Study visit on INSPIRE interoperability data sets and services @ Slovak environmental agency, Banská Bystrica, Slovakia
Predictive Analytics for IoT Network Capacity Planning: Spark Summit East tal...Spark Summit
The Internet of Things (IoT) is a growing network, supporting a wide variety of service types with specific network requirements that differ from traditional human type communications. This has led to emergence of dedicated IoT network standards. To optimize investments for dedicated network infrastructures, we’re investigating a dynamic approach in network capacity planning to accommodate multiple IoT traffic types over a cellular network, while maintaining their specific requirements.
We studied models of IoT traffic and used machine learning in prediction and scheduling of future workload under heterogeneous and variable traffic conditions when human-type and machine-type communications are mixed.
An integrated analytics framework including Hadoop and Spark were deployed for experimentation and a number of capacity planning use cases were implemented to verify the accuracy of the method.
DSD-INT 2016 A crowd-sourced spatial database can change the way we work - Va...Deltares
Presentation by Ben van Kester (Deltares) at Earth Observation and Data Science Symposium, during Delft Software Days 2016. Monday 24 October 2016, Delft.
Open Data Seminar
Department of Public Expenditure and Reform
D/Public Expenditure and reform, Government Buildings,
Merrion Street, Dublin 2
Conference Room 0.2, South Block
2.00pm, Wednesday 11 February 2015
Tracey P. Lauriault and Rob Kitchin
Programmable City Project, NIRSA, Maynooth University
Overview presentation of the CPaaS.io project given at the first year review meeting in Tokyo on October 5, 2017.
Disclaimer:
This document has been produced in the context of the CPaaS.io project which is jointly funded by the European Commission (grant agreement n° 723076) and NICT from Japan (management number 18302). All information provided in this document is provided "as is" and no guarantee or warranty is given that the information is fit for any particular purpose. The user thereof uses the information at its sole risk and liability. For the avoidance of all doubts, the European Commission and NICT have no liability in respect of this document, which is merely representing the view of the project consortium. This document is subject to change without notice.
2017 iii 6_pietro_elisei_bridginginnovationsmartcitiesATTRACTIVE DANUBE
Creating the governance framework
and roadmaps for smart city investments, which are oftentimes
costly, is essential for ensuring that effort is directed to the real needs in the territory. Leveraging on
intrinsic territorial attractiveness potentials, today’s challenge for most cities is
to meet actual urban
problems with the right tools and fitting flagship projects.
The lessons learned and ongoing smart cities initiatives we present aim at bridging the pan
-
European
innovation landscape with the actual beneficiaries using participatory st
rategic planning processes
and integrated approaches to standardizing key performance indicators for Smart Cities (ESPRESSO
Project).
2017 iii 4_primoz_kete_inspir_edpracticalexamplesofimplementationofthedirecti...ATTRACTIVE DANUBE
Geodetic Institute of Slovenia is involved in implementation of the INSPIRE dir
ective in Slovenia since
2010.
In the past three years, we were involved in two mayor projects
of two different national ministries
regarding transposition of several INSPIRE data specifications into nati
onal data models and
products.
We will present our approach and experiences with implementation of 8 INSPIRE data theme
specifications into
National topographic model (DTM) and
national hydrography dataset.
We will show some practical examples from the projects and present future steps that lay ahead.
The presentation will give an overview of MIG past activities (MIWP14
-
16) as well as new or on
-
going
activities defined by the MIWP 2017
-
2020 endorsed by MIG in December 2016.
2017 ii 5_katharina_schleidt_datacovestatisticalviewerATTRACTIVE DANUBE
As part of the process of making INSPIRE a success, we must first clearly understand its failures;
however, this is currently difficult, as there are few existing INSPIRE compliant service available to
work with. In order to ameliorate this deficit, we a
t DataCove are using our Data Ghosting concept,
transforming and providing existing data from various European sources in an INSPIRE complaint
manner; once the data is available, we create user interfaces, as using the data is what this is really
all about
. In this talk, we'll share our experiences in this process as exemplified in our Statistical
Viewer, highlighting where INSPIRE works, and where it could be made even better.
2017 ii 1_jiri_ctyroky_spatialinformationanddecisionsupportsystemfordevelopme...ATTRACTIVE DANUBE
Development planning is huge consumer of spatial data. Prague has developed complex
infrastructure for administration, maintenance and evolvement of spatial data for planning and
decision making. Within the core of activities are two
Prague base data projects
-
Digital technical
map of Prague and 3D city model. Based on it, detail land use and built up structure datasets has
been developed within Planning Analytical Material framework. New data projects concentrates
mostly on topics as
Spatial (Urban) Economy, Mobility and Culture and Society.
Spatial data and information are available through wide variety of application and tools. The central
access point for spatial data and application is Prague Geoportal. Through Geoportal, both
app
lications for general public and professionals are available. Currently, two main issues are to be
addressed: development of tailored application for professionals, ensuring effective access to
relevant sets of information for particular tasks and developm
ent of attractive and easy to use
applications for general public in order to raise the awareness of development planning. Special
importance is seen in support of planning outputs as eGovernment tools
–
Digital Plan.
2017 i 3_tomaz_miklavcic_establishmentofterritorialmonitoringsysteminsloveniaATTRACTIVE DANUBE
The Directorate for spatial planning is r
esponsible to develop and implement national spatial and
housing policies. Responsible policy development isn’t possible without territorial monitoring
–
an
instrument with which we can evaluate existing territorial policy (current position) and can predic
t
future developments (trends).
Presentation aims to present the state of territorial monitoring framework in Slovenia. In the last few
years it was to the large extend build in the Attract
-
SEE project (ETC Danube) and designed as a part
of a wider
endeavour of informatization of spatial planning in Slovenia by development of the
National Territorial Information system.
The presentation will give and overview of the DRDSI platform developed by EC
-
JRC together with
the DanubeNET expert group. The DRDSI represents a three year long project which has been a key
aspect of the JRC's scientific support to the European Strategy
for Danube Region (EUSDR). The
purpose of the presentation is also to give the Attractive Danube project partners the re
-
usable
source of data, information, services. Final part will provide examples of DRDSI impact within the
region, including the main o
utcomes from the DanubeHack 2.0 community event.
Territorial attractiveness (TA) is reflected in the set of specific economic, environmental and social
potentials of a territory which make it competitive in comparison to other territories. Through good
governance, policies can maximise these potentials t
o increase attractiveness of the regions for
residents, visitors and investors. The main challenge in the Danube Region is lack of capacities of
target groups involved in development planning for more efficient and cooperative multilevel
governance conside
ring the needs of all stakeholders. Previous project Attract
-
SEE was focuses on
developing a framework for common territorial monitoring system suited to the needs of policy and
decision makers.
Attractive Danube project
focuses on strengthening
multilevel and transnational governance and
institutional capacities of policy planners involved in territorial development of Danube Region. This
will be achieved by (a) establishing transnational and national
information platforms which should
secure an
effective decision making process as well as an efficient coordination of sectoral policies
and all development actors’ activities, both vertically and horizontally and (b) intensive capacity
building programme for empowering multilevel public authorities and civil society in development
planning addressing major societal challenges.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Sharpen existing tools or get a new toolbox? Contemporary cluster initiatives...Orkestra
UIIN Conference, Madrid, 27-29 May 2024
James Wilson, Orkestra and Deusto Business School
Emily Wise, Lund University
Madeline Smith, The Glasgow School of Art
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
2017 iii 3_jiri_polacek_inspire_implementationasalinkbetweenegovernmentandenvironmentalpurposes
1. INSPIRE implementation as a
link between eGovernment and
environmental purposes
Jiří Poláček
Czech Office for Surveying, Mapping
and Cadastre (ČÚZK)
2. What’s to Come
• Role of ČÚZK branch in the INSPIRE implementation.
• What are we running and how we do it.
• Specific conditions for INSPIRE implementation at
our office.
• Open Data Issue
• Experience with running free on-line services.
• Use-cases of the existing network services.
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
3. Branch Organizational Chart
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
ČÚZK
Cadastral
Offices (14)
Cadastral
workplaces (98)
Land Survey
Office
Cadastral
Inspectorates
Research
Institute
4. Source Information Systems for specific
INSPIRE themes
• ČÚZK
Information System of Cadastre
of Real Estates (ISKN)
Basic Register of Territorial
Identification, Addresses and
Real Estates (RÚIAN)
• Land Survey Office (ZÚ)
The Fundamental Base of
Geographic Data
(ZABAGED)
Database of geographic names
(Geonames)
• Ortoimagery of the Czech
Republic
• New Altimetry of the Czech
Republic
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
Cadastral parcels
Buildings, Addresses,
Administrative units
Hydrography,
Transport networks, Protected
sites, Land cover
Geographical names
Orthoimagery
Altimetry
5. Status of INSPIRE Implementation
INSPIRE Theme Metadata View service Download service
Coordinate reference
systems OK OK OK
Geographical grid
systems OK OK OK
Geographical names OK OK OK
Administrative units OK OK OK
Addresses OK OK OK
Cadastral parcels OK OK OK
Hydrography OK OK OK
Elevation OK OK OK !
Orthoimagery OK OK OK !
Buildings OK OK OK
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
7. Metadata Harvesting
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
European
INSPIRE
Geoportal
National
INSPIRE
Geoportal
ČÚZK
Geoportal
Geoportál …
... … …
Geoportál … …
8. Workflow - INSPIRE
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
View and
download
services
Viewing
Cadastre
Source
INSPIRE
9. What Are We Running
• INSPIRE harmonized services:
– View : „Cadastral Parcels“ (since 2011), „Addresses“,
„Administrative Units“ (since 2013), Buildings (since 2015)
– Download: „Cadastral Parcels“ (since 2012), „Addresses“,
„Administrative Units“ (since 2013), Buildings (since 2015)
– Both WFS 2.0.0. and pre-prepared datasets (GML 3.2.1)
– ATOM for pre-prepared datasets
• National services:
– View service for the cadastral map (including the raster
map - since 2008)
– National extensions (UX) for the AD and AU themes
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
10. Specific situation of ČÚZK
• On-line
– Need for eGovernmental Application for making decision.
– Data are frequently updated.
• Open
– RÚIAN data is Open Data by law.
– INSPIRE download services for mentioned themes (subset of
RÚIAN data) are available for free.
– Digital Cadastral Maps are available for free.
• Need of early Implementation
– RÚIAN was a newly established database.
– Duty to harmonize data and run harmonized network services in
strict terms (2012 for Annex I, 2015 for Annex III).
Konference Inspirujme se ...
11. Open Spatial Data in ČÚZK
Data series Data format Number of datasets
Cadastral Parcels INSPIRE harmonized (GML 3.2.1) 13091
Addresses INSPIRE harmonized (GML 3.2.1) 6259
Buildings INSPIRE harmonized (GML 3.2.1) 6259
Administrative Units INSPIRE harmonized (GML 3.2.1) 1
Geographical grid systems INSPIRE harmonized (GML 3.2.1) 2
Cadastral map VFK (national standard) 13185
VKM (national standard) 632
SHP 13091
DGN 13091
DXF 13091
RÚIAN – complete dataset VFR (national standard) 12520
SHP 6259
RÚIAN – change records VFR (national standard) 31
RÚIAN – selected records
(addresses)
CSV 12652
RÚIAN/ISÚI – complete dataset with
history
VFR (national standard) 6266
RÚIAN – special records (electoral
district)
VFR (national standard) 2
Approved survey sketches VFK (national standard) 13185
Total 123140
INSPIRE
harmonized
25512
National
Standard
45821
Proprietary
Format
51807
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
12. Side Effects of the On-line Solution
• Bright side:
– On-line services (especially WMS) are used by a number of
applications (both internal and external)
– As no registration is required, they are „easy to use“
• Dark side:
– Difficulties with edge-matching on the state borders
– It is not possible to guarantee availability and responses
for free services and applications
– Most (2/3) of our users are anonymous
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
13. Network services – Average Monthly
Demands
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
0,0
100,0
200,0
300,0
400,0
500,0
600,0
700,0
800,0
900,0
1000,0
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Visits (th.)
IP addresses (th.)
Data amount (GB)
356 thousand visits
100 thousand unique IP addresses
924 GB of downloaded data
122 mil. hits
14. Number of Accesses to the On-line
Download Service
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
1/16 2/16 3/16 4/16 5/16 6/16 7/16 8/16 9/16 10/16 11/16 12/16
CP
AU
AD
BU
Monthly:
CP – Cadastral Parcels 94 thous.
AU – Administrative Units 20 thous.
AD – Addresses 29 thous.
Bu – Buildings 25 thous.
15. RÚIAN Exchange Format – Downloads per
Month
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
0
200000
400000
600000
800000
1000000
1200000
1400000
1600000
1800000 1,14 mil. files monthly
566 GB of downloaded data
16. Why on-line download services are
not used as often
• Most of the users linked their applications with
RÚIAN data (available since 1.7.2012).
• Implementation of Buildings theme (2D extended
schema) enabled to link Buildings, Addresses and
Parcels together (available since October 2015).
• Users are testing the availability and reliability of the
on-line solution (light client solutions).
• Demands on WFS are step-by-step growing.
• Extension of Cadastral Parcel theme (in preparation)
will provide on-line access to the Cadastral Map.
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
17. Operational Aspects
• It is not possible to guarantee availability and
responses for free services and applications
• Serious obstacles has been caused mainly by
the Viewing Cadastre application
• The most serious cases:
– March 2008
– January 2014
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
18. Main evening news of the Czech TV
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
19. Biggest Consumers of Network Services
• Viewing Cadastre Application 23 % (run by ČÚZK since 2004
the most frequently visited governmental web page)
• Ikatastr mobile Application 6%
• Other ČÚZK branch applications 3%
• Utilities
• Projections and engineering companies
• Municipalities and Regions
• Banks
• Environmental purposes
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
20. Use-cases
(How to search use-cases of anonymous users ?)
• Generally we get IP addresses only.
• Some applications contain links to the web
pages, from which our network services were
accessed.
• During January 2017 1 thousand such pages
were monitored.
• Following use-cases are based on this list
(selected open applications).
14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
31. 14.2.2017 Konference Inspirujme se ...
Conclusion
• Running free and on-line INSPIRE network services brings
specific challenge.
• It is difficult to use free services for guaranteed
applications.
• The real need of view services is much higher than the
defined INSPIRE parameters.
• INSPIRE extensions is the right way to bring INSPIRE and
national services together.
• ČÚZK used INSPIRE implementation as a chance to build
up infrastructure for providing spatial data with respect
to the end-user.