About the Author:  Sean Gorman founded FortiusOne in 2005 to bring location based analytics to the mass market. Sean brings over 10 years of experience at the forefront of the geospatial revolution as a researcher, practitioner, and entrepreneur at FortiusOne. Through both academic and entreprenurial efforts he has been working to make geographic data more accessible to the public since 1997 culminating in the creation of GeoCommons – a crowd-sourced repository of statistical data and social feeds that can be easily mapped, remixed and reused by non-technical users. Sean has been featured in media such as, Wired, Der Spiegel, ABC, Washington Post, Business 2.0, MSNBC, CBS and CNN. He also holds a PhD. From George Mason University in Public Policy where he was the Provost’s High Potential Scholar and was the recipient of the Fischer Prize. He has published dozens of articles on geographic data sharing and analysis, and authored the book Networks, Complexity and Security: The Role of Public Policy in Critical Infrastructure Protection. Read more from this author


OSM “State of the Map” – Manchester UK

Just got back from a great, if jet lagged, two days at the State of the Map in Manchester. Those not familiar OpenStreetMaps (OSM) is a project to collect collaborative street data around the globe that is open for anyone to use. In the US we take this for granted, but in many countries basic geographic data like streets maps can be prohibitively expensive. OSM started as a small London based project but has quickly spread to several countries and has a growing dedicated community of which about hundred were in Manchester. It was really impressive to see how far the project has come and the impressive road map for the future. Not a single bad talk or even bad question in the two days, including interesting insights from Ed Parsons of Google and Sean Phelan of Multimap.

The Open Source GeoWeb

of DIY Drones, which are basically remote control airplanes with a camera and a GPS strapped to them – magic presto you have open source aerial imagery. Sean Phelan talked about slightly more commercial versions running about $60,000. Could we have open source / user generated satellite imagery in the not so distant future? If anything it should break the strangle hold current imagery providers have on terms of service by providing low cost alternatives. Although I think that will be pushed more by balloons than drones. Often called “near space” observations there is a lot of activity going on in the area, mostly driven by the US military.

Diagram of Near Space

The original economics of balloons were very expensive, but ones like Near Space System’s get close to the million dollar mark and can cover a 600 mile radius.

Near Space System's Baloon

The Balloon Boom

As the economics continue to scale down the feasibility of low cost balloons providing an economically viable source of imagery becomes a very real possibility. There is natural oligopoly of companies that can afford to launch satellites because of the economics involved, but balloons could turn that around very quickly providing much needed competition on price and terms of use. It also provides the intriguing possibility of open source imagery collection, although perhaps more interesting, persistent imagery (stationary balloon = real time feed). Aerial imagery replaced by drones and satellite replaced by balloons as low cost alternatives. They could be important pieces of infrastructure for an open source GeoWeb. If you are a Neal Stephenson fan you’ll appreciate the mass balloon image from Diamond Age.

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