This is the last blog post I will be making for the Seismic SOS project!. If anyone has been keeping up with or has read my weekly reports page you will see that it has been a huge learning process for me, and I just want to say that I am very grateful to have been given this opportunity by 52°North, GSOC 2013, and the open source community.more >
52°North Sensor Web Community at the FOSS4G 2013 Conference
Next week the FOSS4G 2013 Conference will take place in Nottingham. This is a great opportunity to meet geospatial open source enthusiasts from all over the world.
Seismic Observations in SOS, Midterm Report
This is the midterm update for my GSOC project to integrate seismic data support in SOS. My progress was relatively slow at the start due to a learning curve related to the SOS code base. I have made a lot of progress recently. My main goal for the midterm milestone was to have the SOS set up as a proxy data source querier that could take requests from the server and return seismic data, in time series and/or event format. I wanted to be able to create my own instance of SOS where it was possible to use operations such as GetCapabilities, DescribeSensor, and GetObservation to pull data and simulate what a user might ask for in the SWE client. For details on this architecture, please refer to the SOS Wikipedia page.more >
New 52°North SOS 4.0.0 Beta2 released
The Sensor Web community has published a new beta release – “beta2” – of 52°North’s implementation of the OGC SOS 2.0 standard. The new 52°North SOS 4.0.0. contains improved components and new functionality.