Sure Martin. Let's go ahead with it. ------------------------------------ Sent from my Nexus 4 On Feb 9, 2014 11:56 PM, "Martin Desruisseaux" < [email protected]> wrote:
> Hello Nadeem > > Thank for you quick reply. Your work seems a nice use case. If you agree, > I will post an email on the Moving Feature SWG asking if they would like > such use case (it will probably depends on their schedule and whether they > consider having enough use cases or still want more - they have 4 in their > latest draft, but your work does not seem to duplicate the other use > cases). If the SWG said that they would like to add this use case, then we > could write one or two pages about your work, including screenshots if you > have some? > > Does it sound okay? > > Martin > > > Le 09/02/14 17:50, Nadeem Anjum a écrit : > >> Hi Martin, >> >> I am very much present here on the list. >> >> The GSoC 2013 project involved simulation of single moving criminal agent, >> to predict crime patterns. The future work of this project could involve >> moving victim agents add well as moving police agents. >> >> So yeah, the project involves a multi-agent moving model and can be >> proposed as a use case for the OGC working group. >> >> ------------------------------------ >> Sent from my Nexus 4 >> On Feb 9, 2014 9:59 PM, "Martin Desruisseaux" < >> [email protected]> wrote: >> >> Hello Nadeem Anjum (hopping he is still on the list) >>> >>> The OGC's Moving Features standard working group is looking for use >>> cases. >>> I saw some proposals about transportations in a Japanese city, hurricane >>> trajectory, or a soccer match composed of 23 moving features. >>> >>> If my memory serve me right, the Google Summer of Code 2013 project was >>> about a multi-agent model applied to a security or law enforcement >>> problem, >>> is that right? If so, I guess that those agents could be considered as >>> moving features. Should we propose this GSoC project as a use case for >>> the >>> OGC working group? >>> >>> Martin >>> >>> >>> >
