I was just informed that this invitation went out with the wrong date.  It is 
in fact scheduled for Thursday, Sept. 18.

Apologies for the spam!

_____________________________________________
From: Michelle Baildon
Sent: Wednesday, September 10, 2014 12:47 PM
To: '[email protected]'
Subject: NOW WITH DATE/TIME: Worldmap: A Spatial Infrastructure to Support 
Teaching and Research (BROWN BAG TALK)


The WorldMap platform http://worldmap.harvard.edu<http://worldmap.harvard.edu/> 
is the largest open source collaborative mapping system in the world, with over 
13,000 map layers contributed by thousands of users from Harvard and around the 
world. Researchers may upload large spatial datasets to the system, create 
data-driven visualizations, edit data, and control access.  Users may keep 
their data private, share it in groups, or publish to the world.
The user base is interdisciplinary, including scholars from the humanities, 
social sciences, sciences, public health, design, planning, etc.  All are able 
to access, view, and use one another's data, either online, via map services, 
or by downloading.
Current work is underway to create and maintain a global registry of map 
services and take us a step closer to one-stop-access for public geospatial 
data. Another project is working on tools to support the visualization of 
spatial datasets with over a billion features. Current collaborations are 
underway with groups inside Harvard, such as Dataverse, HarvardX, and various 
departments, and with groups outside Harvard, such as Cornell University and 
the University of Pennsylvania. Major additional contributors to the underlying 
source code include the WorldBank, the U.S. State Department, and the United 
Nations.
The source code for the WorldMap platform is available on GitHub 
https://github.com/cga-harvard/cga-worldmap<https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v1/url?u=https://github.com/cga-harvard/cga-worldmap&k=AjZjj3dyY74kKL92lieHqQ%3D%3D%0A&r=yQ8m8To9b1nwNozW9luGQxeYlRUwXdmDMKNVdzjfv%2BU%3D%0A&m=bFXFS7gfgc5%2BTtZtylz8%2Bvzg064UkC2a3QnlOJuA5no%3D%0A&s=e691c77b47ad60f2ab1a320d3e6fde64a2ed5ec2e23a2a97ebef494083c1ddcb>.


Date/Time:  Wednesday, September 17, 2014, Thursday, September 18, 2014, 12-1pm
Location: E25-202

Discussant: Ben Lewis is system architect and project manager for 
WorldMap<http://worldmap.harvard.edu/>, an open source infrastructure that 
supports collaborative research centered on geospatial information. Before 
joining Harvard, Ben was a project manager with Advanced Technology Solutions 
of Pennsylvania, where he led the company in adopting platform independent 
approaches to GIS system development. Ben studied Chinese at the University of 
Wisconsin and has a Masters in Planning from the University of Pennsylvania. 
After Penn, Ben helped start the GIS Lab at U.C. Berkeley, founded the GIS 
group for transportation engineering firm McCormick Taylor, and coordinated the 
Land Acquisition Mapping System for South Florida Water Management District. 
Ben is especially interested in technologies that lower the barrier to spatial 
technology access.

Information Science Brown Bag talks, hosted by the MIT Libraries' Program on 
Information Science, consists of regular discussions and brainstorming sessions 
on all aspects of information science and uses of information science and 
technology to assess and solve institutional, social and research problems. 
These are informal talks. Discussions are often inspired by real-world problems 
being faced by the lead discussant.

For more information, contact:
Randi Shapiro, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



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