A conference call the morning of November 12th would work well, since that 
evening the Random Hacks of Kindness conference starts and it looks like some 
OAMers and many other geohackers will be attending. OAM is on the list of 
project definitions for the event. We could hopefully reach a verbal agreement 
of where to start, and then the attendees could try to generate some prototypes 
and proof-of-concepts.

http://randomhacksofkindness.eventbrite.com/

*
Marc Pfister
Technology Manager
ENPLAN
[email protected]
(530)221-0440 x108
(530)221-6963 Fax

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of John Crowley
Sent: Monday, November 02, 2009 3:22 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [OAM-talk] The once and future OpenAerialMap

I am new to the list, but have been following in the background. I organize a 
set of humanitarian field experiments at Camp Roberts, under the aegis of the 
Naval Postgraduate School and the National Defense University.

Mikel Maron and David Bitner joined us in August, and our conversations there 
made us realize how critical a shared imagery archive has become to the 
development of the field of crisis mapping. We realized that the humanitarian 
community needs a place where civilian and military organizations can share and 
exchange pre- and post-crisis imagery, as well as subsquent analyses (our holy 
grail would be to identify visual patterns that are precursors to violence, 
mass migrations, and mass atrocities, including genocide). Based on those 
discussions, the Naval Postgraduate School subsequently offered to help 
catalyze the reanimation of the OAM project.

To that end, I would like to introduce NPS professor Don Brutzman. He is 
willing to offer  computing resources to help us bootstrap OAM, including 
bandwidth, storage, and (if needed) supercomputer processing power. I'll let 
him fill in the details. He's an open source developer himself (see his work on 
creating X3D, and he is on the W3C committee for HTML5). He has been using OAM 
for his team's research and therefore has a longstanding interest in reviving 
the project.

We also would like to offer a conference line to help speed these 
conversations. Next week, he and I will be at Camp Roberts with several other 
technologists and geographers. We'll be continuing the work from August, 
including building an open-source tool to automatically mosaic UAV still 
imagery. We are willing to host an OAM conference call on Thursday 12 Nov, 
hopefully at a time that allows our European colleagues to participate (we'll 
be on PST, so would early morning our time work?). Could we get a rough show of 
hands about who would like to participate on the call? What agenda items should 
we be covering? And what is the best way to ensure that the call gets back into 
this list? (for instance, we could record the call, if everyone agrees, and 
publish the audio feed, or designate someone to live-blog the call).

Taking up Charlie's point about separating conversations about technology from 
those about governance/organization, should we host two calls?

Looking forward to contributing to a great project,

- John Crowley





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