QGIST at EuroSciPy 2019 in Bilbao¶
We will present the project and recent developments at EuroSciPy! Meet us there.
Friday, 2019-09-05, 16:45 EEST (14:45 UTC), Mitxelena
Enhancing & re-designing the QGIS user interface - a deep dive (Sebastian Ernst, Maria Müller) [EuroSciPy slides]
QGIST at FOSS4G 2019 in Bucharest¶
We will present the project and recent developments at FOSS4G! Meet us there.
Friday, 2019-08-30, 12:00 EEST (09:00 UTC), Fortuna Est
Enhancing & re-designing the QGIS user interface - a deep dive (Sebastian Ernst, Maria Müller) [FOSS4G slides]
User-friendly Open Source Geoinformation Software¶
Open Source Geographic Information Systems (GIS) can be pretty, user-friendly and driven by Graphical User Interfaces (GUIs). The QGIST project sets out to significantly improve and enrich the user experience of THE modern-day open source GIS application: QGIS.
QGIS (formerly known as Quantum GIS) is one of the largest open source projects in the area of GIS. Since 2002, it has evolved many fold and has become a powerful multi-domain tool. QGIS covers, but is not limited to, various fields ranging from geomorphology to cadaster mapping as well as data visualization in 2D, 2.5D and 3D.
While its impressive analysis libraries have become a mature infrastructure, its GUI remains dependent on a command-line workflow. Its use requires programming skills. Now, as the QGIS community is attracting more and more end-users rather than just users with development background, we decided to gradually reinvent the QGIS interface, enabling a much wider audience to benefit from open source GIS.
We focus on a plugin-based approach, allowing interested QGIS users to review our concepts and ideas - without interfering with the original QGIS codebase. We are publishing a series of functional plugins and themes, gradually building on top of one another. Ultimately, QGIS will offer a true enterprise GUI experience.
About QGIST.org¶
We, the QGIST project, are an informal free collective of independent professionals with various scientific and engineering backgrounds and a strong interest in open-source GIS software - including QGIS, of cause. We want to bring the gist of QGIS to its users, hence QGIST.
It is our mission to apply our broad, interdisciplinary domain knowledge to open source software. By supporting their communities, we want to give back to them what they enabled us to do in the first place - becoming the professionals that we are now.
Our software will remain open source under permissive licenses forever. All source code will be made available in our Github profile.
For those who need it, commercial support will become available from members of the collective through the project’s commercial support platform, QGIST.de/QGIST.com.
You can contact us by e-mail at info@qgist.org.
Imprint¶
The QGIST project is an initiative of pleiszenburg.de - Independent Scientific Services.
Address |
Sebastian M. Ernst
Franz-Flemming-Straße 43a
04179 Leipzig
Germany
|
Telephone |
+49 175 26 53 712
|
VATIN |
DE 815 658 105
|
Data protection¶
What information is being collected? This website is what is commonly referred to as a static website. It means that only pre-rendered static content is served to the visitor. No active server component is executed. Therefore, only meta data describing access events to static files are logged. The meta data includes the visitor’s IP address, the date and time of the access, the names of the accessed files, the visitor’s browser user agent string (usually including the name and version of the visitor’s browser and the name and version of the visitor’s operating system) and status codes, indicating a success or potential errors of the access process.
Who is collecting it? The data is aggregated by the by the systems of the hosting provider of this website and passed through to its owner. The owner of this website is pleiszenburg.de - Independent Scientific services as stated in the above imprint.
How is it collected? The hosting provider’s servers collect access data. It is a passive method, only logging meta information - as described earlier - about access events to files. This website explicitly does not use any external third-party tracking services.
Why is it being collected? The data is primarily collected as status information, allowing to analyze the website and identify potential technical issues. Its secondary use is to determine rudimentary statistical information about its use, e.g. the number of visitors.
How will it be used? The data only serves to improve the website. While the raw data itself can barely be used to identify individual visitors, it is only being analyzed in an anonymous form. Parameters of interest are the number of unique visitors, the number of page views / page impressions and technical issues such as dead links or broken files.
Who will it be shared with? Nobody.
What will be the effect of this on visitors of this website? In the event of experiencing technical issues with this website, those issues are likely going to be resolved on their next visit of this website. Otherwise, there wont be any effects on the visitors of this website based on collected data. However, we sincerely hope that the website’s contents are going to inspirational.