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2:51PM

Notification of AGI AGM 2012

This year's AGI Annual General Meeting will take place on 19th September 2012 at the East Midlands Conference Centre, University Park,  Nottingham, NG72RJ.  All AGI members are eligible to attend the AGM. In the event of a vote each individual member will have one vote (see note on proxies below).

The AGM will be held during AGI GeoCommunity‘12, AGI's annual conference.  If you would like more information on this event or wish to register for the conference please go to  http://www.agi.org.uk/agi-geocommunity-registration/

Please note this year's AGM will be taking place at 17:05 on 19th September, immediately after the presentations at the end of Day 1 of the AGI Conference and before the ‘Top Tens’ and AGI party.  Those attendees who have not registered for the conference on that day will not be allowed to enter the room until the presentations have finished. Registration for the AGM will take place outside the designated room.

The Finance report will include the presentation of the 2011 annual accounts, approved by Council at their meeting on 20th June. The accounts for 2011 are available on the AGI website at http://www.agi.org.uk/agi-documents/

 

AGM Agenda:

1.    Formal welcome

2.    Apologies for absence

3.    Minutes of the last meeting

4.    Finance report                         

5.    2012 audit

6.    Any other business

 

Note

Appointment of proxies

As a member of AGI, you are entitled to appoint a proxy to exercise all or any of your rights to attend, speak and vote at the meeting. A proxy does not need to be a member of AGI but must attend the meeting to represent you. The instrument appointing a proxy is required to be in the form, or as near as circumstances will permit to the form, set out in Article 33 of AGI’s Articles of Association. Any such instrument must be sent or delivered to AGI at 150 Minories, London, EC3N 1LS or at the AGM venue, and must be received no later than 12.00 hours on 19 September 2012.

10:14AM

Andrew Watson to present at AGI GeoCommunity '12

The AGI is delighted to announce that Andrew Watson will be a plenary speaker at this year's AGI conference.

Andrew is the Deputy Director of Information at the Metropolitan Police.

He is also the national police lead for GIS, a member of the PSMA GI Customer Group and was responsible for the delivery of GIS products in support of Olympic Security.

He graduated from Strathclyde University with an honours degree in civil engineering and spent 12 years working as a chartered civil engineer, mostly on highways projects. Having moved over into the information and technology world, he became the CIO for the British Transport Police in 2004 and moved to the Met in 2009.

Andrew has been responsible for developing GIS policy and practice in the Police Service since 2005 and recently hosted the first ever Police GIS conference.

More about AGI GeoCommunity '12

AGI GeoCommunity '12: Sharing the Power of Place will be held at East Midlands Conference Centre, Nottingham on 18 - 20 September 2012.

AGI GeoCommunity is the largest and most comprehensive independent conference in the UK digital mapping and geospatial calendar. The conference provides real insight and leadership in current geographic information and location based issues via a range of keynote addresses and conference papers as well as by hands on training and face to face delegate networking.

The AGI GeoCommunity series has a proven reputation as a 'must-attend' event for a range of service delivery managers and information management and technology professionals. Previous delegates and speakers have been drawn from Central and Local Government, Utilities, Health, Emergency Services, Infrastructure, Insurance, Marketing, Business Intelligence, Finance and Technology sectors.

AGI GeoCommunity '12 will open on the 18th September with the popular pre-conference 'Icebreaker' evening event and offer two full days of thought leadership, practical education, knowledge transfer and real world best practice and case studies.

AGI GeoCommunity ‘11 attracted 450 delegates. The residential format, introduced in 2007, is now well established and the event has proven its growth and sustainability. Feedback from last year’s delegates indicated that 97% of those polled thought the event offered value for money and 89% felt it fulfilled their expectations. 97% said the venue was ‘good’ or ‘excellent. A full report of delegate feedback is available on the AGI website.

AGI GeoCommunity Website: www.agigeocommunity.com

 

9:57AM

AGI Chief Executive and Director to take up new post

The Association for Geographic Information (AGI) announces the resignation of Chris Holcroft as Chief Executive and Director of the Association.

On behalf of the AGI Council, I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate Chris on his successful application to the role of Chief Executive for the Royal Meteorological Society. I would also like to thank Chris for his dedication, commitment and hard work to both the organisation and industry at large.

Chris will remain with the AGI until the middle of October and in the meantime is fully committed to helping achieve what will undoubtedly be another great AGI GeoCommunity conference.

The Association intends to appoint an interim Chief Executive to provide continuity in our membership service and work, while we undertake the recruitment process to seek a long term replacement. We expect to be able to announce the interim Chief Executive appointment within the next 2-3 weeks.

During Chris’s six years as Chief Executive he has, in partnership with the AGI team and AGI Council, ensured that AGI has strengthened its reputation as the leading professional organisation for the GI industry and a respected voice within government and beyond. The AGI will continue to provide wide-ranging benefits for our members and uphold its mission to maximise the use of geographic information for the benefit of the citizen, good governance and commerce.  The AGI Council looks forward to working with our new Chief Executive, along with our members, our volunteers and our regional and special interest groups, towards building upon past success and ensuring a bright future for our organisation and industry.

Jonathan Marshall

Chair, AGI

3:38PM

AGI Northern Group Conference Round Up

When I first signed up to Twitter a month ago I didn’t think it would lead me to writing this article. It was an attempt to keep abreast of football gossip. However, I soon found, as a career hunting Geography graduate, it was an ideal platform for networking. It is from this networking that I learnt of the Association of Geographic Information (AGI) Northern Group Conference; a coming together of individuals in Manchester on July 4th to share ideas from the geospatial world. As a throw of the dice I attended the conference, not knowing completely what to find. However, from the beginning I felt extremely welcome, with participants taking genuine interest in what I had to say. Once seated we were welcomed by Graham Morgan (Chair of the AGI Northern Group and MD of Spatial Consultants Ltd), and tasked us with introducing ourselves. I remember enjoying how much more personal this was than my earlier efforts to enter the industry.

The presentations were kicked off by Dr. Omair Chaudry, UNIGIS, on ‘Structuring Volunteered Geographic Information.’ This aimed to use place-tags from images on Flikr to create a keyword map.  Stuart Mitchell (AGI Northern Group Conference Organizer and owner of Geodigital) did a masterful job of keeping speakers on track and tweeting regular updates with the #AGI_NG tag).  Ian Robinson followed, with ‘Using GIS for risk assessment and resource allocation in the fire service’ which concerned the allocation of fire service resources for optimum coverage over an area. I enjoyed this as the application used a spatial analyst method which I was familiar with. These set the scene well, featuring content I would expect to find if I were to walk into a GIS job, but also revealing how innovative the industry is, for example the use of extensive free data sourced from social networking sites such as Flikr.

At this point the presentations swung towards more future development, started by Ewan Peters from ARUP, who gave a talk on ‘The Role of BIM’, BIM standing for Building Information Modelling. However it was noted for this presentation it would be better referred to as Built Environment Information Modelling, suiting the geospatial context. This talk exhibited BIM as a process that combines geometry and other information to provide mapping at all stages of a project. ‘Transform your approach to data and INSPIRE’ was the next talk, by David Eagle of 1Spatial. This considered the audit of data to save money, and the transformation of error prone data into accurate, valuable data, in order to bring it in line with new European INSPIRE data standards. These two talks were completely new subjects for me and so were the most challenging period of the day, but it exposed to me just how many layers there is to the GI community.

The next three talks represented a shift from advances in the industry to ways in which the participants could be motivated to use initiative to create our own, efficient advances. This was started absorbingly by Gary Gale, Nokia, with ‘Big Data versus My Data’, a lecture that concentrated on the increasing use of social networking, a practice that creates data. But who owns this data? Gary explained services are unmotivated to preserve data, and so we must preserve it ourselves, by creating a ‘Personal Digital Archive’ on host websites. The presentation with the least amount of GI focus, it showed to me how broad the subject can be. Following that, Jo Cook, Astun Technology, gave a more geo-centric presentation entitled ‘Consuming Open and Linked Data with Open Source Tools’, demonstrating how to make the most of freely data. Carried out by downloading free datasets, this can be converted using programmes such as Python for ease of use within a GIS. Andy Coote of ConsultingWhere Ltd. finalised this section brilliantly with a call to arms to the industry. ‘The Importance of B2C in the Growth of the Geospatial Market’ explained how there is an opportunity at present to embrace advances in technology in mobile apps, media and augmented reality to take geospatial understanding further. This presentation resonated with me in its innovative thinking, highlighting the big future in this industry.

Finally Professor Robert Barr, University of Liverpool & Manchester Geomatics, concluded the presentations, with ‘It’s good to talk – opening up the address debate’, stressing just how important communication is to reduce duplication of data. One fine example was the Royal Mail, who re-geocoded the properties of Britain, an exercise that not only took a lot of effort and taxpayers money but also did not really need repeating. It became clear that this malpractice is not uncommon, mainly due to copyright concerns over GI data that can be used. This wrapped up an engaging conference perfectly, highlighting simple steps we can all take for a more streamlined community.

Furthermore, throughout the day numerous coffee breaks took place that were ideal times for me, as a graduate, and everyone else to network and chat. This was a big opportunity for me, and without the friendliness of the participants it may have been a bit daunting. I found a treasure trove of advice and guidance (for example, I’m now a fully fledged Python self teacher!), not to mention some business cards. Without trying, this conference has become the perfect space for a graduate looking for a way into the geospatial industry, as well as its main function which is for GI professionals to meet and share ideas.

Graham closed the conference with quick reminder of some of the things we had learnt during the day and by thanking the speakers, attendees and event sponsors (PSMA).  Then, in what is apparently typical form, we retired to a local bar for a ‘natter’.  Personally, I would like to thank all the speakers and participants for a fascinating, and for me, motivating event.

The AGI Northern Group is a regional group of the Association for Geographic Information.  The group is run by volunteers and organises topical evening events throughout the North of England.  The group is online at www.agi.org.uk/north as well as via LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter

10:07AM

Three more sponsors for AGI GeoCommunity '12

The AGI is delighted to announce three more commercial sponsors for this year's AGI conference.

Astrium GEO-Information Services and RouteWare have taken Silver Sponsorship and COWI A/S has taken Bronze.

Rollo Home of COWI said: "COWI A/S are delighted to be able to support AGI GeoCommunity 2012. As a mapping firm with global experience of the capture, production and distribution of geospatial data we recognise the significance of the conference in the UK. It is the single most important event in the geospatial calendar here, and I for one am looking forward to be able to demonstrate the COWI services to the wide range of geospatial users that attend the event."

Uffe Kousgaard of RouteWare added: "RouteWare is happy to be back at AGI and meet our many customers in the UK. We have a lot of new products to showcase, all aimed at optimizing your logistic operations and saving on costs."

Chris Holcroft, Director, AGI added: "It is great news to welcome these three sponsors to AGI GeoCommunity '12. It further reinforces the appeal of the format, enriches the diversity of the exhibition and helps the AGI run this event at minimal costs for delegates. We hope Astrium, RouteWare and COWI have an enjoyable and productive event with us in September."

More about Astrium GEO-Information Services

Astrium Services’ GEO-Information division has become a recognized world leader in the geo-information market by offering decision-makers sustainable one-stop-shop solutions to increase security, protect the environment, and better manage natural resources. It has exclusive access to SPOT and TerraSAR-X satellite data, while also calling on a full gamut of space data sources and airborne acquisition capabilities, enabling it to offer an unrivalled combination of Earth observation products and services. Its portfolio spans the entire geo-information value chain.

More about RouteWare

RouteWare has existed as a consultancy company since 1992 and has experience with many different solutions for the Windows platform. Since 1998 RouteWare has specialised in algorithms and tools for shortest path and related problems. RouteWare products are continuously extended with new functionality, existing algorithms are improved, and to make sure the products are independent and can be used with your favourite GIS tools and platforms.

More about COWI

COWI  has important international experience in providing services within surveying, mapping, geographical information, 3D city models, IT solutions and land registry. It delivers high quality products and services based on significant investments in state-of-the-art technology, including large format digital cameras, aerial laser surveying systems (LiDAR), a thermal camera system, terrestrial laser scanners and an IT-platform supporting geographical information management.

More about AGI GeoCommunity '12

AGI GeoCommunity '12: Sharing the Power of Place will be held at East Midlands Conference Centre, Nottingham on 18 - 20 September 2012.

AGI GeoCommunity is the largest and most comprehensive independent conference in the UK digital mapping and geospatial calendar. The conference provides real insight and leadership in current geographic information and location based issues via a range of keynote addresses and conference papers as well as by hands on training and face to face delegate networking.

The AGI GeoCommunity series has a proven reputation as a 'must-attend' event for a range of service delivery managers and information management and technology professionals. Previous delegates and speakers have been drawn from Central and Local Government, Utilities, Health, Emergency Services, Infrastructure, Insurance, Marketing, Business Intelligence, Finance and Technology sectors.

AGI GeoCommunity '12 will open on the 18th September with the popular pre-conference 'Icebreaker' evening event and offer two full days of thought leadership, practical education, knowledge transfer and real world best practice and case studies.

AGI GeoCommunity ‘11 attracted 450 delegates. The residential format, introduced in 2007, is now well established and the event has proven its growth and sustainability. Feedback from last year’s delegates indicated that 97% of those polled thought the event offered value for money and 89% felt it fulfilled their expectations. 97% said the venue was ‘good’ or ‘excellent. A full report of delegate feedback is available on the AGI website.

AGI GeoCommunity Website: www.agigeocommunity.com

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