Doug Nebert Receives OGC's Gardels Award.WAYLAND, Mass. -- At the June meeting of the Open Geospatial Consortium The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) is an international voluntary consensus standards organization. In the OGC, more than 330 commercial, governmental, nonprofit and research organizations worldwide collaborate in an open consensus process encouraging development and , Inc. (OGC OGC Office of Government Commerce (UK government) OGC Open Geospatial Consortium, Inc. OGC Office of the General Counsel OGC Open GIS Consortium, Inc. ) in St. John's Newfoundland, Doug Nebert received OGC's seventh annual Kenneth G. Gardels Award. The Gardels Award, a gold medallion, is awarded to individuals who have made an outstanding contribution to advance OGC's vision of geographic information fully integrated into the world's information systems. Doug Nebert is the Clearinghouse Coordinator at the US Federal Geographic Data Committee Federal Geographic Data Committee - (FGDC) ftp://fgdc.er.usgs.gov/gdc/html/fgdc.html. (FGDC FGDC - Federal Geographic Data Committee ). He was a principal organizer of the first Web Map Testbed, which gave rise to OGC's Interoperability Program, and he is one of the few currently active Technical Committee and Planning Committee planning committee n (in local government) → comité m de planificación participants who have been active in OGC from the beginning. He was the principal author and is the editor of the OpenGIS(R) Catalog Services Specification and he has been a key contributor to other key specifications. He chairs the Architecture Working Group. In addition to his many contributions to OGC, Mr. Nebert has spoken and taught around the world to promote the idea of the Global Spatial Data Infrastructure A Spatial Data Infrastructure or SDI is a framework of spatial data, metadata, users and tools that are interactively connected in order to use spatial data in an efficient and flexible way. . He is well known and widely regarded as one of the top experts on geospatial metadata Geospatial metadata (also geographic metadata, or simply metadata when used in a geographic context) is a type of metadata that is applicable to objects that have an explicit or implicit geographic extent, in other words, are associated with some position on the and geospatial catalogs. Doug has also played a key role in helping people in governments understand how OGC standards fit into modern government enterprise computing. He has been the chair of the Global Spatial Data Infrastructure (GSDI GSDI Global Spatial Data Infrastructure ) Technical Committee for many years and has been instrumental in the creation of numerous nations' National Spatial Data Infrastructures. Mark Reichardt, president of OGC, said, "Doug has been a tremendous asset to the Consortium and its members. Year after year he has taken on problems that were critical and technically challenging, and he has always been a clear voice of reason in the Technical Committee and also in the Planning Committee, where he has often served as a Technical Committee Representative. His advocacy for OGC within government has been essential to our progress. We all owe him our greatest thanks." The award is given annually in memory of Kenneth Gardels, one of the founding directors of OGC and OGC's former director of academic programs. Mr. Gardels coined the term "Open GIS," and devoted his life to the humane and democratic uses of geographic information systems. He died in 1999. The OGC is an international voluntary consensus standards organization of over 270 companies, government agencies and universities participating in a consensus process to develop publicly available geoprocessing interface specifications. OpenGIS Specifications support interoperable solutions that "geo-enable" the Web, wireless and location-based services, and mainstream IT. |
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