Aula Talk Thursday 17.8. at 18:00 by Matt Biddulph in Helsinki
Aula Talk:
OPEN DATA MOVEMENT - THE NEXT WAVE OF OPEN SOURCE
Matt Biddulph
www.hackdiary.com
Thursday August 17th at 18:00
Helsinki Institute for Information Technology (HIIT)
6th floor, Pinta-building, High Tech Center (HTC), Ruoholahti
Tammasaarenkatu 3, Helsinki
The event is open to all and free.
Welcome - Tervetuloa!
The Wikipedia is only the tip of the iceberg of information that is becoming freely accessible on the internet. Following the success of open source, an open data movement is occurring online that seeks to gather, publish and enable the reuse of rich machine-readable datasets - like all programs ever broadcasted by the BBC.
By opening up these wellsprings of information, which were previously only accessible to large institutions, the open data movement has unleashed a new wave of creativity on the Web. Programmers, students, and companies are building mashups by overlaying photos, blog posts, and other objects to open datasets like the BBC Programme Catalogue, Wikipedia, Open Streetmap, and Thinglink.
As a case in point, Biddulph will describe how the BBC's database of programming from the 1950s to the present day was transformed from an internal green-screen application to a public Web 2.0 service using
Ruby on Rails. Expect to see some playful examples of what you could do with it and other open datasets.
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Matt Biddulph is a freelance software developer based in London. He previously worked at BBC Radio and Music Interactive as the leader of the software architecture team, aka Head of Plugging Things Into Other Things. He blogs on Hack Diary (www.hackdiary.com).
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The event is organized by Aula (www.aula.org) in collaboration with HIIT. Aula is an open network that promotes the exchange of ideas across boundaries.
Please forward this invitation to anyone you feel would be interested in attending.
Ola dear Marko Ahtisaari,
I like so much to send you a letter,
Can you please send me your email
thank you very much
Marc
Posted by: marc | October 13, 2006 at 08:36 PM