Foreword
For novices and geospatial experts alike, mapping technologies are undergoing as significant a change as has been seen since mapping first went digital. The prior introduction of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and other digital mapping technologies transformed traditional map making and introduced an era of specialists in these new geographic technologies. Today, an even newer set of technological advancements are bringing an equally massive change as digital mapping goes mainstream. The availability of Global Positioning Systems (GPS), broadband Internet access, mass storage hard drives, portable devices, and—most importantly—web technologies are accelerating the ability to incorporate geographic information into our daily lives. All these changes have occurred simultaneously and so quickly that the impact of only a fraction of the full potential of spatial technologies has yet been felt.
In parallel with the exciting opportunities that modern technologies are providing the digital geospatial universe, a less broadly known but perhaps far more important phenomenon has emerged: a new world of open source collaboration. Open source development and user communities, along with a healthy commitment from industry, are filling the growing need and demand for spatial technologies for making better decisions and providing more information to the growing mapping needs of technology users. In a multidimensional world, geography forms a common framework for disseminating information. ...