Re: An Elephant is Faithful 100% - Mailing list pgsql-advocacy
From | Chris Travers |
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Subject | Re: An Elephant is Faithful 100% |
Date | |
Msg-id | 437E58F7.4090907@travelamericas.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | An Elephant is Faithful 100% (Josh Berkus <josh@agliodbs.com>) |
Responses |
Re: An Elephant is Faithful 100%
|
List | pgsql-advocacy |
I can donate some time. The best email for getting in touch with me about this is chris@metatrontech.com Josh Berkus wrote: >Folks, > >I recently received the following appeal from the African Elephant Database. >They need help migrating to PostGIS and building out their application. > >I, personally, cannot imagine a more compelling project which deserves the >PostgreSQL community's collective help. The elephant is our mascot! Plus >the AED folks introduced the idea of making this a general OSS project for >species conservation databases. > >Who's available? > >--------------------------- >I'm writing with to explore the possiblity of a collaboration between >Postgresql, PostGIS and the African Elephant Database (AED) of the IUCN/SSC >African Elephant Specialist Group (AfESG). Please allow me to begin by >giving you a little background on all those acronyms, in reverse order. > >The AfESG is a group of elephant experts from across the African continent >who, aside from their daily jobs, disinterestedly lend their skills to >provide technical advice on elephant conservation and management. The >mission of the AfESG is to promote the long-term conservation of African >elephants throughout their range, and the group focuses its efforts on >capacity building, alleviation of human-elephant conflict, compilation and >dissemination of technical information, and the development of elephant >conservation strategies. Led by a volunteer chair, the AfESG has a small >secretariat in Nairobi, Kenya. Please see http://iucn.org/afesg/ for >details. > >The AfESG is one of the most active of over 120 Specialist Groups of the >IUCN Species Survival Commission (SSC). The largest conservation grouping in >the world, the SSC is a worldwide network of over 7,000 volunteer experts >working to conserve the diversity of species found on Earth. The SSC is >responsible for the production of the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. >See http://iucn.org/themes/ssc and http://www.redlist.org. > >The SSC is the largest of the six commissions of IUCN - The World >Conservation Union. IUCN is the world's largest and most important >conservation network. The Union brings together 82 States, 111 government >agencies, more than 800 non-governmental organizations (NGOs), and some >10,000 scientists and experts from 181 countries in a unique worldwide >partnership. IUCN's mission is to influence, encourage and assist societies >throughout the world to conserve the integrity and diversity of nature and >to ensure that any use of natural resources is equitable and ecologically >sustainable. The World Conservation Union was founded in October 1948 >following an international conference in Fontainebleau, France. IUCN HQ is >in Gland, Switzerland. See http://iucn.org/. > >The African Elephant Database >The AED is a geographical information (GIS) system used to maintain an >accurate and up-to-date record on the distribution and abundance of African >Elephants. The AED is regularly updated, with data on elephant range and >numbers constantly being solicited from wildlife authorities and experts >across the continent, and a major report is produced every three years and >made available in the AfESG website (see http://iucn.org/afesg/aed/). > >The AED currently runs in ESRI ArcGIS 9.1., in a personal geodatabase (MS >Access) format. We obtained ArcInfo through one of ESRI's conservation >program grants - but soon we were being asked to pay for maintenance charges >in excess of USD3,000 per annum. Despite these costs, we are considerably >constrained by the limitations of the set-up - including the MS Access 2Gb >size limit. If we were to upgrade our configuration to a full geodatabase >would involve acquiring ESRI's Spatial Database Engine (SDE) plus a >commercial RDBMS such as Oracle, DB2 or MS SQL server, at a one-off cost of >several thousand dollars and annual maintenance fees to match. > >Such costs are well beyond our reach, we are hoping to build a more >sustainable solution using open source software. Although opensource GIS has >not evolved as much or as quickly as opensource relational databases, we do >have some hopes that a suitable system could be developed to maintain the >AED. The AED is the most comprehensive species database in existence, and we >believe there would be value in developing a turnkey solution that can be >used to maintain monitoring information on other species for which there are >relatively good data. > >We've got the elephant and the database in common. If you think a >collaboration could be productive and mutually beneficial, please let me >know so that we can begin to explore the options. > >I look forward to hearing from you. > >Sincerely, > >Julian Blanc >Manager, African Elephant Database >IUCN/SSC African Elephant Specialist Group >Email: julian.blanc@iucn.org >Web: http://iucn.org/afesg/ >-------------------------------------------------- > > >
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