‘ innovation & collaboration as policy issues of the dutch kadaster ’
Post on 30-Dec-2015
28 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
‘Innovation & collaboration as policy issues of the
Dutch Kadaster ’
Kees de Zeeuw, director Kadaster International
Overview
Kadaster and products Trends Challenges
– Customer orientation– Society orientation
Approach– Innovation– Collaboration
Conclusion
Kadaster services Registry, administration and distribution of property information Topographic mapping and distribution of geo-information National geodetic reference network (NETPOS) Information node for addresses and buildings Information on position of
cables and pipelines Regional development services Information products International activities
Kadaster topographical products
Digital Topographical Key Register Dutch Territory1:10.000 - 1:1.000.000, object oriented
Update frequency: 2 years
Large-scale Base Map facility of the Netherlands
1:500 to 1:1.000
Maps GIS
ObjectsImages
Time
Geo-information trend: data
Office Internet
LocationMind
Time
Geo-information trend: demand
Customer and society orientation
Collect– High end technology– Crowd sourcing (“authorised” data)
Manage– Collect once, multiple use (data at the source)– Open source and cloud computing
Deliver– Office, web and location based services
Advice– Data, information, knowledge– Act in an international environment
Policy issues 2011
Focus on our customers, create added value– Good quality, certainly right, timely, low price
– Broad base product line for most customer groups
– Custom made services for complex issues
Collaboration with partners Cost reduction Flexibility Quality and continuity International context
Approach
Collaboration
– Strategic dialogue with companies
– Use of third party data
– New (joint) (cross border) web services
– New partnerships
ApproachClosed innovationOpen innovationCo-creation
Douwe Egberts and Philips, 2001(> 15.000.000 sold)
Microsoft team,1978
Tomtom, 2010Traffic information based on cell phones
Some innovation issues
The ‘crowd’ and the ‘cloud’ Objects and images Speed, size, interfaces 3D (x, y, z) Multi-temporality (t) Scalability / AG ‘Smart linking’
5D
Smart data linking
Interoperability Semantics Ontologies
“Over the past few years, it seems that a good way to
ensure a small audiance for a technical session, is to
include in your presentation title words as ‘semantics’,
‘ontologies’ or ‘interoperability’
(Gary J Hunter, Transactions in GIS, 2002).”
‘Smart linking’
International context
Standards (ISO, OGC, W3C) Integration of geographical structures
(Eurogeographics, Eulis, Inspire) Consultancy, partnerships and cooperation
Conclusion
Farewell to a single party strategy Innovation as part of our business Accept / fill-in our role as authority,
innovator and co-creator Europe and the world as our context Share our knowledge with other
countries and organisation
Thank you!
top related