Open != gratis. Open is a commitment: to customers, partners, fellow users. Whether it is publishing quality code based on shared principles and standards, or publishing quality data that is authentic (traceable), maintainable (living) and responsible, we are developing a common vision is of a smarter world where humans and machines work better together. Whether we apply this for peace or profit is an individual choice.
So make your choice, and take a stand! Today, you can show solidarity with the people of Paris and the open source movement by leaving breadcrumbs to the Paris Open Source Summit, adding this code to your website:
This will invert your page colors through a bit of jQuery magic, and add a button at the top right of the page with an explanatory text and link to the Summit’s home page in French and English. Hashtag your screenshot with #POSShack#OSSPARIS18
Yesterday I didn’t manage to “open the little door” due to a packed schedule, so today is a double feature!
OpenGLAM is an initiative of Open Knowledge that promotes free and open access to digital cultural heritage, held by GLAMs: Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums. It became more than just a hashtag when the European Commission flagshipped it as part of the DM2E (Digitised Manuscripts to Europeana) project, dedicated to “building the tools and communities to enable humanities researchers to work with manuscripts in the Linked Open Web”. It’s basically a great excuse to spend the night in a museum
My advent’s calendar hack was to contribute a Data Package to the #openglam tag on GitHub. At the last OpenGLAM event, we received data from the Lichtspiel film archive in Bern - who sent us an export of their film database. We did not have time to do something with it at the hackathon, so I wrote an initial converter and created a Data Package from it yesterday. Feel free to use it to discover gems from the history of Swiss cinema! And share ideas via the Issues tab of what we might do with it.
An important and increasingly visible part of the activities of Open Knowledge in Switzerland have been the hackathons related to Open Cultural Data and the OpenGLAM network, that have come to be known as #GLAMhacks. During these events, people like myself are let loose on databases of digitized works, and encouraged to be creative, explore, and to help promote the cause of openness and remix culture. No other hackathon series has had quite the same variety of project ideas, in my opinion. We have had theatric performances, games and game data, and even A.I. ghosts. Boo!
Behind the scenes of GLAMhack, a highly dedicated and well organized team encourages and supports institutions from around the country to prepare datasets for open publication. And by open, they really mean it. In the slide that follows from a presentation by one of the project’s initiators, Beat Estermann explains yesterday how Open Government Data plays out at a lunchtime event in Bern.
The same trickle-up effect is seen in the community’s efforts, as datasets go from being handed to someone on a USB stick, being shared at the hackathon on our DataTank™, to being cleaned up and published on the national Open Data portal, to being promoted on the international, Europeana portal - as in the case of the host of the first hackathon, the Swiss National Library. Contrast this to the usual trickle-down path of official reports and statistics, and you’ll see why we’re excited.
So what has the community contributed to this, besides hundreds of semi-random project ideas which can be found on make.opendata.ch/wiki ? The #GLAMhack team also happens to be one of the most careful monitors of the impact of hackathons in Switzerland, running surveys, keeping track of various numbers, and publishing a report annually - this year’s draft is being finalized, but you can previous editions linked here.
Compiling some of the numbers from their report, I’ve put together this quick estimate of the value of our contributions over the years, making some very very low assumptions about the average time (2/3 of planned time) and wage (the country average according to Wikipedia) spent contributing at the events.
Year
2015
2016
2017
2018
TOTAL
Participants
100
100
90
65
355
Projects started
24
15
10
15
64
Datasets (cumulative)
15
75
116
148
148
Start
Friday, February 27, 2015 at 10:00 AM
Friday, 1 July 2016 at 10:00
Friday, 15 September 2017 at 10:00
Friday, 26 October 2018 at 10:00
-
Finish
Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 16:30
Saturday, 2 July 2016 at 17:30
Saturday, 16 September 2017 at 17:30
Sunday, 28 October 2018 at 16:00
-
Hours
30.5
31.5
31.5
54
147.5
Working hours
20.33
21.00
21.00
36.00
98.33
Participant hours
2,033.33
2,100.00
1,890.00
2,340.00
8,363.33
Average wage
30.94
30.94
30.94
30.94
30.94
Wage contributed
62,910.84
64,973.49
58,476.14
72,399.04
258,759.52
Not bad, for an event series which had a total budget of half that amount, and of course we are not including here the full downstream effect of new data published thanks to this community.
Additionally, I spent some time today thinking about the feedback I got at the last #GLAMhack to some discussion about improving the platform, and complementing our old wikis with newer tools, adding these as issues to Dribdat. Please let me know if any of these resonate with you, and give us a !
After initiating the debate in the media and in politics, it is time to make open data happen: right here, right now, with the tools at hand, the data within reach, to bring out the ideas everybody is coming up with. We are kick-starting a community of designers, coders, communicators and activists to help Switzerland move towards a more ‘direct data democracy’ for participation, transparency and accountability from the grassroots.
With these words, in three languages, the first MAKE hackathon was announced - a year before the Opendata.ch association was founded. Organized by Jeremy Stucki (Interactive Things), Andreas Amsler (Politnetz), Hannes Gassert (Liip), and myself. A high caliber team running the first multilingual and multi-site hackday in Switzerland dedicated to opening data for good. Here’s my first email to Hannes, whom I met at Random Hacks of Kindness in Basel:
Our goals were to create an open platform. MAKE was more than just a name or hashtag, it was a brand and a set of tools and guidelines. We wished to enable any hackathon organizer to be able to use it, either by working with us directly, or by following the guidelines - which later included at least one participant from the association, and the lesser of 10% of the budget or 1000 CHF contribution to our association. And we had grand plans for the joint venture as we carried our activism out across the country (GeoAdmin map).
Here I won’t go into the details of what happened at these events, since you’ll find photos and descriptions all over this forum, in the wiki and on the website. Suffice to say that we’ve been able to MAKE a lot of open data - not just help to get the ball rolling and accelerate the deployment of open data portals, but to kickstart and help a lot of local initiatives get going.
We haven’t been very systematic yet about keeping records ourselves, and seeing “what happened next” to the projects remains a research exercise for the undaunted. To help you get started, I’ve taken the first step to aggregating our old wiki projects. The new project site already has a CSV and JSON format API, and to complete the migration to hack.opendata.ch, we would need to automate the entry of every URL in the table into Dribdat.
The aggregation happens in a scraper (automated extraction of structured content from a Web site) running on the Morph.io platform of Open Knowledge Australia. There are several other projects from Switzerland running on this platform, whose purpose I consider to be very much in the spirit of #makeopendata.
Sunday is considered in the culture I live in to be a family day, to be spent away from family if only on very meaningful activities. On top of that, the 2nd Sunday of Advent (note: != Second Advent) is an occasion celebrated widely in this 66.9% Christian faith (2016 census data) professing country. And so I only had time for a small “Adventhack”, focusing on the co-working spaces that have had a big influence on my activities, a home-away-from-home and enabler of my work-life-balance.
A map of a particular brand of globally-distributed coworking spaces called Impact Hubs, can be found as an embedded Google Map on the ‘Global Community’ home page at impacthub.net. It can also now be found as a Gist on GitHub in open data formats (CSV, GeoJSON, Data Package). In order to do this, I reverse engineered a nice solution documented by our friend @g33konaut.
What is great about the Impact Hub, is the nature of this meta-organization. Based in Vienna, Zürich and London, it is a company that brands itself as a movement. It reaches out to the young-and/or-able entrepreneur through fundamental impulses of trust- and community-building, and an adherence to the Sustainable Development Goals - which every Hub subscribes to represent and foster. It sets itself as an example, for each of the startup initiatives it incubates, to follow.
Measuring the impact of SDG’s is quite a pickle for fans of data (sdg-tracker), and I would expect the Impact Hubs to lead the way in this area. In previous annual Global Impact Reports, like the 2015 edition (e.g. screenshot below), there was an effort to account for the number of startups, and to survey members to find out what industries and business models they address.
Perhaps I’m looking in the wrong places, but it seems to me that this kind of data is no longer aggregated or published at a global level. Individual Hubs sometimes make quite an effort to visualize themselves, like this year’s lovely infographic from Impact Hub Ottawa:
However, I could find no initiative to make data accessible in open formats. Perhaps the surveys conducted by the Vienna University of Economics and Business - Social Entrepreneurship Center are detailed in a research papers, I couldn’t find it. I searched open data portals in vain - and the best thing I could come up with was that map. Which, I think, could still be useful to understand the “global” part of the Impact Hub community, and I leave it to you, dear reader, to suggest questions of proximity and impactfullness that we could ask from these data points.
Doing so would seem to go hand-in-hand with sustainable company strategy. For the duration of the existence of the Opendata.ch association, we have had strong relations with the three Swiss Impact Hubs - organizing and supporting events such as Make Zürich, IoT Hackathon and the Climathon, through André Golliez keeping “office hours” for several years in the Zürich Impact Hub, to most recently kicking off the Digital Learning Lab initiative at Impact Hub Kraftwerk pictured below. Plus, people in our community including myself have contact with Hubs around the world. I’m sure that a more strategic exchange here could be a triple win.
If you are part of the Impact Hub community, perhaps you could be inspired by the Financial transparency of the Effinger coworking space, or the various / datasets / on the topic of co-working available on the European Data Portal? If you are, and would like to see your Hub and network be more Open, let’s talk!
The organisation’s revamped structure, its management believes, could inspire others to adopt it, and it is considering how to share its knowledge. “We would definitely like to inspire a more shared, bottom-up economy, versus the top-down traditional ones,” says [Petr Skvaril, Impact Hub’s global partnerships manager]
– Impact Hub takes on all the fervour of ‘a movement’ as network increases (FT, 2015)
As a first step, I would also suggest that a little more effort is invested into promoting exchange with the open source community. I have found exactly one open, and still unanswered, issue on GitHub:
And there are some code bases out there that could potentially use community contribution, from supporting adoption to code reviews and security checks to feature improvements… like open data APIs
And that’s just for the beginning. Looking at existing collaborations like Partnership4SDGs, I could see some opportunities for working with Open Knowledge and the School of Data for positive, measurable impact.
Information Technology people have to love problems. I’m talking about those real murky, down in the deep end of debugging unpredictable execution time in the VLIW instruction set of your SIMD architecture kind of murk. You’ve got to be dedicated to your craft, and so (speaking from personal experience) you tend to get focused on a very narrow lens definition of what IT means, what your scope of work entails, fixating on how reliable your estimates on highly defined work packages can be - rather than on how impactful or beneficial the results of your efforts are.
Then along comes a person like Bret Victor, a beast of burden, and tells you to STFU and stop complaining because there are definitely bigger fish to fry in life than moaning about your TDD coverage goal quota. First, he grabs our attention…
Climate change is the problem of our time. It’s everyone’s problem, but it’s our responsibility — as people with the incomparable leverage of being able to work magic through technology.
– worrydream/ClimateChange
In the previous Adventhack, we were talking about working with the Impact Hub and SDGs, and there is one in particular that I wished to draw out as an example of how incredibly refreshing and motivating it can be to do what I do (solve IT problems…right! =)
A few years ago one of the people running the Zürich Impact Hub asked me to help organize an event called a Climathon. At the time, if it sounded like “hackathon”, I was in - weekends are for chumps! Anyway, we got together and had a good old time, actually really darned inspiring time, which you can read about on my blog:
Or see the results of here:
These Climathons kept happening, and I kind of lost track, and now I wanted to sit down and catch up and see what the Climate-KIC is up to these days. And I realized that, for all my interest in what @worrydream was saying, I have spun up a few more processes in the datacenter, heated up the blockchain with a few transactions… There was Proof of Work, but little proof that any of my work contributed to cooling down the planet.
Last week, while rewriting my brand story, I went over the question of what makes Open viable, thinking about SDG 13 and what motivates us to make dramatic improvements in behavior in this direction. Our fascination with glaciers like the Aletsch Gletsch are also symbolic of the shrinking accessibility of the world’s knowledge, as key indicators are blasted off the open web (datarefuge).
And so I’m going ahead today with a small step, renaming my studio, placing more emphasis on Aletsch and less on Data, even though the “Let’s” part remains central to what I do. And discovering delicious IT problems in the process…
So, thank you Climathon, for sodabot and many other cool hacks. Let’s work together to limit the / -clicking and hand-waving, and get back to finding the tools and making progress on the real issues. Here are some great starting points:
Once upon a time, people must not have had to think about food. I guess we just ate whatever we could, while trying to avoid being eaten. Humans have come a long way since, scanning our foodstuffs prepared in laboratory conditions with our intelligent assistants reporting on how likely the product is to tickle our taste buds. OK, with some foods, some people, we don’t really want to know what’s inside…
Even when the cycle of nutrition is carefully orchestrated, I am sure that today most of us - myself included - wouldn’t forego the occasional adventure of ducking into a hole in the wall eatery for a hot, spicy, don’t-ask-don’t-tell kind of meal that you will probably regret a couple of hours later. Here is another video about the future of food, suggested by the ZOE project team last February at the Basel Hackdays of the Open Food Data Program.
Five years ago the time seemed ripe, pardon the pun, for dispensing more than just free meals at hackathons within the association. We experienced the first commercial successes, with open data apps being downloaded and adopted by important companies, even in Switzerland. It felt like we needed to do something big. There was excited discussion of a new product database, which this article summarizes:
The interest from the community was there - from a hackday prototype focusing on Switzerland’s largest grocery chain, which continues to make waves years later (Cumulizer), to contributing to international projects (Open Food Facts), to awesome research projects in the works (FoodRepo, BeerDecoded). We were eager to help people find their way to statistics and pertinent questions about Switzerland’s agriculture. By the way, don’t look for it among the industry sectors, it is a special field of study at the Federal Statistical Office, with data available in specialized agencies like Agroscope and sites like this:
The Open Food Data Program accelerated many things, paving the way to the more professional Strategy 2.0 of the association, demarkating more clearly where interests lie within our group. For the School of Data working group, it was an opportunity to run Data Expeditions, develop our process, and collaborate with Open Knowledge Portal on the Datacentral micro-portal, serving community data resources via API on our hackathon platform.
In the kitchen, you see some people sticking to the recipe, others bristling at the mere suggestion of being asked to weigh an ingredient. Sometimes I wonder if the most modern principle is to stop thinking about food again - and let the thousand year old traditions and nutritional guidelines take over. Just let yourself be fed by the incredibly refined feeding systems of the world. Go with the flow, relax. In my student days in Canada, we called it the “maccaroni & cheese diet”, the most popular kind of ready-meal, beckoning with naive simplicity.
And yet… All around us, the under- and over-nourished are making a mockery of our Smart Food ideas. The system is not there to keep you healthy and content, it contives to fill your stomach and empty your wallet. Without laws, regulations, ISO-certified manufacturing chains, watchful consumers and consumer rights groups, we could be eating horse dung and not know any better.
Smart Food may be a prerogative of the up-and-coming, clamoring to prolong their lifespans. Open Food is a tool of the citizenry of the world, to use information processes for freedom of choice, and freedom to (not) care. I have dedicated my Tuesday hack to Open Food, firing up one of the startup projects we coached for the first time in a few months, dusting it off and starting a pull request.
The proverbial fuel on the fire.
I would also like to give a shout out to @hannesgassert@sylviereinhard@florianwieser and everyone else involved for futhering the limits of our movement, hacking the system for the cause, and creating the grounds for many terrific and ongoing adventures. I was inspired to work on similar topics elsewhere, like connecting the Powercoders initiative to the school restaurant La Cultina, later developing a concept app together with their students and a graduate of the Powercoders pilot class. Lots of follow-up remains.
If you would like to see more initiatives like this one, please consider making a donation to Opendata.ch this holiday season. Every bit helps the cause!
It has been a long and very dense week. I trust, you will forgive my brevity and missing the chance to update this thread for a few days. I have nevertheless kept up my Advents calendar, and will very briefly mention the “hacks” without going into much background. If you have a burning question, you know where to find me. Wishing everyone a pleasant last sprint of the year, if you’re not already on a well deserved time out!
Coinciding with my last meeting with the opendata.swiss project team at the Federal Archives this week, the project on its way to a new home at the Federal Statistical Office - I contributed design work towards one of my open source collaborations with the team:
An idea posted along with a sketch, for externally embedding content from CKAN - the world’s favorite open data portal - overcoming technical limitations, and helping to make open government data accessible and well-supported in more places. Community support de rigeur.
There is much to know about running an association. Even after being closely involved with founding and supporting several of them, I am still learning on the job. A good reference for anyone in Switzerland is the knowledge base at vitamin B - the “competence center was set up by Migros culture percentage (Kulturprozent) in order to support associations with useful information, individual advice and further training.”
The Finances working group of Opendata.ch was launched during some of our first, Open Finance Data-focussed hackathons in Bern, 2012 and 2013. The group had an outward focus, building tools for local interest, creating machine readable budgets and statements. We made little attempt to contribute to international projects like OpenSpending, but we did have some impact within and beyond our borders with the well publicized Open Budgets project.
I rather regret the until now missed opportunity to make the finances of our own association more open, and to lead by example. So together with @jonasoesch and @friedepeace, we prototyped some content for the group’s currently blank website - a visualization of the finances of the association over the past 3 years. These numbers are shared with members in detail at every general assembly - and are now conveniently available in summary form in CSV format here.
Please consider making a donation for more innovation, transparency and efficiency!
Good governance is based on the three principles of transparency, balance of power and effectiveness.
Transparency
Transparency means free information, open communication, participation and accountability to all parties involved (management board, members, customers). Transparency can be improved through regulations and appropriate controlling.
For the association this means:
Decision processes are comprehensible, regulated and documented. Board members and club members know how decisions are made.
Connections (mandates, assignments) and conflicts of interest of the board members are disclosed.
Fees, compensation and expenses are regulated in writing and known to all.
Balance of Power / Checks and Balances
As in functioning democracies, there should also be a mutual control (“checks”) of the committees in the association in order to achieve a balance of power (“balances”).
This includes:
Separation of powers, i.e. employees cannot at the same time be board members.
A balanced distribution of power in the executive committee and in the entire association.
The “four-eye-principle” is helpful, i.e. all decisions and agreements are made (at least) by two persons, legally binding documents are signed by two persons.
Not too many offices and functions should be united in one person and conflicts of interest should be disclosed.
Effectiveness
The association should be organized and function in such a way that its purpose is achieved as well as possible. Helpful in the sense of Good Governance are for it:
Optimal size of the board: In medium-sized associations 5-7 board members are optimal, in smaller associations 3 persons.
Organisation adapted to the purpose of the association: Board size, office, working groups, delegations are adapted to the association and its size.
Regular recording of the performance of the board: its work is shown and reported.
One thing I wonder about when going through the list of other people’s contributions at Oli’s OpenSource Advent Challenge, is how many of these are done within working hours, and how many of them serve an already commercially supported project vs. homemade experiments. In any case, I used the opportunity of tackling the somewhat touchy topic, in our community, of Open Research Data, by making official the release of an actual commercially supported project of mine with the University of Bern.
This weekend’s double feature in my calendar are the two faces of the academic coin: the University and Applied University of Bern, the two forming a critical basis for Open Government in Switzerland. The University of Bern one the focal points of OGD teaching and research at the Institute of Information Systems - in particular through the Forschungstelle Digital Sustainability. The Bern University of Applied Sciences (BFH, as it is abbreviated in German), looking to answer the questions “What should the state look like in the future? And how do we get there?” at the E-Government Institute.
This weekend I brushed off a tutorial that was posted earlier on this forum, one of my BFH classroom materials, to a new wiki wiki for community submissions to the OGD Handbook:
The Handbook should be a helpful resource as the opendata.swiss project continues and more organizations join the portal, and implement open data and open source publication strategies. Strategies, such as the recent announcement of open sourcing the cadastral geodata project from the Canton of Bern:
Doing regular teaching stints at BFH, working on pilot projects like MIDATA and studies like our upcoming hackathon research; and supporting events like DINAcon and the Data Visualization Meetup at the Uni through work with the IWI team - I continue to be involved with both institutions in my home town. There are cool showcases like IWI’s student projects, but still no single place from which to quickly connect to development (the data and the code!) happening in Berne’s small but active Open Data community.
For today’s hack, I decided to bring the two to a virtual roundtable - and include the commercial and government initiatives in Bern / Berne (symbolized by that bear up there) for good measure.
You can add your own projects to the showcase until the end of the year. Time is ticking!
“Hi! How are you. That weather keeping you down again?” As a kid in Calgary, I remember being quite affected by the seasonal ‘chinook migraines’, another urban myth debunked by science. Is it comforting to know that, along with thousands of others, I was needlessly referred from doctor to doctor, urged to move to another climate, when, really, I should have taken a better look the data? Not really. But it is one of those life lessons that should help us pay more attention to the voice of Reason. Let’s connect the dots …
Better climate is good for health. And health is good for the climate. Nothing makes people pay attention quite as well as the latest health scare. Or health costs, for that matter. One of the most popular open government datasets in Switzerland are the Health Insurance Premiums (I believe it is the top dataset, but don’t have the stats handy). Getting this data open was the goal of one of the best looking projects ever to come out of a #makeopendatahackday in 2012:
I still enjoy re-reading the seantis blog post about their design process. It is unfortunate that the project is no longer maintained. If you’re interested, clone my fork, which makes it a little bit easier to deploy. But beware of dragons (changes in the data format)!
Back to the climate. Because that’s what is really at stake here, not just the weather. At this time, the Federal Office for the Environment (BAFU in German) publishes two interesting Health-related datasets on the portal: Air quality (yearly) and Bathing water quality. Both are downloadable in ODS (Open Document Spreadsheet) format, under a CC-BY license.
On the Air quality topic, BAFU’s historische Daten and NABEL 2017 publications are a good introduction, with mood-boosting visuals like
There have been lots of visualizations of this data. I’ll let you look for it on places like SRF, Swissinfo, etc., yourself. I was checking out this neat text-only tool (arias.ch), and the IWI student projects - one from last year stands out:
As with the Finance topic, the question of data compatibility quickly comes up. After we find the cleanest, healthiest canton, how does Switzerland rank up to it’s neighbours? Lucky that there are people interested in open air quality and fighting air inequality who are working on this rad platform:
Impressive as well is the source data visualized at EEA’s Air Quality Index. But how do these charts and maps make a difference? Will they convince you to think twice about booking that flight to Rio, or will she:
I don’t know the answer, but I am keen to help people who care to find out.
Today’s Pull Request refreshes parts of the deployment and maintenance scripts, known as roles from Ansible Galaxy, of the website for the Public Health association. The site is made with Wagtail, an open source CMS on top of Python, Django and PostgreSQL. And it has already faced a fair share of issues that require sharp hardening scripts and backup strategies.
I’ve been working with the association during the past couple of years, and have recently helped to start a Working Group dedicated to issues of technology and data. We will be shortly posting our plans, so stay tuned! There are more bits of background on my blog.
“You can please some of the people all of the time, you can please all of the people some of the time, but you can’t please all of the people all of the time”
There is much to be said about #energy …our dependence and fascination with the non-living motive forces that so enrich and threaten our living existence. I wrote quite a bit about what Open Energy means to me in my 2016 blog post on the subject of the last Hackdays on the topic. And all I really want to say now is…save the date, because we are doing it again!
While we have booked time for a more in-depth discussion of platforms and infrastructure at Opendata.ch in the new year, it has been a while since I have updated the central site for Hackday projects. As we we started posting challenges today for our next event, I fixed the release history and started a Pull Request to update the instance.
What I would like to do as well is freeze the current site and start afresh, but that’s another issue.
Today I didn’t have much time for code, my IT voodoo is struggling. This week much of my attention is taken up with going through the customs and motions of starting a new venture. Faithful readers may note that we rarely talk about business here. But business - in it’s oh-so-many forms - is just the art of making people move. Move from home to the school/factory/office, move from their home town to their vacation destination, move from the kickoff to the goal line.
Which is why I wish to dedicate this day to sports.
What’s quite important in sports is, of course, fair play. In the case of my own experience, the competitive instincts to beat your own high score and to show off among your peers, contributed much to forming community around open data. And one of the most remarkable and well responded to events in the history of Opendata.ch were the Sports Hackdays in 2014.
Ready, Steady, Go! was our rallying cry. And at four awesome locations Basel, Sierre, Milan, Vienna, we had people hacking on sports data. This was until now our association’s only international hackathon, Urban Data Challenge not withstanding.
We even almost made it to London. Which would have made a lot of sense, seeing as one of the most impressive open data programs happening right now is the ODI’s cooperation with Sport England. Still, we had our share of cool projects. Like:
MatchQuote, which was both a sweet hardware installation (IoT foosball!), sweet data (hopp FCB !), and one of the first partnerships with the nascent Swiss Data Journalism community
Tor de Geants, a real #makeopendata project where people took the time to collect, analyse, and properly publish the data
Linked Open Data for Bisses, technically ahead of it’s time, nailing a big topic in Switzerland - alpine tourism - and still continuing in one form or another through @Alco and students in Valais
So where are we at with Sports Open Data today? There are people in the community who are active, engaged. Not happy that we are not continuing the initiative we started, concerned about the general direction we are going. Next year, we need to pull together. After all, innovation is a team discipline.
Something we, sometimes, have to learn the hard way…
Afterwards, I hit the road to join the guys for a round of after-work unihockey. There was fun and it was a workout, but at one point my lousy footwork cost me a (admittedly tiny, but potentially more complicated) fracture of the ulna. The night ended in ER, with no tears shed. The staff and doctors were professional and invested in my well-being - which is really refreshing, when you’re not in for something serious. On top of that, I had the privilege to be accompanied by one of my team-mates, who helped pass the time discussing life, the world and everything in it.
Without bragging or baggage, the discussion was a rare chance to properly introduce someone from outside of IT to the issues of open data and open source, discuss the philosophy of our movement, and get direct feedback on what made sense (and what sounds like hogwash).
In the end, what could have been a disastrous night was saved by the care and compassion of fellow beings. If this is something that is normal and even expected in sports, it leads one to ask - why is it rare in our more “serious” pursuits? And in any case, bringing Open out beyond the confines of our technological bubble is as earnest and well-intentioned a contribution to our Open Source Advent as any code commit.
Post scriptum
sport (spôrt, spōrt)
n. Physical activity that is governed by a set of rules or customs and often engaged in competitively.
Replace “physical” with “intellectual” or “programming”, and you get hackathons. …Get it?.. Nerd. Become a member, Slack up, and let’s fix this
It once occurred to me that it’s rather hard to open any kind of knowledge if there is little room in people’s minds, or time in their schedules, for learning.
With these words, almost four years ago I turned a new page to start a blog and this forum, with the purpose of documenting the start of a School of Data chapter. In fact, for a brief time, Switzerland was considered for the future location of the international headquarters - something that makes sense for quite a lot (admin.ch) of international NGO’s.
At present time, we are an official chapter that continues to be governed by an MoU (google hosted PDF), organized in the form of a Working Group of the Opendata.ch association. The main points of this were summarized in a post here one year ago.
Today I took time to think some more about the pressing questions of the future of this initiative. And write up an update on those main commitments:
a. Translate and adapt into local language and context
This has continued along the same lines as last year, plus an initiative to translate DataBasic tools. Currently there is still no consequential translation project in place. If we wanted to do more of this, we could start here:
b. Organise a minimum of 5 events
Only two events are currently listed on our homepage, but quite a few number of documented activities on this forum. Scrolling through the posts, I counted 13 events which included relevant activities and some form of representation:
We are still not doing this consistently. Let me know if you’d be interested in helping to keep track!
d. Commit to continuously share lessons and knowledge with network members
We have had very little of this kind of activity this year. No summer camp, few calls or emails. But I have been posting updates semi-regularly to the global network Slack. The network is alive and well, but for now we’re doing our thing on the outskirts.
In hope to improve the last point, I dedicated my Adventshack to the work of the German chapter, der Datenschule and one of their very funky open source projects - Datenspaziergang. Currently available in German only, this is an app and backend that helps to plan “data walks” through the city.
Developed as part of the Demokratielabore project, the basic idea is to let the community be your tour guide - and Open Data your destination. Discovering the urban landscape both through the physical landmarks and intangible data sources. This has parallels to OSM’s popular Mapping Parties, as well as the inclusive mobile experiences of Layar or Pokémon Go.
You can read more about the project and how it connects and expands on Data Expeditions in the article below. If you’d like to help me set up a Swiss server, try the experimental setup at spaz.schoolofdata.ch, then clone the repo, and get in touch!
Going forward into 2019, data literacy has become embedded into the strategy of our local association. We have now started to see the connection to the scoda network to many of our broader activities, and the need for the materials and concepts that the School of Data provides. You should be able to see evidence of this in our upcoming Open Education Hackdays.
Improving the regularity and accountability of our workshops, strengthening ties to HQ and other chapters, and organizing funding and regular support for our activities remains a challenge. If you would like to support the initiative, give us a shout! And please also consider following, joining and donating to our association.
One of the biggest news in the data community last year (2017) was the so-called rescue of Transport.opendata.ch by one of the country’s well known online portals - Search.ch, who provide a number of useful services for data- and knowledge-seekers.
Behind this are interesting stories: the beginnings of open data activism in Switzerland through reverse-engineering, one of our first mobility themed Hackdays, multiple years in hand-wrenching / debate with officials, intrepid DevOps efforts by @fabian and all the contributors to the most popular code project at opendatach.
The “proof in the pudding”: millions of hits on the API that ensure lasting interest in keeping the service going, as hundreds of developers in the transport companies themselves see the light of the open source + open data approach.
And, finally, came the ultimate validation: official adoption of the open transport topic at the opentransportdata.swiss portal at the end of 2016.
Something the community was deeply invested in - for example, at that year’s annual (un)conference - and remains committed to.
In my case, I was delighted to see that a Python wrapper is being maintained for the API by @fabaff, and put in some time to try it out and contribute some minor suggestions.
So give the open transport APIs of Switzerland a try, perhaps at the upcoming hackdays, and you never know - you might stumble upon the next killer app for the mobile generation!
One of the fundamental instruments that every lawyer has at their disposal, are the basic provisions, and the current positions, of law. Not “a law”, not “the law”. Just law. A changing, constantly evolving thing, a system. And this system being one of the fundamental instruments of our society, it makes sense that accessing, interpreting, and understanding the ramifications of legal process through data is a prerogative of citizen movements.
During our until now only major event with the Open Knowledge network, the 2013 OKCon, we organized a hackathon at the University of Geneva dedicated to legal data. In the past five years I have often looked back at what we learned and started then, and wondered what could be achieved with more effort in this somewhat overlooked area of open data activism.
In recent times, this meant supporting the efforts of innovators in the legal profession, like @dhuerlimann
But, what’s a hack like me got to do in these kind of high level discussions? At this point I would like to acknowledge the efforts of our neighbouring chapters like Open Knowledge Deutchland (Offene Gesetze) and Regards Citoyens in France for keeping the path to “citizen legal” well lit.
For over two years now, the new Swiss Legal Tech Association has been upgrading the status quo, making it possible for us to support and participate in innovative legal projects like Entscheidsuche.ch and Privacy Butler.
The latter was the subject of my Adventshack, updating the frontpage, linking to further information & live tools to help users make sense of Terms of Use and other legalese being reprogrammed and refactored in the age of A.I.
Let’s smarten up for the testing times ahead. And, lest I forget, big kudos to @lauxandlaw for many years of service and huge contributions to the open data cause. This whole Advent’s calendar is partially an answer to your “landscape” suggestions of some years back.
Yes, it is painful to live in a globalized world, with families scattered across the seven seas, making by with the odd Skype call or online gaming session to keep relationships from dissolving into pixel dust. The truly enabled global citizen lives up in the air (Handelszeitung). The flip side of the coin is the economic worth of tourism, locally, nationally (BFS), internationally (World Bank). And don’t forget nature tourism (a.k.a. eco-tourism) as promoter of sustainability.
But seriously, now. My present this year to my (big on travel) extended family was an Oculus Go headset, set up with the best of National Geographic, Arte 360, Google Earth, etc. I made sure everyone got a taste of virtual travel: if it convinces just one person to stay at home instead of a homestay, it will more than pay for itself.
About those whooshing noises. We ran an event last year dedicated to the subject, and - I gotta say - it was one of the best experiences I ever had as a participant. Being a tourist in Switzerland rocks. The transport, hotels, the people are at the top of their game.
I’m not going to go into the details of the government program we tried to support and all that here. You’ll find some of this in the earlier forum thread. Here I just want to point out that those Hackdays were the perfect excuse to sink deep into two brilliant communities: OpenStreetMap and Open Network Infrastructure.
To whom my double Adventshack is dedicated:
This is a dataset of readings from the Things Network around Zürich, prepared earlier this year for the TWIST 2018 hackathon. I cleaned the README up a bit, converted to GeoJSON using QGIS, and added a geospatial Data Package descriptor for visualizing the gateways data on GitHub or on the new DataHub.
While editing OpenStreetMap during a walk in the Berner Oberland, my user got suspended. Admittedly I was being a bit silly with my profile, and had a load of links in my content, but still … ouch! I lost the content of an excuisitely written Diary entry. So I poked around the code of the editor (Ruby on Rails), and made a suggestion to make the form submission a remote procedure call. Thankfully the powers-that-be (fellow editors) have already unbanned me and restored my diary entry
An image is worth a thousand words, a logo that at least a hundredfold. The last box in this series is a token of gratitude, for the community that kept the open data spirit going strong this year, and really made #makeopendata happen with their code prowess, events and spirit. Thank you, @csarasua and all you Linked Data hackers!
My Adventshack implements a long asked for feature request in Dribdat, the showcase application used at the Wikidata hackathon this year:
There was a special reason to implement this today - a new website puts together all the superb results of this year’s Open Data Advent Cal at opü.ch - type it in to delight your inner geek!
And keep an eye out for next year’s activities.
With this, my own Advent’s Cal for this year is complete. Of course, many boxes and topics are missing. We are part of a global map, and the task of Linking the Data out there remains for the jungle path ahead. So we can keep on hackin’.