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The United States Geological Survey (USGS) this week
announced (press
release) an update to Geospatial
One-Stop (GOS), the federal government portal for geographic data,
services and more. This is the first time the site has been in the news
for some time.
The update provides an opportunity for those in the geospatial
community to revisit the site, see what's new and see how the portal
can help in day-to-day work. The update reflects changes in data
querying, query results and how they are delivered, and further
information about the services the site indexes.
What's New in Querying?
Within the Help Center tab at Geodata.gov is a document titled "What's
New in Geospatial One-Stop (GOS) Version 2.3." It details changes
relevant to three different user groups: users, publishers and
administrators. I focus here on changes specifically aimed at users. I
used as an example a query noted on Twitter: the individual sought a
shapefile of U.S. Forest Service Regions. (Figure 1).
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Figure
1. My
query. (Click
for larger image)
One of the new features appears in the second step of the query
process; it filters via icons the type of content of interest. The
options include Live Data and Maps, Downloadable Data, Services and
Applications, among others (Figure 2). The previous implementation of
this part of the search was a bit more hidden. Further, one of the
options, Geographic Activities, was renamed Planned Data Activities to
make it clear that such data were not yet available. It'd be nice to
see each type of content with a link (or mouse over) that provides an
expanded definition. A second new filter option provides the ability to
select metadata by collections. The current options include
Geodata.gov, Marketplace, GIS Inventory (Ramona) and options for
coastal data. While some of these collections are self-explanatory,
some such as GIS Inventory are not likely to be familiar to all
visitors and, like the types of content, would benefit from further
descriptive information. Other collections noted in the "What's New"
document, including The National Map, do not appear in the
collections
list.
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Figure
2. Filter
to refine type of content
What's New in Results?
Once I executed my query, more new features of GOS appeared. A review
of search criteria (Figure 3) showed what I searched, where I searched
(collections or in my case, no collections), the search's bounding box,
and the option to see my results in GeoRSS, KML, HTML or fragment
(defined in the "What's New" document as "a snippet of HTML"). I tried
to view the 93 results in each format. None were successfully created
on my Mac (Mac OSX, Safari), though all four appeared in my Windows
machine (Win XP, Firefox). According to the "What's New" document,
these tools use "the REST API" and allow "search results to be exposed
in external applications, such as RSS Readers, HTML pages and KML
readers such as Google Maps and Google Earth." Users have been able to
sign up for e-mail updates when new data appear that match a saved
query. These e-mail messages now include GeoRSS and KML links.
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Figure
3. Queries
can be restricted to
collections. (Click
for larger image)
The results of my query were coded using the icons of the content type
filters (Figure 4). I think making the current content type
filter a bit more prominent would be helpful; the bold text of the
current filter was not as prominent as it might have been among the
colorful icons.
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Figure
4. Results
are coded by content type. The filter type can
be changed on the fly using the icons. (Click
for larger image)
What's New in Service Availability?
I clicked on the best match I saw for my query, which was a link to the
Geography Network, but I found that resource unavailable. Had I been
looking for Live Data and Maps (the Geography Network is an
application), I'd have run into another new feature, a status check
(Figure 5). A Service Availability button on the resource's metadata
page taps into the Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) Service
Status Checker and returns a status update. In my case, the status for
a Web Map Service (WMS) from the Naval Research Lab was, in short,
"down" (Figure 6). Of the five Live Maps and Data results returned,
just one had its GetMap (one of the WMS services) "up." That WMS was
from the VT Center for Geographic Information.
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Figure
5. Live
Data and Maps and Services metadata pages
feature a Service Availability button. (Click
for larger image)
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Figure
6. The
Naval Research Lab service that was returned
by my query was a valid service, but its Get Capabilities was down and
its GetMap was not tested. (Click
for larger image)
The integration with the FGDC Service Status Checker is a true winner
from my perspective. There is nothing worse (and my students will back
me up here!) than finding just the right service and it being
unavailable. Further, this check of standards-based services like WMSs
confirms for new users that the server is at fault (though of course
there may be other factors in a failed connection). I'm hopeful that
since the Contact Owner button is right next to the Service
Availability button, users will not hesitate to make contact when a
service is down. I'd like to think hosts of such services monitor them
to see when they go down, but if not, here's another easy way to do so.
Two other updates are noted for end users, including enhancements to
the Statistics Tab and an update to the Maps Tab. New stats include:
- number of metadata records in GOS (211,114, as of
March 5)
- number of records for each content type
(geographic services, 20)
- number of publishers (with at least one record,
6,139)
- most accessed metadata records are identified
(Mississippi and Ohio
River Polygon)
The statistics are nice to have, but are served up,
along with charts,
in a Flash application, so you can't cut and paste them to other
applications.
The updated Maps tab provides access to maps by theme (basemaps,
environment, geology) and scale (national, state, local). There's also
an option to visit Map Stores like the USGS Store, The National Atlas
and The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA). I'm not sure "Map
Stores" is the best term for these; I suggest these are "government map
providers."
The other new features are aimed at data publishers and geodata website
administrators. They include:
- tools to configure the GOS metadata harvesting
interface and view
harvesting history
- the ability to register multiple WMS service
layers in a single
service with ease
- an update to the federal government list in
publisher profiles -
federal publishers can attach an agency name to each metadata record
(for example, Dept. of Agriculture, Dept. of Commerce)
Conclusion
The updates for end users, specifically those that access filters and
information about service availability, are valuable additions. Just as
enhancements to consumer mapping portals rarely drive huge amounts of
new traffic to a site, a few changes are not likely to convince
longtime non-users to head to Geodata.gov in droves. Still, each
enhancement is a step in the right direction.
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