2 resultados para Search Engine
em Universitat de Girona, Spain
Resumo:
When publishing information on the web, one expects it to reach all the people that could be interested in. This is mainly achieved with general purpose indexing and search engines like Google which is the most used today. In the particular case of geographic information (GI) domain, exposing content to mainstream search engines is a complex task that needs specific actions. In many occasions it is convenient to provide a web site with a specially tailored search engine. Such is the case for on-line dictionaries (wikipedia, wordreference), stores (amazon, ebay), and generally all those holding thematic databases. Due to proliferation of these engines, A9.com proposed a standard interface called OpenSearch, used by modern web browsers to manage custom search engines. Geographic information can also benefit from the use of specific search engines. We can distinguish between two main approaches in GI retrieval information efforts: Classical OGC standardization on one hand (CSW, WFS filters), which are very complex for the mainstream user, and on the other hand the neogeographer’s approach, usually in the form of specific APIs lacking a common query interface and standard geographic formats. A draft ‘geo’ extension for OpenSearch has been proposed. It adds geographic filtering for queries and recommends a set of simple standard response geographic formats, such as KML, Atom and GeoRSS. This proposal enables standardization while keeping simplicity, thus covering a wide range of use cases, in both OGC and the neogeography paradigms. In this article we will analyze the OpenSearch geo extension in detail and its use cases, demonstrating its applicability to both the SDI and the geoweb. Open source implementations will be presented as well
Resumo:
La Junta de Andalucía dentro de su proyecto de Sistema de Información Geográfico Corporativo (SIGC), ha desarrollado un módulo de Callejero Digital de Andalucía (CDA) que recoge la información de direcciones de los 770 municipios de Andalucía. El Callejero Digital de Andalucía se articula en torno a los datos espaciales, una aplicación web de consulta, un motor de búsqueda (geocoder) y una serie de servicios OGC y SOAP. Todas los desarrollos están basados en software libre y pretenden convertirse en la herramienta corporativa para establecer la geoinformación asociada a registros y direcciones postales de la Junta de Andalucía. (...)