l e bermudez 1, p bogden 2, g creager 3, j graybeal 4, dec 2008 l e bermudez 1, p bogden 2, g...

1
L E Bermudez L E Bermudez 1 1 , P Bogden , P Bogden 2 2 , G Creager , G Creager 3 3 , J Graybeal , J Graybeal 4 4 , Dec 2008 , Dec 2008 1 1 [email protected], [email protected], 2 2 [email protected], [email protected], 3 3 [email protected], [email protected], 4 4 [email protected] [email protected] In 2010, there will be 10,000 telemetric devices for every human in the planet (prediction by Ernst and Young). IN53A-1185 IN53A-1185 Acknowledgements Acknowledgements Ongoing funding for this project is provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA Ocean Service, Award NA04NOS4730254, and the National Science Foundation through grant ATM-0447031. Major contributions to the project are being provided as a component of the SURA Coastal Ocean Observing and Prediction (SCOOP) Program, an initiative of the Southeastern Universities Research Association (SURA). Funding support for SCOOP has been provided by the Office of Naval Research, Award N00014-04-1-0721, and by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA Ocean Service, Award NA04NOS4730254. Further support provided by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. Any material in this poster represents the understanding of the authors and not necessarily of NSF. Interoperability in Interoperability in Sensor Networks Sensor Networks OOSTethys OOSTethys Semantic Sensor Observation Networks in a Semantic Sensor Observation Networks in a Billion-Sensor World Billion-Sensor World We are a community of software developers and marine scientists who develop open source tools to integrate ocean observing systems. Our goal is to dramatically reduce the time it takes to install, adopt and update standards-compliant Web services. We test and develop our software with an open- access interoperability test bed. Our end-to-end "system of systems" includes over 1000 platforms with real-time data, and it’s growing fast. If you install one of our reference implementations, or if you have your own Sensor Observation Service, we encourage you to register it in the system. We believe that standards enable innovation, so we work directly with standards organizations. At the Open Geospatial Consortium, we initiated an Oceans Interoperability Experiment so we could advance the OGC Sensor Web Enablement initiative. We just finished Phase I and we are in process of starting Phase II, so stay tuned. http://oostethys.org http://oostethys.org System Components System Components Community vocabularies and ontologies support data discovery and integration We are developing OGC Sensor Observation Service (SOS) reference implementations to help you get an SOS installed easily and quickly on a web server. The following applications are available. Contact each leader if you want to join us. * PERL (Eric Bridger, GoMOOS, [email protected]) * JAVA (Luis Bermudez, SURA, [email protected]) * PYTHON (Bill Howe, NaNOOS, [email protected]) * ASP (Brenda Babin, lumcon, [email protected]) Toolkits Toolkits Collaborator Collaborator s s Semantic Semantic Mediator Mediator QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Improving understanding of coastal phenomena requires an IT infrastructure to bring heterogeneous information to decision support tools. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Term mappings, rules, and inferences for powerful search capabilities http://marinemetadata.org/ http://marinemetadata.org/ semanticframework semanticframework

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Page 1: L E Bermudez 1, P Bogden 2, G Creager 3, J Graybeal 4, Dec 2008 L E Bermudez 1, P Bogden 2, G Creager 3, J Graybeal 4, Dec 2008 1 bermudez@sura.org, 2

L E Bermudez L E Bermudez 11, P Bogden , P Bogden 22, G Creager , G Creager 33, J Graybeal , J Graybeal 44, Dec 2008, Dec [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]@mbari.org

In 2010, there will be 10,000 telemetric devices for every human in the planet (prediction by Ernst and Young).

IN53A-1185IN53A-1185

AcknowledgementsAcknowledgements

Ongoing funding for this project is provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA Ocean Service, Award NA04NOS4730254, and the National Science Foundation through grant ATM-0447031. Major contributions to the project are being provided as a component of the SURA Coastal Ocean Observing and Prediction (SCOOP) Program, an initiative of the Southeastern Universities Research Association (SURA). Funding support for SCOOP has been provided by the Office of Naval Research, Award N00014-04-1-0721, and by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA Ocean Service, Award NA04NOS4730254. Further support provided by the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. Any material in this poster represents the understanding of the authors and not necessarily of NSF.

Interoperability in Sensor Interoperability in Sensor NetworksNetworks

OOSTethysOOSTethys

Semantic Sensor Observation Networks in a Billion-Sensor Semantic Sensor Observation Networks in a Billion-Sensor WorldWorld

We are a community of software developers and marine scientists who develop open source tools to integrate ocean observing systems. Our goal is to dramatically reduce the time it takes to install, adopt and update standards-compliant Web services.

We test and develop our software with an open-access interoperability test bed. Our end-to-end "system of systems" includes over 1000 platforms with real-time data, and it’s growing fast. If you install one of our reference implementations, or if you have your own Sensor Observation Service, we encourage you to register it in the system.

We believe that standards enable innovation, so we work directly with standards organizations. At the Open Geospatial Consortium, we initiated an Oceans Interoperability Experiment so we could advance the OGC Sensor Web Enablement initiative. We just finished Phase I and we are in process of starting Phase II, so stay tuned.

http://oostethys.orghttp://oostethys.org

System ComponentsSystem Components

Community vocabularies and ontologies support data discovery and integration

We are developing OGC Sensor Observation Service (SOS) reference implementations to help you get an SOS installed easily and quickly on a web server. The following applications are available. Contact each leader if you want to join us. * PERL (Eric Bridger, GoMOOS, [email protected]) * JAVA (Luis Bermudez, SURA, [email protected]) * PYTHON (Bill Howe, NaNOOS, [email protected]) * ASP (Brenda Babin, lumcon, [email protected])

ToolkitsToolkitsCollaboratorsCollaborators

Semantic MediatorSemantic Mediator

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Improving understanding of coastal phenomena requires an IT infrastructure to bring heterogeneous information to decision support tools.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Term mappings, rules, and inferences for powerful search capabilities

http://marinemetadata.org/semanticframeworkhttp://marinemetadata.org/semanticframework