Skip to content

AfriSpatial

Open Source Geospatial Solutions

AfriSpatial can help you…

  • Design and implement Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
  • Develop custom geospatial applications
  • Train and develop your staff with FOSS (Free and Open Source) GIS tools
  • Integrate diverse GIS software and data in your enterprise
  • Migrate from proprietary (privative) software to FOSS software
  • With system and staff support
more...

Archive

Category: School GIS

Education is undoubtedly the largest propaganda weapon in this consumerist-driven society. Having just completed matric, I realize that the first eighteen years of my life has been a period of unmitigated Windows brainwashing. It is a travesty to think how the capitalist greed of proprietary software has permeated my life for so long.

I recently began working at AfriSpatial with the intention of keeping myself busy during the holiday and earn some pocket money in the process. I was required to work in Linux which was a somewhat foreign OS to me and, afraid it would mysteriously hurt my fragile Windows PC, I installed Xubuntu OSGeo Live in a Virtual Box. At this stage life was treating me well…

One day, Windows decided to do an update which broke the harmony of my Virtual Machine by somehow preventing connection to the Internet. I wasted precious hours troubleshooting every conceivable error but this was to no avail. I had two choices: either forget about Linux and revert to the primitive ways of life before Linux or take a bold new step into a brighter future. So I actually had no choice and no more patience. I had to install Linux as a dual-boot. There was no other way.

This seemingly inconsequential event instigated a change; a purgation of conscience whose effects altered the kernel of my value system. I guess in hindsight this transmogrification was inevitable for an aspiring programmer.

Having joined the ranks of the converted Linux users, life has become so much brighter, so much more fulfilling, so much more. Gone are the days of tasteless architecture and graphics. The experience has been liberating. I blame schools for polluting their computer labs with expensive proprietary software when there are open source equivalents for just about everything (and often these ‘alternatives’ are better). Open source is undoubtedly the way forward. Anything Windows can do, Linux can do better. I am not trying to be antagonistic, just honest.

These are the confessions of an ex-Windows user.

Interest in QGIS is growing among high school Geography teachers in southern Africa. Teachers are looking for GIS software that is affordable, easy to use and understand and easy to teach with. They say it’s important to be flexible and creative in the classroom and not be stuck with fixed lesson plans. Hands-on work such as on-screen digitising and map composition is important. Quantum GIS satisfies all these requirements.

Following the recent QGIS workshop in the Western Cape we were invited to present a QGIS workshop at Michaelhouse College in kwaZulu-Natal Province. Twenty-two Geography teachers spent Monday 15th Nov in the Geography computer room learning the basics of QGIS and how it could be used in practical lessons. Bridget Fleming, as a Geography teacher who uses GIS in every lesson, gave an introduction from a teacher’s perspective and gave a background on FOSS (Free and Open Source Software) and its history and principles.  Then Gavin Fleming from AfriSpatial and Frank Sokolic from GIS Solutions / EduAction took QGIS through its paces.

Bridget’s tip for teachers who are daunted by technology is: “Just get the kids started and they will teach you the rest!”

15-Nov-2010 09:05, HTC HTC Magic

15-Nov-2010 09:33, HTC HTC Magic

15-Nov-2010 10:57, NIKON COOLPIX L16, 2.8, 5.7mm, 0.007 sec, ISO 565

15-Nov-2010 10:57, NIKON COOLPIX L16, 2.8, 5.7mm, 0.007 sec, ISO 800

15-Nov-2010 10:57, NIKON COOLPIX L16, 2.8, 5.7mm, 0.007 sec, ISO 518

15-Nov-2010 10:58, NIKON COOLPIX L16, 2.8, 5.7mm, 0.011 sec, ISO 800

15-Nov-2010 10:58, NIKON COOLPIX L16, 2.8, 5.7mm, 0.005 sec, ISO 702

15-Nov-2010 10:58, NIKON COOLPIX L16, 2.8, 5.7mm, 0.008 sec, ISO 800

15-Nov-2010 10:59, NIKON COOLPIX L16, 3.5, 9.873mm, 0.008 sec, ISO 400

15-Nov-2010 14:23, HTC HTC Magic