2013 eurogi dublinked (v1)
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supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
spurring innovation with public sector data
A Creative Dublin Alliance project Supported and Powered by IBM Technologies
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
What is Dublinked?
An initiative of Dublin City Council, DunLaoghaire-Rathdown, South Dublin, Fingal County Councils, and NUI Maynooth, as part of the Creative Dublin Alliance
An innovation network focussed on economic development using public-sector data
A portal for the discovery of static and dynamic data about the Dublin Region, from public and private sources.
A single-point-of-contact for new companies and users who wish to engage with the public sector for data requests and project proposals
Supported also by the OSI, NTA, CSO, PSRA, Dublin Chamber of Commerce, Dublin BID, and many others
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
What is Dublinked?
Federated DataStores, with a unified discovery engineAll data to be directly machine accessible (RDF, URI)Usage supported by workshops and training events
Dublinked
SEARCHIndependentDataStores
MNCs, SMEsAcademia,
Public Sector,Citizens
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
What sort of Data is Available?
Most of our data is OPEN, and released under the PSI license
We have other data which cannot be released due to licensing constraints, and for these we have a single NDA for non-commerical use.
OPEN DATA
RESEARCH DATA
Arts & Culture, Citizen Participation, Demographics, Housing, Land UseTransportation, Road Networks, Education, Economy, Environment,
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
Need to keep it fresh and updated
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
Complements other Activities
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
The Commercial Tension
SMEs and Activists
The Activist: Publicly funded data should be free!!
SMEs don’t want to pay upfront to explore new ideas
Commercial Services
Mapping is expensive, Quality costs
Why should companies make all the money, and the public pay all the costs. That’s not fair!!
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
What is the role of GI?
Most of our users come to us with an ICT background, not a geography, mapping, or GI background.
They ask un-informed questions...
• Where are the roads in Dublin?
• What is the height of buildings in Dublin?
• where is there a free parking spot?
• where are the bus-stops?
• where are the playgrounds in Dublin?
Without GI, it is very difficult to extract value from the data
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
Planning Data – A use case
A good place to start as the data is already availableNormally hidden behind an API
In theory it should be easy, all 4 local authorities used the same system and captured similar data...
but
It took us at least 6 months to actually manage to produce a common output format. Problems arose such as
- projections (eg: WGS vs ITM)- export formats (eg: CSV vs SHP vs KML)- same content but different titles- different software versions causing problems
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
IBM SPUD – Semantic Processing of Urban Data
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
Lessons Learnt
Large companies research, startups develop
Data quality is critical and is difficult to achieve
The process of releasing data from organisations is slower than one would expect – often for perfectly valid reasons
The process of encouraging people to innovate with public-sector data is equally slow – an education process
Often data gets lost, or it’s not in a form that can be exported – it takes effort to extract it.
Unexpectedly many different forms of public sector data can offer diverse opportunities for new businesses!! (eg playgrounds)
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
Where do we go from here...
Targeting new areas – particularly fragmented sectors such as tourism and the social services.
Service Level Agreements – if companies depend on public sector data, who is going to guarantee that it will keep coming?
More support for startups – plan to work more closely with economic development units, enterprise boards and enterprise Ireland.
Crowd-sourcing – need to involve the citizen more in enhancing the datasets and the use cases
Better Search – provide more links and discovery mechanisms for data, particularly stuff hiding within other datasets.
Keep it Fresh – keep delivering more data, dynamic data, greater variety, more participants. Stale data = dead data.
supporting data-driven innovation in the Dublin region
Delivering Economic Benefit – NEW JOBS