Citations:GeoServer

English citations of GeoServer

1996 2007 2008 2010 2011 2015
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  • 1996, South Australia. Department of Mines and Energy, MESA journal[1], Eastwood, SA: Mines and Energy South Australia, →ISSN, page 2:
    The first stage of the GeoServer is expected to be on-line by May 2001.
  • 2007, National Research Council, A research agenda for geographic information science at the United States Geological Survey, Washington, DC: National Academies Press, →ISBN, page 61:
    Functional analysis for The National Map server. Commercial geospatial data servers (such as the Environmental Systems Research Institute's [ESRI] ArcIMS) and open source solutions (such as MapServer and GeoServer) can both provide a range of mapping functions and GIS capabilities.
  • 2008, Eveline Bernier, Yvan Bédard, Thierry Badard, Frédéric Hubert, “UMapIT(c) (Unrestricted Mapping Interactive Tool): Merging the datacube paradigm with an occurrence-based approach to support on-demand web mapping”, in Michael P. Peterson, editor, International perspectives on maps and the Internet, Lecture notes in geoinformation and cartography, Berlin [u.a.]: Springer, →ISBN, page 198:
    The spatial querying service uses GeoServer [] an open-source project that implements the WFS specification (OGC, 2002).
  • 2010, Bernd Resch, Thomas Blaschke, Manfred Mittlboeck, “Live geography: interoperable geo-sensor webs facilitating the vision of digital earth”, in senseable.mit.edu[2], Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, archived from the original on 2015-05-10:
    The Live Geography approach supports the GENESIS project as it builds the technological foundation for the thematic pilots by providing mechanisms for measurement data provision (Sensor Observation Service), sensor fusion (GeoServer data store), alerting (SAS and CEP) and serverbased data analysis (ArcGIS Server application).
  • 2011, Ramanathan Sugumaran, John DeGroote, Spatial decision support systems: principles and practices, Boca Raton, FL [u.a.]: CRC Press, →ISBN, page 229:
    Examples of common open source map and geospatial server technologies include MapServer, GeoServer, and MapGuide, while ArcGIS Server, GeoMedia WebMap, and AltaMap Server are commercial products.
  • 2015, Frank Hardisty, Sterling Quinn, “[Geography 865: Cloud and Server GIS] Introduction to GeoServer”, in e-education.psu.edu[3], University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University, College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, archived from the original on 2015-05-10:
    Two recent exciting additions to the stable of GeoServer data sources are the Esri file geodatabase and Google Fusion Tables (via GDAL).

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