1. Helsinki Region Infoshare – Open Regional Data for All Project Manager Ville Meloni Forum Virium Helsinki September 2011
2. Project Overview 07.11.11 Forum Virium Helsinki “ Making regional information quickly and easily accessible to all. The information can be used freely at no cost ” To develop a network of information owners who maintain and open their data following common guidelines. To build a web service through which the data can be easily found, accessed and utilised. Provide information as machine readable ” raw data ” which is easy to utilize in various applications and web-services. To pilot an open data activity model and its implications to both the producers and end users of the data.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8. www.hri.fi -web-service Data-search, access, feedback, rating and discussions News about project progress , experiences from different stakeholders
9. Application Examples - Statistics Visualization of www.aluesarjat.fi statistics with Google motion chart. http://www.floapps.com/lab/tieke/bigchart.php
10. Application Examples - Geodata Helsinki metropolitan area shapefiles (KML) in use on top of Open Streetmap
11. Application Examples – Library data Data: http://data.kirjastot.fi/ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oLYb28c9JF4 HelMet-library-barcode reader by Jaakko Rajaniemi
12. Application Examples – Public Transport Data: http://developer.reittiopas.fi/ Source: http://sites.google.com/site/reittigps/ ReittiGPS – Markus Halttunen
13.
14.
15.
16.
Notas del editor
-Government efficiency: 1) Increasing data openness makes it easier to use for other government agencies, too. 2) Harmonizing information management practices brings economies of scale and makes knowledge transfer between organizations easier. 3) Saving time for everyone. -Business and innovation: 1) Giving access to government data for free is good for companies. It breeds new markets and supports innovation. 2) Better services for citizens, 3) For example, new ways to use information have many times been found by people who have a different educational background compared to the usual users. -Transparency and democracy: 1) Open data supports active citizenship, research and journalism by increasing transparency. 2) For example, it facilitates discussions in social media by making it easier to reference to government information. -> good example in Finland is what Helsingin Sanomat mediacompany did with their parliamentary election with their “election machine” -> opened that data, bred lots of applications, visualizations and discussion