Safe FME 2010

So yea I’m a little late with this as I’ve been really busy this week. Still I wanted to get out the word (assuming that you pay zero attention elsewhere) that Safe has released FME 2010. Now I’ve got no scientific data to back this up, but I’ve imagined that they were done with FME 2010 for a couple weeks now, but had to wait until the new year arrived before they could release it officially. I of course can understand given they probably had everything printed up beforehand and who wants to be they guy telling the accountants that they have to reprint all their material because they wanted to release in 2009.

Or maybe not…

OK so some really great things in 2010 that I’m looking forward to using in production is the improved metadata support and of course the engine that drives WeoGeo, FME Server.  Oh Canada!

We hope you enjoy the beer, oh, like I mean the ETL, eh.

Safe Software posts all videos from the 2009 FME UC

Safe Software just opened up all the videos from the 2009 FME UC.  If you didn’t go and want to see what the fuss is all about, now is your chance.

We hope you enjoy the beer, oh, like I mean the videos, eh.

We hope you enjoy the beer, oh, like I mean the videos, eh.

Back from the 2009 Safe FME User Conference

Yes, I’m back from almost a week in Canada visiting my friends in Vancouver and the FME UC at Whistler.  First I’d like to thank Safe for the honor of giving the keynote.  I enjoyed it thoroughly and meeting everyone there was an absolute blast.

Both Don and Dale did a great job outlining how Safe was responding to the changing geospatial world.  It really does become clear how well FME is able to bridge gaps in proprietary data ensuring it is easily accessible by all.   FME Server was definitely the focus of the conference and most people I bumped into really want to go that route.  Remote processing is something that everyone can get behind, running scripts on your local desktop is not going to cut it anymore.  The workshops and technical sessions were excellent (though I couldn’t go to every one I wanted to) and the word is that Safe will be posting the video and presentations this week on their website.  I’m not sure if everything will be publicly available, but I’m sure the Don and Dale show will be and that alone is worth paying attention.

The lightning talks were all excellent, Jeff Konnen talked about Rasters and FME Server, Glen Rhea talked about using FME to assist first responders during natural disasters, Peter Lauland showed some FME, SQL and TCL goodness and Paul Bissett showed how WeoGeo is scaling FME Server in the cloud to just clobber huge jobs (specifically they showed spinning up 64 FME engines to process worldwide tiling jobs).

The welcome social was on top of Whistler Blackcomb Mountain and was quite an experience.  I’ve never been to Whistler before and the views just blew me away.  Seeing all the work for the 2010 Olympics (and how much more they have to do) was mind bending.  And just the networking between users was also great.  I really liked seeing how many different ways someone can complete the same task and what different software packages they are using.  Much different from the ESRI/Intergraph/Autodesk conferences I’m used to going to.  Best tool to get the job done is the rule and FME is usually at the center of it.

I’ll try and post more about the conference this week as I recover and get back into the swing of things.  I need to start preparing for the ESRI User Conference early next month and I’ve got some exciting plans for that so stay tuned.

Safe Releases FME 2009

Today Safe Software released FME 2009.  I’ve was unable to take the 2009 beta for a spin (being busy is a good thing these days), but there are three new formats supported that really have me excited; CityGML 1.0, Adobe Geospatial PDF and OpenStreetMap XML (come to think of it Autodesk 3ds support might come in handy at the old architecture studio).  Plus the 20% performance increase over FME 2008 will be a welcome change of pace from software that gets slower as it “improves”.  The improved user interface of Workbench should increase usability for those who are used to other geoprocessing software packages.  Safe has a “What’s Great” brochure available that outlines the improvements in more detail.

WeoGeo Helps Safe Software into the Cloud

Paul Bissett has some great news on Safe Software entering a partnership with WeoGeo.  This is great for users who have looked at the superb FME Server and wondered how the heck could they actually use it.  WeoGeo gets that into the cloud using Amazon Web Services (AWS) and users benefit by being able to pay for what they use.

Details in the press release.  Paul was hinting he had some news for GeoWeb and apparently he wasn’t kidding around.  This could be a game changer for sure.

WeoGeo help FME Server into the cloud

WeoGeo help FME Server into the cloud