Portable GIS Version 2 Released

I’ve been a long time fan of running GIS applications on flash drives.   Now that I’m rolling around with a flash drive that you can’t tell is a flash drive, I always have my GIS apps with me.  That said, there is a much easier way to do this than rolling your own apps, Portable GIS.  Version 2 was released today and if you have any interest in having GIS apps in a small package, save yourself the time and just go with Portable GIS.

OSGeo gets mobile with Portable GIS

OSGeo gets mobile with Portable GIS

Portable GIS Version 1.2 Posted

I am excited to read on Jo Cook’s blog that version 1.2 of Portable GIS has been released. The concept of being able to either try out or even use software without having to install it, is how we’ll get GIS applications in the hands of everyone. Plus who doesn’t want to carry GIS on your key chain? That isn’t geeky, it is being prepared!

Note: there have been some problems with the download server, but all seems well as of this moment.


Putting Open Source GIS software in your pocket

Portable GIS: GIS on a USB Stick

I’ve blogged about putting GIS applications on USB memory sticks in the past, but there seems to be some traction going on with this. Jo Cook presented at FOSS4G2007 a talk about Portable GIS. Jo has followed up with a blog post about the talk:

Thanks to everyone who attended my talk at FOSS4G and/or came up and offered me kind words of encouragement afterwards. I’m pretty overwhelmed in the level of interest in this.

That is encouraging. There is now a dedicated page to portable GIS and with more community involvement, maybe we’ll start seeing some real progress here. As I wrote in the comments over there, I feel that for open source GIS to get penetration in many organizations, folks will need to be able to run these applications without the need to install them. Portable GIS is more than just running GIS applications on a USB memory stick, but the idea that these are self contained applications. Of course you don’t want to run production GIS using such applications, but being able to show how many of these open source products can integrate with existing workflows and improve your output might start getting companies to look at them and start deploying them internally.

This is sure something I’m keeping my eye on.


James’ stick has FWTools, Metacarta Labs-on-a-stick, QGIS and SDSFIE on a stick