Difference between revisions of "Main Page"

From CUOSGwiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 18: Line 18:
 
* [[Spatial Multiple Criteria Evaluation and Digitizing in ILWIS]] by [[User: Reneebzt | Renee Bazinet]]
 
* [[Spatial Multiple Criteria Evaluation and Digitizing in ILWIS]] by [[User: Reneebzt | Renee Bazinet]]
 
* [[Development of a Kriging Analysis in GRASS GIS]] by [[User: chrisbot | Christopher Bot]]
 
* [[Development of a Kriging Analysis in GRASS GIS]] by [[User: chrisbot | Christopher Bot]]
  +
* [[Highly Effective Analysis of DEM in OpenJUMP]] by [[User: tombrown | Thomas Brown]]
   
 
== Tutorials From 2012 ==
 
== Tutorials From 2012 ==

Revision as of 12:43, 27 November 2013

Carleton University Open Source GIS Tutorials

Temporary Service Disruption

Please note: the ability to create your own user account has been temporarily suspended, due to excessive abuse by spambots, etc. If you would like an account to make legitimate contributions to the tutorials on this site, please contact Scott Mitchell (see http://www.carleton.ca/~smitch).

FOSS4G/GRASS workshops

Relevant help links for GEOM4008 Students

  • Consult the User's Guide for information on using the wiki software.
  • MediaWiki FAQ
  • Students in GEOM 4008, please remember to create your own account in this system, and login to it when you write your wiki pages

Tutorials from 2013

Tutorials From 2012

Tutorials From 2010

These are from a completed class, and the students have released control of the tutorial contents to the community. If you want to update/correct/improve any of these tutorials, please feel free to log in and help improve our tutorials.

Unless otherwise noted in the individual tutorial, all of these were originally developed on/for a Windows environment. Specifically, most students were using classroom computers running Windows XP, with QGIS 1.5 (including GRASS Tools), and FWTools. Please note that this environment imposed a 32 bit Windows XP constraint that prevented the system from using all the RAM in the computers, which is likely the culprit in those cases where the tutorial authors complained that the tools could not work with larger datasets.

2010 contributions:

Previous Tutorials

Scott is slowly moving over content from the 2008 class.