Sorry for the cross-post of this, but trying to spread the word broadly... 

MAGIRT is proud to sponsor the webinar, “Using GeoBlacklight to Implement Your Own Geoportal” on February 19 , 2014 at 3 PM EST . 




Reminder: This webinar is FREE to the first 50 registrants who are MAGIRT Members! 




GeoBlacklight is an open-source geospatial discovery technology which expands the Blacklight search platform into GIS data holdings. GeoBlacklight is installable in minutes, easily customizable, and compatible with the Hydra ecosystem ( http://projecthydra.org ). In this webinar, we will (1) demonstrate the GeoBlacklight technology, (2) define and describe geospatial data holdings, (3) discuss how you can implement your own Geoportal using GeoBlacklight, and (4) field questions you may have. 



The technology behind GeoBlacklight goes beyond traditional Geoportals to provide three types of search (text, faceted, and spatial) across a federated repository of shared geospatial metadata, and a rich data model designed for preservation and repository management. Stanford started the development of GeoBlacklight in 2013, and, with MIT and Princeton, released a beta version in 2014, with a planned 1.0 release in 2015. 



Moreover, this effort is an open collaborative project aiming to build off of the successes of the multi-institutional Blacklight and OpenGeoportal federated metadata sharing communities ( http://opengeoportal.org ). 



Registration is $20, or free to MAGIRT members : 

http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=olweb&Template=/Conference/ConferenceList.cfm&ConferenceTypeCode=X 



Speakers: 



Darren Hardy is a GIS Software Engineer at Stanford University, where he develops open-source geospatial digital library software and services. His interdisciplinary research focuses on crowd-sourcing geographic information, geospatial data discovery and management, and spatial effects on information behaviors. He earned Ph.D. and Masters degrees in Environmental Science and Management from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and B.S. and M.S. degrees in Computer Science from the University of Colorado at Boulder. 



Jack Reed is a Geospatial Web Engineer at Stanford University. He works on increasing access to geospatial data at Stanford University Libraries. A contributor to open-source software, Jack is active in the GIS, library, and open-data communities. He also serves on the executive committee of The International Association for Geoscience Diversity. 



Sincerely, 



Paige Andrew 

Chair, MAGIRT