
Joe Davis shared this pic from the Brecon Beacons National Park visitor centre
Joe Davis shared this pic from the Brecon Beacons National Park visitor centre
We are extremely pleased to announce the six funded proposals for our 2025 QGIS.ORG grant programme. Funding for the programme was sourced by you, our project donors and sponsors! Note: For more context surrounding our grant programme, please see: QGIS Grants #10: Call for Grant Proposals 2025
These are the proposals:
As usual, we provide a summary of the proposal discussions.
Since the total requested budget is equal to the available budget, there is no need for a voting this year.
On behalf of the QGIS.ORG project, I would like to thank everyone who submitted proposals for this call!
Robert Simmon shared this pic of a road sign approaching El Chalten in Argentina. It reminds me of the second post on the site when Ken and I had the idea to start Mappery.
Cartonaut spotted this map of San Francisco peninsula for exclusivefresh.com on the back of their fish delivery van. A great pic at 60mph!
Doug Greenfield said “Bottle of red cuz dry January is over thank goodness”. Who are we to disagree?
Hace un tiempo atrás, hablamos del nuevo plugin ETL (Extract, Transform and Load) integrado en la plataforma de gvSIG Online,que permite realizar cualquier integración, transformación, edición… geoespacial de datos.
Hoy queremos compartir una integración que se ha estado desarrollando recienteemente y que mejora significativamente la gestión administrativa y geográfica en las entidades locales: la conexión entre el gestor de expedientes SEGEX de SEDIPUALBA y la plataforma gvSIG Online.
El resultado es una potente funcionalidad que permite, por ejemplo, identificar todos los expedientes asociados a una parcela o localizar en el mapa los elementos vinculados a un expediente concreto. Todo ello sin necesidad de duplicar información ni modificar los sistemas de origen.
En el siguiente vídeo mostramos cómo se realiza la conexión entre ambas plataformas y los beneficios que aporta.
Esta iniciativa refuerza el compromiso de la Asociación gvSIG con el desarrollo de soluciones abiertas, interoperables y orientadas a mejorar la eficiencia en la administración pública.
En el Ministerio de Transporte y Obras Públicas (MTOP) de Uruguay se realizó el lanzamiento oficial de la 8ª edición del curso-concurso gvSIG Batoví, una iniciativa que desde sus comienzos ha convocado a cientos de estudiantes y docentes de todo el país, además de participantes de Colombia, México, Cuba y Madrid.
El proyecto invita a presentar propuestas geográficas que aborden problemáticas locales desde una perspectiva territorial, en sintonía con los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible (ODS) promovidos por la Organización de las Naciones Unidas (ONU). “Es un proyecto que se ha transformado en una política de Estado que ha atravesado los distintos períodos de gobierno y es nuestra aspiración que siga creciendo y fortaleciéndose durante este período”, expresó el director nacional de Topografía, Arq. Felipe de los Santos.
Desde 2011, la dirección nacional de Topografía promueve este tipo de experiencias formativas mediante un convenio con Ceibal y la Asociación gvSIG. A partir de 2017, el curso-concurso ha ofrecido oportunidades de crecimiento tanto a estudiantes como a docentes, generando impactos positivos en las comunidades participantes.
Durante el acto de lanzamiento, la subsecretaria de Transporte, Claudia Peris, destacó el potencial transformador de este proyecto y valoró su alcance. Por su parte, Felipe De los Santos, expresó que este evento representa un gran desafío y un enorme orgullo para su cartera, por dos razones fundamentales. Primero, porque “forma parte de las primeras acciones” orientadas a “fomentar el trabajo colaborativo dentro y fuera del Ministerio. Queremos consolidar espacios de sinergia entre quienes diseñamos y ejecutamos políticas públicas en todo el territorio nacional”. Segundo, porque este proyecto ha sabido sostenerse en el tiempo, “ha atravesado los distintos períodos de gobierno”, consolidándose como una verdadera “política de Estado”.
De los Santos también subrayó que la iniciativa “ha trascendido fronteras”, con participación de estudiantes y docentes de Colombia, México y Cuba, así como de referentes de universidades latinoamericanas y europeas como la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, la Universitat Oberta de Catalunya y la Universidad Central Marta Abreu de las Villas.
Los proyectos desarrollados en el marco del concurso han abordado temáticas clave como la conservación ambiental, el mejoramiento del espacio urbano y barrial, la participación ciudadana y los derechos colectivos, contribuyendo desde una mirada integradora a la construcción de ciudad y territorio.
Las inscripciones y bases del curso-concurso estarán disponibles a partir de mayo en el sitio web institucional del MTOP. Esta convocatoria está dirigida a estudiantes y docentes de nivel medio de Educación Secundaria y de UTU.
En la actividad también estuvo presente la directora general de Secretaría, Yenny Merlo; el director nacional de Vialidad, Federico Magnone; el jefe del departamento de Geomática, Sergio Acosta y Lara; el sub gerente de Desarrollo Profesional Docente, Nicolás Ambrosi; la inspectora nacional de Geografía y Geología, Prof. Magister Mónica Canaveris.
A beautiful simple map spotted by Wanmei L in downtown LA
I have enjoyed a rest week. I exercised every day, but nothing intense or long, with double easy workouts on Thursday. I did a short bit of tempo pace running on Thursday, 8-8.5 effort out of ten. It felt great.
16.3 miles running
7 hours, 16 minutes all training
981 ft D+ running
Next week I'll be diving into tempo runs for real as I get into my second eight-week training block.
A pale brown concrete bike path rises in curves toward snow-covered Rocky Mountain foothills under broken low clouds.
Robert Simmon shared these from the Museo de Arte Precolombino in Santiago, Chile. I love the way the map wraps around the corner of the gallery.
Timeline of pre-Colombian cultures mounted on the wall of the Museo de Arte Precolombino. The oldest cultures are dated to 14,000 BC.
Another year, another set of opaque accounts from What3Words. Why do I say opaque? Because despite quite a few years of reading company accounts I feel that I must be missing something when I read through these accounts.
The headline info is clear:
The cumulative position is eye watering, since its formation w3w has accumulated £146m of losses and taken on £160m of investment,
The directors consider w3w to be a “going concern” and it looks as if it can sustain another year or so of losses with a bit of shareholder support but unless major revenues start to materialise then at some stage a major cost reduction program will be needed or ..?
I don’t understand how this works, the company continues to lose sums that are many times it’s revenue and yet investors continue to support the business presumably because they have insight into the future upside that will come from a massive upturn in revenues or a golden clad purchaser who will confer unicorn status on the company.
Maybe I am an old fashioned entrepreneur who fussed too much about costs and revenues.
Maybe this all works out brilliantly and the company is on the verge of becoming an outstanding success, as the directors say in acknowledging risk “The group has created a new addressing format, with the aim of becoming a universal standard for location referencing. A key aspect of this is acquiring and retaining a high volume of newly engaged consumers, creating wide-scale network effects and consumer behaviour change to ultimately deliver commercial contracts.”
On the other hand, maybe we will look back on this saga in a couple of years and wonder how we could possibly have believed that it would ever make money. Well I won’t be doing that!
Doug spotted this map design on the exit of an office building in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Joe Davis spotted this massive map display in Lyon
Who can resist a bit of map tat? Certainly not Wanmei L.
We’re happy to share some major updates coming to the QGIS platform over the next few months. These changes are part of a long-planned technical migration that will bring new possibilities and ensure QGIS stays modern, fast, and future-ready.
Qt6 is the latest version of the cross-platform application framework that QGIS is built upon. Moving to Qt6 allows us to:
While most of the migration is complete, a few final tasks remain, especially around Continuous Integration (the automated processes that run on each change to the QGIS code base to help reduce bugs), layout rendering, and PDF output. The core team is actively working on these and making significant progress.
To mark this significant backend shift, we’ve decided to align the Qt6 migration with a new major release: QGIS 4.0, which will arrive after QGIS 3.44, in October 2025.
Here’s what you need to know:
This strategy allows us to modernise QGIS without forcing a major rewrite of existing plugins. Some adjustments will be needed to ensure QGIS 4.0 compatibility.
Note on Features: While QGIS 4.0 marks a major version jump, it’s essential to understand that this release will include only a few new user-facing features. The primary focus is on the transition to Qt6, which involves significant changes under the hood.
In the QGIS project, a major version number doesn’t necessarily mean a flood of new features—it signals a break in the API. This ensures that developers are aware of potential compatibility updates needed for their plugins or integrations, even if the visible functionality remains largely unchanged.
This isn’t just about upgrading for the sake of it — it’s about keeping QGIS secure, modern, and maintainable.
To ensure a smooth transition for users and developers, we’re taking a phased approach:
This gradual rollout ensures users who depend on stable environments can continue with 3.40 LTR, while early adopters and plugin developers move forward with Qt6 in 4.0.
We’re making it easier than ever for plugin developers to prepare:
If you maintain a plugin, now’s the perfect time to start testing and preparing for Qt6 compatibility! See:
The migration to Qt6 isn’t just theoretical — it’s already happening and ready for testing:
Start exploring Qt6 builds today and help us shape the future of QGIS.
We’ll share more updates in the coming weeks. In the meantime:
A massive thank you to all contributors, developers, testers, and organisations supporting this transition.
QGIS 4.0 is shaping to be a big leap forward, and we can’t wait to share it with you!
Edited on 24.04.25
- Removed leftover texts
- Added a note on new features in QGIS 4.0
A little bit of fun for you. We have teamed up with our friends at TripGeo who make a whole load of fun map and travel related games including my favourite Scrambled Maps (Warning – you may get hooked) to create a new puzzle for you Scrambled Maps in the Wild. We have started with 7 puzzles and plan to add more if people like them and want more, so do let us know what you think
La Semana Santa no solo es una de las celebraciones más emblemáticas del calendario, sino también un gran reto organizativo para los municipios. En este contexto, la colaboración entre el Ayuntamiento de Albacete, la Policía Local y la Junta de Cofradías ha permitido desarrollar itinerarios seguros para los desfiles procesionales, utilizando como herramienta clave la Infraestructura de Datos Espaciales, basada en tecnología gvSIG Online.
Gracias a esta plataforma, que ofrece información geográfica completa y constantemente actualizada, se ha podido planificar con antelación los servicios de emergencia, diseñar recorridos accesibles y seguros, y coordinar los distintos servicios municipales involucrados en la gestión de estos eventos multitudinarios.
Se ha publicado la información de las distintas procesiones de Semana Santa en el Geoportal de la Policía Local, accesible desde la web del Ayuntamiento y de la IDE de Albacete. La plataforma de gestión de información geográfica de Albacete no solo facilita el acceso a mapas, catálogos y servicios de visualización, sino que se ha convertido en una herramienta indispensable para el diseño de proyectos y la planificación urbana. Según ha destacado Francisco Navarro, teniente de alcalde y concejal de Movilidad, “el Geoportal es un servicio esencial y fundamental que permite conocer la ciudad centímetro a centímetro y nos ayuda en la planificación urbana”.
La Unidad de Cartografía, Topografía y Geomática del Ayuntamiento ha sido la encargada de elaborar y mantener la cartografía y la información espacial que alimenta esta plataforma. La información se organiza y visualiza en distintos visores temáticos, como el Visualizador de la Policía Local, desde donde se gestiona todo lo relativo a los recorridos procesionales de Semana Santa. Tras la creación de la estructura en la geodatabase por parte del equipo de Topografía, es la Policía Local quien se encarga de mantener actualizados los recorridos, fechas y detalles.
Además, la IDE de Albacete ofrece a los ciudadanos otras funcionalidades destacadas como el Visor de Urbanismo (Plan General de Ordenación Urbana), el Visor Cartográfico (con cartografía histórica y límites administrativos), el Visor del Cementerio (para localizar sepulturas) o el Visor Feria, que permite gestionar la ocupación de espacios durante grandes eventos.
Esta experiencia demuestra una vez más el valor de las plataformas basadas en tecnología gvSIG Online para la gestión municipal, la mejora de la eficiencia de los servicios públicos y la implicación de diferentes actores en la toma de decisiones a través de la geoinformación.
La prensa dice:
Andrew Tyrrell could have said “Here is one I made before” (readers of a certain age will get the cultural reference) but he was a bit more loquacious and said “Driving to #Queenstown to run my first half marathon tomorrow, and stopped off along Lake Cromwell to admire one of my #MapsInTheWild. I made this in my day job, and there’s one for each of the freedom camping sites managed by Toitū Te Whenua.”
Nice one, Andrew!
Whoots is a simple tile server proxy for WMS servers. WMS > TMS. So if you have an application that only works with ZYX Google-style tiles and all you have is a WMS server, you can use it to re-route the request.
It was created way back in 2010! Here’s the post announcing it: WhooTS a small wms to tile proxy – WMS in Potlatch
There’s been few recent changes.
The code is at https://github.com/timwaters/whoots
Jeff Allen shared htis. No idea what or where the building is but this is spectacular.
A little bit of image search and I discovered that this is Highland Hall on the University of Toronto Scarborough Campus, still spectacular.
En la última versión de gvSIG Online se ha incorporado un nuevo tipo de simbología: la leyenda por mapa de calor. Dicha leyenda permite representar, tanto la densidad de puntos como con valores ponderados, mediante un gradiente continuo de colores.
En el caso de densidad de puntos podemos ver en qué zonas hay más puntos, y puede ser muy útil para ver dónde hay más farolas en un municipio, dónde ha habido más accidentes… En ese caso todos los puntos tienen el mismo valor.
Si se utiliza un campo para ponderar, un caso podría ser el de estaciones de tomas de datos, por ejemplo de temperatura, polución…, y donde el campo a ponderar sería el de dichos valores.
En ambos tipos de leyenda se dispone de dos tipos de gradientes: uno donde se indica el color inicial y color final, y en el que se calcula el gradiente entre esos dos colores, y otro en el que se pueden indicar gradiente de varios colores y el porcentaje de aplicación de cada uno.
Los otros parámetros que se deben configurar son el radio (en píxeles), que calcularíamos en función de la separación de los puntos que estemos representando, y los píxeles por celda.
Aparte, si la capa está configurada con parámetro temporal y aplicamos dicha leyenda, podríamos visualizar cómo cambian los gradientes en el tiempo. Por ejemplo si representamos una capa de delitos, podríamos ver si las zonas con más delitos han ido cambiando según el tiempo,
En el siguiente vídeo podéis ver su funcionamiento:
Doug G spotted this, very useful if you are in Western Massachusetts
I brought running back in week eight. I ran five times, and four days in a row for the first time since early June, 2024. The numbers:
31.9 miles running
12 hours, 12 minutes all training
5,171 ft D+ running
Tuesday I did hard running and hiking intervals on Towers road, 5.5 km of 10% grade. 30 minutes at 9/10 effort, my biggest single workout of the season. I'm only a minute slower on the climb than early season runs in 2020 and 2021. That's very encouraging.
Today I went back to the hills for an easy long run. It felt easy until mile eight, where I boarded the struggle bus for the last two and a half miles. Still, I enjoyed the entire run, saw lots of hikers, and the season's first wildflowers: sand lily, clematis, pasqueflower, and springbeauty.
Close up of white Sand lily blossoms with a dirt trail and high plains in the background. Lower Timber trail, Lory State Park, Colorado.
Conditions are very dry in our foothills. The creeks in Well Gulch and below Arthur's Rock often have running water into May, but have none now. It's not a good sign.
Raf has been on a run of great maps in the wild recently. This one is a detailed aerial image on the label of Lacrima Olea, “The plots where the olives come from, in gold on top of the orthophotomap, is the label of Lacrima Olea, the Picual variety extra virgin olive oil home grown and cold pressed produced by Cooperativa de Godall, Catalunya”
Javier Jimenez Shaw spotted this giant ad at Alexanderplatz station, Berlin. We last saw Gordon on the London Underground, now he is in Berlin – he gets around!
Raf spotted this fabric sold by the meter at El Barato shop in Reus, with a vintage map pattern
Michael Stuyts shared pamphlet with us from a play being performed in Antwerp
Poor weather last week complicated my training plans. I ran more than I did in week six, but not much more. I did some indoor intervals, a tempo run, the usual yoga and pool HIIT, my favorite bike loop of Southwest Fort Collins, and a great trail run in the hills of Lory State Park on Saturday. All together, here are the numbers:
24 miles running
9 hours, 32 minutes all training
2,313 ft D+ running
My body is holding up well, so I'll be doing even more running in week eight. Spoiler alert: I've already had one solid running workout, the hardest of my season so far.
A sandy trail along a partially snow-covered ridge approaches a stand of pine trees under a blue sky. Lory State Park, Colorado.
I'm not the first person to make a sandwich with fried eggs and pastrami, but I think I may have come up with a name for it that could stick. Served hot with melted cheddar cheese on slices of grilled sourdough bread, I call it the "Poulletier" after François Poulletier de la Salle, the discoverer of cholesterol.
A grilled sandwich, cut in two, on a green plate.
Hash browns would be good in this. As would a thick smear of pesto sauce, suggested by a person in a reply to my Mastodon post. I'll try one or both of these additions next time.
Kevin Carey sent this “A glorious mappy chair at Oldmeldrum House Hotel, Aberdeenshire”
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Another one from Raf, he must have been. traveling a bit. This one is a hand drawn map on a blackboard inside El Refugi, a small eats & drinks place in Arbolí, Catalunya
The GeoServer 3 crowdfunding campaign is now entering its final phase. After months of effort and strong engagement from the geospatial community, we are approaching our collective goal. The campaign has reached over 90% of its target, with only €40,000 remaining. Several organizations are currently engaged in discussions, and we remain confident that we will successfully complete the campaign.
📅 We will officially close the campaign on Monday, April 21, 2025.
This is the final window of opportunity for organizations that wish to contribute and ensure GeoServer’s continued innovation and reliability.
GeoServer 3 is more than just a version number—it is a significant technical shift that will modernize the platform’s foundations and secure its future. This includes:
You can learn more about the technical transition already underway in this behind-the-scenes update.
If the total contributions exceed the financial target, the additional workforce funded through this campaign will be redirected to tasks identified and prioritized by the GeoServer Project Steering Committee (PSC). This ensures the extra support directly benefits the project’s long-term roadmap and the broader user community.
We extend our sincere thanks to all who have supported this campaign so far—through funding, code contributions, testing, and outreach. The effort has already mobilized an international team of core contributors who are ready to move forward.
We now invite all remaining stakeholders to join before the deadline. If your organization uses GeoServer and values its open, sustainable evolution, this is your moment to act.
🔗 To pledge or contact the coordination team, please visit:
https://geoserver.org/sponsor/gs3-crowdfunding
Let’s complete this journey—together.
The following organisations have pledged their support:
Individual donations: Abhijit Gujar, Laurent Bourgès, Stefan Overkamp.
In the last couple of months a total of 57 new plugins were published in the QGIS plugin repository.
In early February a new web portal for QGIS plugins was launched, in line with the main website overhaul, intending on improving the user experience and with new functionalities as well as detailed information on over two thousand plugins. Congratulations on all involved, and enjoy everyone!
Here follows the quick overview in reverse chronological order. If any of the names or short descriptions catches your attention, you can find the direct link to the plugin page in the table below:
Space trace |
Draws a spacecraft’s ground trace over the Earth’s surface. |
SpaceMouse3Dconnexion |
Plugin Direct HID support for 3DConnexion SpaceMouse in QGIS 3D views. |
ČHMÚ/CHMI – Meteorological Data Processing |
Weather measurements and spatial interpolation. |
UHI |
Urban Heat Island. |
FPT Plot Allocation |
Plot allocation for forest inventory. |
Cornelis |
Help produce ‘cartographic’ tessellations of the plan, and try to imitate M.C. Escher. |
Fun Reprojector |
Reproject vector layers by selecting anthropomorphized characters as coordinate systems. Enjoy transforming your layers with a fun and intuitive graphical interface! |
AzimuthTool |
A powerful QGIS plugin for generating vector line layers from azimuths or quadrant bearings and distances, starting from a user-defined point. |
GSM Cover Builder |
GSM Cover Builder allows you to quickly generate coverage plans based on localities and a defined coverage radius. |
Matti |
A plugin to estimate soybean maturity. |
SplashTool Result Loader |
Load and symbolize results from a SplashTool output directory. |
aGrae | Mapeo Integral | Analíticas de Mapeo |
aGrae Mapeo Integral, permite gestionar la informacion de cultivos asociados a la explotacion. |
aGrae | Mapeo Integral | Mapeo de Procesos |
aGrae Mapeo Integral, permite gestionar la informacion de cultivos asociados a la explotacion. |
Change GPKG Path |
QGIS Plugin to change all GPKG datasources inside a GPKG project. |
Layer Group Locator Plugin |
Registers a locator filter that searches for layer groups by name (case insensitive) and jumps to the group in the layer legend. |
Warszawa GIS |
Wtyczka zapewniająca łatwy dostęp do danych przestrzennych m.st. Warszawy. |
QGIS Track Changes |
This plugin helps track changes in vector layer data, including: – Feature modifications – Geometry updates – Attribute changes It ensures data integrity by logging changes efficiently within QGIS. |
Promptly |
This plugin provides an interface to send prompts to various LLM providers (Ollama, OpenAI, OpenRouter, Anthropic, and custom endpoints) and execute the generated Python code in QGIS. Features include: Support for multiple LLM providers, Database schema integration for SQL queries, Layer metadata reference for QGIS operations, Code execution with error handling and fixing, Cross-platform compatibility. |
FloodRiskSwatPlus |
QGIS plugin to assess flood risk impacts in economic terms for SWAT+ scenarios. |
QTempo |
Plugin for accessing data from the TEMPO-Online statistical database of the National Institute of Statistics of Romania. |
NeighborHighlighter |
优化邻区可视化工具,点击空白处自动恢复颜色 |
Geom From Attribute |
This plugin allows users to create geometry using attributes from table. |
PackageInstallerQgis |
Package installer for QGIS plugins. |
AutoSave |
Automatically saves the QGIS project and editable layers at a user-defined interval. |
Stratigraphic Thickness |
Estimates the stratigraphic thickness based on a trigonometric calculation with topographic correction using a DEM. |
Pan Europeo Processing |
gdal calc wrapper for multi utility attribute functions raster calculator. |
grd2stream |
Streamline generation from gridded data. |
Add BIM Data Dictionary Semantics |
Use the buildingSMART Data Dictionary (bSDD) API or similar APIs to classify features and add attributes. |
PlacesSearch |
Fetch places data from Google Maps API and save to Shapefile. |
Crop Site Suitability Analysis |
Equal weighted overlay analysis for crop site suitability mapping. |
MOVE – MobilityDB |
QGIS Plugin to display MobilityDB query results. |
LayoutSelector |
Load and manage QPT layout templates in QGIS. |
Social Tenure Domain Model |
A pro-poor land information tool that offers a complimentary land administration system that is pro-poor, gender-sensitive, affordable and sustainable for the promotion of secure land and property rights for all. |
QGIS Pip Manager |
A QGIS plugin to manage Python packages within the QGIS environment, simplifying the installation, uninstallation, and searching of packages without command-line interaction. |
VectorSelector |
Select a one or multiple fields in a vector file filter columns and create a widget. |
Sig Caceres WMS |
Gestión del SIG de Cáceres. Menú de carga de capas WMS. |
Buscador Sig Caceres |
Buscador SIG de Cáceres. Permite realizar búsquedas por: Barrios, calles, caminos, carreteras, toponimia,… |
Minimum Bounding Box |
Create layer with extents (minx,miny, maxx, maxy) and extents geometry. |
Manning’s Roughness Generator |
Plugin to generate high resolution 2D Manning’s roughness coefficients raster from land cover data. |
IdentifProj |
This QGIS plugin is an easy way to guess which map projection has been used for a location. The plugin has 3 use cases : – type projected coordinates and get all thez possible points all over the world – click on a location on the map and find all the possible projected coordinates – draw a bbox and find all the projected bboxes IMPORTANT: at the first start, the plugin will build its CRS database from Qgis CRS list. It can last au couple of minutes but it will only happen one time. This plugin has been initially developed during a third year engineering project at ENSG (https://www.ensg.eu) |
QMapCompare |
A QGIS plugin that enables you to compare maps smoothly. |
Italy Inspire Cadastre Downloader |
QGIS plugin for downloading cadastral data of cadastrals parcels and cadastral zoning in Italy. |
EconoMe |
Load information from QGIS into your EconoMe project and vice versa. Download the calculated damage and risk results from EconoMe to visualize them in your QGIS project. IMPORTANT: You need to have an EconoMe User Account in order to use the plugin! |
MeasureCalculator |
QGIS plugin for calculates area, perimeter, and length for selected features with automatic reprojection for accuracy. |
iNaturalist Extractor |
Extract data from iNaturalist database from an extent. |
3D IO |
Plugin for converting to and from popular 3D data formats. |
Add Legend Labels to Layer Attributes |
Plugin to extract legend labels from the current layer style and assigns them as attribute values to the corresponding features. |
Georondonia |
Tools for the georeferencing of rural properties in Settlement Projects or Land Projects, based on the updated Technical Manual for Georeferencing of Rural Properties from the National Institute of Colonization and Agrarian Reform (INCRA), and for the Rural Environmental Registry (CAR). |
Temporal Resample |
This plugin uses as input a user vector layer that has a temporal field and resamples it to a new time spacing provided by the user. |
tomofast_x_q |
Supports Tomofast-x geophysical inversion code |
geol_qmaps |
The geol_qmaps plugin facilitates legacy field data import, fieldwork preparation and post-fieldwork processing using the geol_qmaps QGIS mapping template developed by the WAXI Team. |
LibreGeoLens |
Experiment with MLLMs to analyze remote sensing imagery. |
Equalyzer – Split Polygons into Equal Areas or Parts |
Splits polygons into equal areas or equal parts easily |
EBVCubeVisualizer |
Visualize biodiversity-related netCDF data within QGIS. |
Gender Enabling Environments Spatial Tool (GEEST) |
Gender Enabling Environments Spatial Tool. |
Topaze |
Add to QGIS capability to compute topographical survey with data fom field recorder. |
GDI |
This plugin is designed to facilitate seamless discovery and access to data available on the GDI platform by leveraging its integrated APIs: the Data Explorer, Authorization Server, and OGC Resource Server. |
Conspiracy of Casrtographers shared this mock-up image of seven Petrofuture maps on display in the boiler room of the Georgetown Steam Plant. For more on Petrofuture have a look at https://conspiracyofcartographers.com/