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Policy Visualisation Network. Open data. Oyj - Postinumerotuotteet muuttuvat maksuttomiksi. Postinumerotuotteiden toimitustapaa ja hinnoittelua uudistetaan.

Oyj - Postinumerotuotteet muuttuvat maksuttomiksi

Uudistus helpottaa oikeiden osoitetietojen saatavuutta ja parantaa postilähetyksissä käytettävien osoitetietojen laatua. Postinumerotuotteet (Postinumerotiedosto, Perusosoitteisto ja Postinumeromuutokset) ovat yrityksille tarjottavia palveluja, joilla yritys voi päivittää asiakasrekisteriään ja varmistua osoitteiden oikeellisuudesta. Postinumerotuotteet muuttuvat maksuttomiksi 1.1.2013 lukien.

Aineistot ovat kuitenkin ladattavissa maksutta itsepalveluperiaatteella Itella.fi- sivulta tai ulkoiselta FTP-palvelimelta jo 3.12.2012 alkaen. Asiakaskohtaiset toimitukset samoin kuin asiakastietojen, sopimusten ja tilausten hallinta sekä laskutus päättyvät vuoden 2013 alussa. Postinumerotuotteiden nimi on 1.1.2013 alkaen Postinumeropalvelut. The Open Data Manual — Open Data Manual v2.0alpha documentation.

Embed. Kuinka julkaista excel-datasetti koneluettavassa muodossa? Jos sinulla on avointa dataa excelissä, sen julkaiseminen koneluettavassa muodossa on usein hankalaa, jos sinulla ei ole sopivaa webbipalvelua/tietokantaa olemassa.

Kuinka julkaista excel-datasetti koneluettavassa muodossa?

Tiedoston tallentaminen csv-muodossa tekee siitä helpommin koneluettavaa, mutta edelleen tiedosto pitää tallentaa webbipalvelimelle polkuun, joka pysyy takuuvarmasti aina samana. Keksin jännän tavan tehdä taulukkomuotoisesta datasta koneluettavaa käyttämällä hyväksi Google Docs -palvelua. Jos lähteenä on Excel-tiedosto, tee näin: 1) Siirry sivulle 2) Paina vasemmalla ylhäällä olevaa "Upload"-nappia 3) Valitse "Files" ja valitse levyltäsi haluttu excel-tiedosto 4) Paina "Start upload"5) Avaa dokumentti ja valitse "File" / "Export to Google Spreadsheet" Nyt selaimesi lataa aineiston suoraan Googlen palvelimilta csv-muodossa!

Ko. url viittaa tästälähin suoraan aineistoon. Does Switzerland have no need for Open Government Data? Switzerland is one of our incubating OKFN:LOCAL chapters in its last stage before full incorporation.

Does Switzerland have no need for Open Government Data?

Its core group of organisers, a talented collaboration from Geneva and Zürich who also founded are planning an Open Data Conference in Zürich on June 28th. Here’s a hello from Hannes Gassert and Andreas Amsler regarding the state of things in Switzerland, and why they believe their nation still needs more open data. Switzerland is often cited as a model democracy. It does indeed have one of the most participatory systems, but, most notably, doesn’t have any Open Government Data policy to speak of. Why is that? It all seems rather obvious: in a small country where knowledge is the only resource to work with, opening public sector information as a commons for everybody clearly is sensible policy. Sure, we do value privacy here – but privacy is for people, not bureaucracies.

Well, perhaps -and without cynicism- we just want to do things right. This is cool: An open data standard for food. An open data standard for food has emerged on the web.

This is cool: An open data standard for food

With such a tool, restaurants, food apps, grocery stores, the government and other interested parties can tell that arugula is also called rocket salad, no matter where on the web it occurs or what a restaurant menu or recipe app calls it. Right now, that’s an impossible task, which leads to inefficiencies in both consumer-facing apps and the supply chains of restaurants and grocery stores. A group of folks concerned about sustainable foods have built the seeds of an open food database hosted on Heroku, with the code pertaining to it located at Github. The group, which gave an awesome panel at South by Southwest in Austin, consisted of a restaurateur chef, someone from an urban gardening movement, someone from Code for America and someone who rates sustainable restaurants. So far, they have created a database of 1,000 foods and hope to have 7,000 that folks can access via an API.

Image courtesy of Flickr user gabriel amadeus. Maude praises UK progress on open data but private sector sees work to do. An "open data" revolution kicked off by a Guardian campaign is gathering pace in the UK.

Maude praises UK progress on open data but private sector sees work to do

The Cabinet Office minister, Francis Maude, is trumpeting the UK's success in making government data freely available - and pointing to examples of companies that have sprung up to create commercial businesses around free data from public bodies. Maude says that "companies including SMEs [small and medium-sized enterprises] and startups are using open data to improve public services and create innovative products. " But, he adds, he wants both "data holders" in government and new data-driven businesses to "promote the open data revolution". One of the newest apps to appear using government data is an iPhone all called Your Taxi Meter, which uses live data from local councils to find out from a car's registration number whether it is a licensed taxi - so that would-be passengers can check on it before they get in.

Announcing the Open Data Handbook version 1.0. The Open Knowledge Foundation are proud to announce the launch of version 1.0 of the Open Data Handbook (formerly the Open Data Manual): Read the Open Data Handbook now!

Announcing the Open Data Handbook version 1.0

» The Handbook discusses the ‘why, what and how’ of open data – why to go open, what open is, how to make data open and how to do useful things with it. Read on to find out more about what’s in the Handbook, who it’s for, and how you can get involved – for example by adding to and improving the Handbook, or by translating it into more languages.