FOSSPicks
FOSSPicks

This month, Graham looks at QGIS, PrettyEQ, dupeGuru, shapes.io, KTechLab, bit, EmissionControl2, and more!
Spatial data environment
QGIS
GIS is an acronym for geographic information system, and those three letters are often applied to software that can sort, visualize, edit, analyze, and manage positional data, such as the data used to create maps. But it's also a subject that can be as hugely complex and as unresolved as the surface of the Earth, Olympus Mons on Mars, or a tesseract in both three- and four-dimensional space. QGIS tries to help with this. It's a Qt-based application that attempts to tame this complexity by making the software free and open source and keeping it as accessible and easy to use as possible. It accomplishes this while still providing enough functionality to allow for serious research and the analysis of whatever data you throw at it.
When you first launch the application, the main window can still be overwhelming. It's full of buttons, toolbars, panels, and menu items, and it's difficult to know where to start. It gets easier when you remember that the main goal here is mapping geographic data onto your screen. That means lots of these options relate to coordinates, projection modes, and analysis and also that the first step should be loading some data. Sourcing data can be difficult, especially if it's the result of specialist research and you'd like to enjoy the same rights over the data as you do the QGIS source code. However, there's a good starting point built into the application itself, and that's OpenStreetMap. This can be found by clicking XYZ Tiles in the browser on the left. Depending on your project mode, when selected it can appear just like an OpenStreetMap browser on the web. Except, in this case, QGIS is interpreting the raw data through its own algorithms to create the view, and you have complete control over these algorithms and how things appear.
As you might expect, QGIS can ingest all kinds of data, including spatially-enabled tables, PostGIS, SpatiaLite, MS SQL Spatial, and Oracle Spatial formats, as well as many spatial-specific vector formats. The project hosts some of its own examples, and you can edit many different file formats or import data from your phone if you have an app that generates GPX files from the integrated GPS device. There's even an initiative to bring point cloud data into the application, which is undoubtedly the next generation of spatial data now that Apple is shipping LiDAR on its phones and tablets. With the data imported, there's equal variety in the ways the resulting visual maps can be composed and explored. The menus are full of reports and measurements you can run, from the distance between two points or a distance matrix to the parts that are likely to be hillsides. Many of these reports are HTML files you can easily share with collaborators, but you can also publish your maps using WMS, WMTS, WMS-C, or WFS formats, as well as their associated servers. The end result is still an overwhelming application, but one that can literally help you explore the world of geospatial data. Thanks to the Python console and plugin system, you can take this as far as you need to, and the analysis scripts used by the application can easily be expanded or modified to suit your needs.
[...]
Buy this article as PDF
(incl. VAT)
Buy Linux Magazine
Subscribe to our Linux Newsletters
Find Linux and Open Source Jobs
Subscribe to our ADMIN Newsletters
Support Our Work
Linux Magazine content is made possible with support from readers like you. Please consider contributing when you’ve found an article to be beneficial.

News
-
openSUSE Joins End of 10
openSUSE has decided to not only join the End of 10 movement but it also will no longer support the Deepin Desktop Environment.
-
New Version of Flatpak Released
Flatpak 1.16.1 is now available as the latest, stable version with various improvements.
-
IBM Announces Powerhouse Linux Server
IBM has unleashed a seriously powerful Linux server with the LinuxONE Emperor 5.
-
Plasma Ends LTS Releases
The KDE Plasma development team is doing away with the LTS releases for a good reason.
-
Arch Linux Available for Windows Subsystem for Linux
If you've ever wanted to use a rolling release distribution with WSL, now's your chance.
-
System76 Releases COSMIC Alpha 7
With scores of bug fixes and a really cool workspaces feature, COSMIC is looking to soon migrate from alpha to beta.
-
OpenMandriva Lx 6.0 Available for Installation
The latest release of OpenMandriva has arrived with a new kernel, an updated Plasma desktop, and a server edition.
-
TrueNAS 25.04 Arrives with Thousands of Changes
One of the most popular Linux-based NAS solutions has rolled out the latest edition, based on Ubuntu 25.04.
-
Fedora 42 Available with Two New Spins
The latest release from the Fedora Project includes the usual updates, a new kernel, an official KDE Plasma spin, and a new System76 spin.
-
So Long, ArcoLinux
The ArcoLinux distribution is the latest Linux distribution to shut down.