Microsoft announces Open Government Data Initiative (OGDI)

As the American public and the Obama administration push the government to post more public data online, federal agencies are struggling with how to do so, and how to make that data available in a form that's usable to the public and to third-party developers who want to use the data for their own Web applications and services.

Microsoft sees an opening and has introduced what it's calling the Open Government Data Initiative, a program to help government agencies host their data on Microsoft's forthcoming Windows Azure cloud computing platform and make it available to developers via a programmatic API.

Microsoft is releasing a free, open source software development kit that gives agencies, or third parties with access to that data, the tools they need to host their data in Azure and provide programmatic interfaces to the data via REST. By default, OGDI churns out data in the Atom format, which can be consumed in any number of ways, including but not limited to .Net, Ruby, PHP, and Python. OGDI can also handle geospatial data.

The company is also asking government agencies that don't want to deal with the SDK to send their data sets to Microsoft -- whether by e-mail, FTP, or any other method -- and Microsoft will then host them directly.

A number of demonstration data sets are up on a reference beta site for OGDI, including a number of data sets on Washington, D.C. (like building permit and crime locations) and per diem spending rates for the General Services Administration. If the data has associated location data, Microsoft's beta site also shows how the government data can be mapped onto a Live Map.

"I think the trend we are seeing is that government agencies, especially with nonsensitive data, ... don't have the computing capacity or power to host it internally nor the funding means to support it," said Susie Adams, CTO of Microsoft's federal civilian agency business, in an interview. OGDI, she implied, would offer a cheaper place to store that data and a less development-intensive way to give developers and the public access to that data.

What's special about OGDI? OGDI enables government organizations to easily expose data for *programmatic access* vs download. An OGDI container stores data in Microsoft Windows Azure storage and anyone with a myriad of both Microsoft and non-Microsoft programming skills can access the data. Flash, PHP, Ruby, Python, C#, Silverlight, maps, have at it! OGDI-based data repositories expose data via the very familiar REST programming model. At the heart of OGDI is a read-only data service built on Windows Azure.

OGDI is two things: 1) a sample site which is also an interactive SDK which can be found at http://ogdisdk.cloudapp.net 2) and source code we used to build it which will be published on CodePlex so that any interested party can build a container and quickly begin allowing programmatic access to data (stay tuned for more information). We call this a “Starter Kit”

You will also see, when you visit the SDK site and begin interacting with the data, that we have a ton of sample code in all of these technologies to help you write programs to access the data. Be sure to check out the demo video on the main page!

We hope you find this interesting and useful and really would appreciate hearing from you!

Calls to action:

  1. If you are a government customer who is interested in more information please contact us at askogdi@microsoft.com
  2. If you are partner, we would be eager to hear your ideas about how you could take advantage of this service. Again, contact us at askogdi@microsoft.com

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