The Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC), the Fisheries & Marine Institute of Memorial University of Newfoundland, and the Alliance for Coastal Technologies organized a one day workshop "From Sensors to
Applications: Advancing the Interoperability of Ocean Sensors."

The workshop was convened as part of the Ocean Innovation 2008 "World Summit – Ocean Observing Systems" Conference October 19-22 in St. Johns, Newfoundland. Workshop attendees included ocean sensor manufacturers, researchers and government officials in the ocean observation community.

The conference brought together the global ocean observing systems community to discuss a revolution in ocean data collection.

The demonstration focused on a harmful-algal-bloom-alert scenario, in which active sensors were discovered, accessed, controlled and read in real-time using browser-based applications that communicate via open standards. The IEEE 1451 "Smart Sensor" standard and the Marine Plug-and-Work Consortium’s PUCK standard, which are typically implemented on sensor hardware, were demonstrated working with OGC Sensor Web Enablement (SWE) standards at the Web application level.

Participants also showed how the SWE standards can provide direct access to legacy sensors not equipped with IEEE 1451 or PUCK capability. These standards work flexibly to support interoperability among researchers’ systems as well as making it easy to provide public access to sensor information. The scenario also showed how sensor owners can coordinate on web publishing and  access policies.

The OGC’s SWE initiative has provided interface and encoding standards for Web services such as publish/discover, sensor tasking, encoding of observations and measurements, scheduling observations and subscribing to alerts from sensor systems.

Slides presented at the conference can be seen at www.oceaninnovation.ca/WorkshopLinks.asp