Location
Creekside Court, building A
900 Arastradero Rd
Palo Alto, CA 94304, USA
map
Day 1: Thursday 12 September 2019
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08:15–08:45 AM Registration
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08:45–09:00 AM Opening remarks by Ted Guild (W3C) and Setting the stage by Joshua Shinavier (Uber) plenary
- Goals for workshop
- Outline high level goals for the workshop, increase awareness of related activities in transportation space with a data centric focus, improve collaboration and coordination going forward, identify gaps, potential standards to address challenges and further solutions.
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09:00–10:15 AM Setting the context: Transportation Sector Perspectives plenary
- Goals
- Share high level experiences, needs, challenges and opportunities of transportation data from different market sectors such as fleet management, multi-modal travel, public interest. Other sectors covered in breakout sessions, lightning talks and within other topics.
- Talks
- Unlocking the Value in Vehicular Data Using Analytics Amir Sayegh - Geotab
- Transportation Mobility CloudJay Hum, Autonomic
- Multi-Modal Traveling: beyond cars Luis Daniel Ibáñez, University of Southampton
- Detection & Inclusion of Two-Wheelers into the Connected Car EcosystemBrent Massey, Ridar
- Federal Perspective on Transportation Data Robert Rittmuller, US DOT
- Scribe
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10:15–10:45 AM Break
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10:45–12:30PM Routing, IoT and GIS discussion
- Goals Discuss state of practice around moving objects, sensors, observations, trajectories and IoT/SmartCity interactions.
- Talks
- Space and Time Topics George Pervical, OGC
- Towards a SAREF extension for Automotive Michelle Wetterwald, Netellany
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Route
Planning on the Web (pdf)
Julián Rojas, Ghent University
- Geospatial Insights Using AI Amir Sayegh - Geotab
- An Ontology-based Standard for City Data Megan Katsumi, University of Toronto
- Towards A Common Data ModelKenneth Vaughn, Trevilon
- W3C Web of Things (WoT) - Introduction, Status and RoadmapTakuki Kamiya, Fujitsu
- Standardization as enabler towards a data centric architecture in automotiveAdnan Bekan, BMW
- Spatial Data, Linked Building Data
- Scribe
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12:30–01:30 PM Lunch
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01:30–02:00 PM Lightning Talks lightning
- Format
- Open lightning talks from participants, please keep any presentations limited to five minutes. Brief questions and comments as time permits.
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02:00–02:45 PM Breakout sessions breakout
- Format
- Open one-hour session for discussions in smaller groups on specific topics proposed by workshop participants. To suggest a topic in advance of the workshop, please send email to the program committee at <group-transportation-data-ws-pc@w3.org>.
- Session 1: Ontology Awareness
- Discussion around ontologies from workshop attendee submissions, uses, maintainers, roadmap, ideas for improvement.
- Session 2: Additional Sector Needs
- Special considerations for other significant sectors such as Insurance, Aftermarket, Maintenance/Service, Fueling/Charging, Autonomous Vehicles, etc
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02:45–03:15 PM Break
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03:15–03:30 PM Accessibility Considerations in Transportation discussion
- Goals
- Introduce W3C Accessibility Initiative, pertinent geospatial annotations, factory and aftermarket modified capability data needs, autonomous vehicle considerations.
- Talks
- Accessible Transportation Janina Sajka, Linux Foundation and Ted Guild, W3C
- Scribe
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03:30–04:15 PM Automotive Standards Activities discussion
- Goals
- Establish understanding of some existing related standards activities in automotive space.
- Talks
- Cloud & Connected Services OverviewSteve Crumb, GENIVI
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04:15–05:00 PM Data design decisions discussion
- Goals
- Norms to encourage following besides having public, dereferencable ontologies
- Talks
- Customer Data ModelsAnand Mundada and Gaurav Tungatkar, Uber
- Incorporating schema-less and other data models
- Data stream APIs
- Extensibility and Schema.org core ontologies
- Publishing and pitfalls
- Accessibility, annotation fields
- Scribe
Day 2: Friday 13 September 2019
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08:00–08:45 AM Registration
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08:45–9:30 AM Marketplace Mentality discussion
- Goals
- Discuss the legal, business, political challenges with thoughts on accommodating in technical solutions including need for portability across providers (NMFTA ELD, Solid). Data openness and ownership.
- Talks
- Personalized and privacy-aware route planning with SOLID (pdf) Julián Rojas, Ghent University
- Portability Across telematics service providers
Ben Gardiner - NMFTA
- Sampling, quality and additional metadata
- Permissions, Access Control in data store
- Scribe
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09:30–10:15 AM Automotive Standards Activities (contd) discussion
- Goals
- Establish understanding of some existing related standards activities in automotive space.
- Talks
- Bringing the Car to the InternetRudolf Streif, Ibeeto
- W3C Auto overviewTed Guild, W3C
- Integration of Vehicles into the Web of Things Adnan Bekan, BMW
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10:15–10:30 AM Break
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10:30–12:00 AM Privacy discussion
- Goals
- Review related solutions on consent capture, ontologies and other representations of permissions from attendees.
- Talks
- Data Privacy and Ownership in the Open Car Lothar Determan, Baker McKenzie
- SPECIAL - EU Project on privacy policies (longer version) Martin Kurze, Deutsche Telekom AG
- Practical privacy for drivers Arjun Hassard, Nucypher
- Scribe
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12:00–12:30PM Standards Coordination discussion
- Goals Discuss state of practice around moving objects, sensors, observations, trajectories and IoT/SmartCity interactions.
- Talks
- Open Process for the Development of a City Data StandardMark Fox, University of Toronto
- W3C/OGC Spatial Data on the Web Interest Group George Pervical, OGC
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12:30–01:30 PM Lunch
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01:30–02:00 PM Lightning Talks lightning
- Format
- Open lightning talks from participants, please keep any presentations limited to five minutes. Brief questions and comments as time permits.
- Talks
- Grade Crossing Behavior ModelRJ Rittmuller
- Open Telematics APIBen Gardiner
- ADEPT – a Limited Iterative Ontological NotationGregory Sharp
- David Mordecai
- videoCheryl Scott
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02:05–02:45 PM Breakout sessions breakout
- Format
- Open one-hour session for discussions in smaller groups on specific topics proposed by workshop participants. To suggest a topic in advance of the workshop, please send email to the program committee at <group-transportation-data-ws-pc@w3.org>.
- Session 1:
- User profile contents, consent management, short term subset access
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02:45–03:15 PM Break
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03:15–04:00 PM Challenges discussion
- Goals
- Cover additional challenges within transportation, ranging from connectivity, caching, information time sensitivity, etc.
- Talks
- Uber FreightJon Freer, Jennie Nguyen
- Scribe
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04:00–04:45 PM Next steps for standardization discussion
- Goals
- Summarize workshop inputs and create an action plan for standardization and continued collaboration.
- Speakers
- Ted Guild, W3C
- Scribe
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04:45–05:00 PM Closing remarks by Joshua Shinavier (Uber) and Ted Guild (W3C) plenary
Instructions for participants
The workshop focuses on topics raised by participants in expressions of interest and position statements. Each topic gets introduced by one or more short or lightning talk(s), and discussed among participants, possibly in smaller groups. The goal of each discussion at the workshop is not to resolve the technical issues of the topic, but to determine its relevance and priority to standardization.
Format
- plenary
- Plenary sessions introduce and summarize generic information relevant to all participants. Transportation-related topics raised during plenary sessions will be discussed in more details during other workshop sessions.
- discussion
- A typical discussion session (45-75 minutes) starts with a few talks by speakers nominated in advance. Talks will either be short (<15 minutes) or very short (lightning talks). They will be followed by a discussion among participants to exchange ideas, assess priorities, and identify possible standardization actions.
- breakout
- Participants break into smaller breakout groups to discuss more specific topics over a period of maximum 60 minutes. The breakout session schedule is built collaboratively by the participants in the course of the workshop. Each group will provide a written summary of their breakout session.
Tools
Chat
We will take notes on IRC during the workshop: irc.w3.org:6665#transpo / IRC web client
Meeting notes
Meeting notes will be recorded on IRC during sessions. These notes will be made public. A scribe will be nominated for each session, however note-taking help from all the participants is very much welcome to ensure correctness and completeness of the notes. We wish to make note-taking a collaborative exercise at this workshop.