In conclusion, it can be said that QGIS was the right decision for the canton of
Solothurn. QGIS can offer most of the features that were requested by the users.
The canton of Solothurn subcontracts the development of features that QGIS lacks
to commercial support providers. With PyQgis and PyQt there are excellent options
for easy in-house application development based on QGIS. One huge benefit is the
unlimited number of installations. To push the development of QGIS, the Canton
2007. This is much more efficient and target-oriented than the payment of support
into the black box of our former software provider. Apart from using FOSSGIS, the
canton of Solothurn also provides public geodata free of charge via the SO!ONLINE
web portal.
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5. Conclusions
Mika-Petteri Törhönen, Daniel Steudler
Information technology systems are crucial elements of cadastre and land reg-
istration everywhere in the 21
st
century. Introduction of automation to land ad-
ministration has improved systems’ efficiency, standardisation and accessibility,
which in turn have contributed to responsible land governance. Developing coun-
try land administrations are, however, often inefficient and poorly structured. This
results partly from the lack of adapted and flexible software tools to standardise,
structure and maintain the cadastre and the land registration. More flexible and
feasible systems are needed.
The chapters in this booklet clearly demonstrate that open-source software, or
FLOSS, has become a credible alternative to commercial off-the-shelf software in
the field of cadastre and land registration systems. The development of open-
source database management and geographic information systems has been rapid
in recent years and they are increasingly applied to spatial data management. This
is relevant globally, but it is seen that, in developing country contexts in particular,
the emerging awareness of alternative approaches and tools to support cadastral
and land registration systems is a very important innovation. Flexibility and the
ability to be adapted to local conditions, and saved licence costs are among the
features that make open-source software attractive in low resources settings.
Open-source software should not, however, be seen as the panacea for sustain-
able information technology systems. Cadastral systems’ software needs continu-
ous maintenance and constant development, which require resources regardless
of the software policy over access to the source code. Adequate business planning
remains the key requirement behind feasible and successful introduction of auto-
mation and digital systems into cadastre and land registration. It is also evident,
however, that there are cases and conditions where partial or full system solutions
relying on open-source software can be the most feasible and successfully intro-
duced option.
This booklet has been prepared and published to serve as a source book for
people working with and for cadastral and land registration applications using
FLOSS.
This booklet can, in addition, be taken as a baseline study. This is what the
FLOSS cadastre and land registration scene looked like in April 2010.