• Science and Technology

    The war on science


    Fiona Helen Panther |  December 7, 2025


    Science is mankind’s greatest achievement but finds itself under threat from the anti-intellectual right, the post-modern left, politically correct dogma and a tsunami of nonsense on the internet.


  • History

    Whitlam in Timor


    Peter Job |  December 7, 2025


    As we remember 50 years of the infamous constitutional crisis and Whitlam’s dismissal and celebrate the positive aspects of his legacy like Medibank, we need to also remember the much darker stories that are rarely told – including Whitlam’s betrayal of the Timorese people.


  • Artificial Intelligence

    What happens to moral responsibility when algorithms judge people?


    Roger Chao |  December 7, 2025


    Morality is forged between us, woven from the relationships, obligations, and shared vulnerabilities that mark us as human. Whatever the administrative attractions of AI interactions, we cannot cede moral decisions to machines.


Latest Story

  • Getting up to speed with workplace flexibility in SMEs

    Juliet Bourke     |      April 15, 2010

    As a partner in a business, plus an outspoken advocate on workplace flexibility, I am very conscious of practicing what I preach and maintaining a competitive business edge. 

  • Better Formats for Privacy Notices: Food Safety labels? Symbols?

    Malcolm Crompton     |      April 15, 2010

    Some interesting research has emerged from CyLab at Carnegie Mellon University. 

  • The Spatial Enablement of Society in conjunction with Spatial Data Infrastructures

    Darren Mottolini     |      April 15, 2010

    FIG2010 has provided many insights into all aspects of Surveying and Land related activities.

    Surveying is not only related to cadastral land surveying as it covers all activities involving land as highlighted in my previous post.

  • Data Automation and the Changing Face of Spatial Data Management

    Michael Dixon     |      April 15, 2010

    Mapping is a practice that has been undertaken for many hundreds of years. 

    There was a time when Burke and Wills traipsed through the Australian desert country, manually mapping the Australian terrain, to make maps available to the community and avid explorers. 

    Today, mapping and the collection of map data, is highly technical with the use of sophisticated equipment to obtain the same end result – a map. The use of electronic GPS units in the bushfire recovery efforts, GNSS CORS Networks to undertake precision farming, and remotely sensed elevation models for coastline mapping, all demonstrate how far mapping, and the management of the map data, has come.

  • Young Surveyors Building the Capacity & Facing the Challenges

    Darren Mottolini     |      April 13, 2010

    The International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) congress rolls into town this week (Sydney April 11-16) and from all the hype surrounding this congress it will no doubt be well received and a great learning opportunity.

    Of course, FIG is not primarily aimed at traditional surveyors, the ten commissions setup cover everything from education and standards to spatial data infrastructures, planning and development , real estate, valuations and also construction economics. In all, FIG covers everything to do with land and as we are seeing more and more evidence of, almost all information collected is being linked back to the land.

  • A National Positioning Infrastructure for Australia

    Peter Woodgate     |      April 13, 2010

    The XXIV FIG (Fédération International des Géomètres) Congress to be held in Sydney 12 – 16 April 2010 will help highlight a critical opportunity for Australia; the opportunity to create a national positioning infrastructure.

  • Mr Koala from Cairo to Sydney

    Mark Gordon     |      April 13, 2010

    FIG holds its Congresses once every four years, and annual Working Weeks in between. So what makes the FIG2010 Congress in Sydney different?

  • Daring to question “Open Identity”

    StephenWilson     |      April 11, 2010

    Is the Open Identity movement making the world simpler? Or more complex?

    There’s been intense renewed activity in cyber security under the banner "open identity". See http://openidentityexchange.org and http://informationcard.net.  But something about the word “open” has never sat well with me in the context of "open identity". I wonder if the open identity community has co-opted the word as one of those unquestionably good adjectives … and twisted it a little?

    Open standards and open government are obviously good things, and it’s clear what they mean.  And open source has a lot of goodness attached to it, even if it’s not without controversy. But what exactly does “open” mean in open identity?

  • Banksia Awards celebrating Australian sustainability innovation

    Grazyna van Egmond     |      April 8, 2010

    It’s easy to become numbed by media saturation and apparent inaction over the ‘big’ issues such as ETS, carbon emissions and greenhouse gas, but for a change I’d like to celebrate the positive.

    Sustainability and responsible environmental stewardship in Australia has come a long way since the inception of the Banksia Environmental Awards, 22 years ago.

    In the early years the awards were dominated by initiatives such as farmland regeneration and pollution clean up schemes.

    Obviously these types of projects were, and are, critical to improving and maintaining the environment around us, but contemporary environmental activists are just as likely to be wearing a suit as a pair of gumboots and tie-dye.

  • Art, Archaeology, Crime and the Surveyor

    Prof John Fryer     |      April 8, 2010

    When the XXIV FIG Congress hits town Sydney will be awash with surveyors. It’s an opportunity to highlight what a great career surveying can be. Surveying has many more possibilities and is far more wide reaching than most people imagine. 

  • Building the Foundation

    Nicola Forbes     |      April 7, 2010

    Open Forum’s featured forum topic for this month is “Building Surveying and Spatial Capabilities”. I would like to consider a fresh angle to this topic by looking at the term “building”. 

    A strong foundation is a prerequisite to any building work. In New South Wales, the surveying and spatial capabilities upon which we rely have been built up in a relatively short time through hard won knowledge, experience and sheer hard work.

  • National Compact heralds period of constructive engagement

    Dr Ron Edwards     |      April 7, 2010

    The National Compact heralds a new era of collaboration between Government and the Third (not-for-profit) Sector.