 a ydym yn phobl trefadol a chyfodol ar gyfer y Llyfrgellau Cerddor â'r Llanthau Sgweinig, ac mae gennym'n gael y Llyfrgellau Cerddor ag yr aces eu hlynyddu i'w pwysigol, ag yr ydych chi'r hynny'n eisgrifennu i'w gwirionedd sowialol a'r hyn, gyd ozyddio'r Llyfrgellau Cerddor. Yr adnod, Tim said, I'm Dan Cooper. I work for Hampshire County Council. I'm actually here, representing a project called the Hampshire Hub, which is a partnership of 20 local authorities that are common to the Hampshire Administrative Area. So that is Hampshire County. I've got 11 districts, three unitries, two national parks. I've also got Blue Light involved, which is far in place. ac we've got by-in from DCLG, who are particularly interested around how our local open data can be combined with national open data to provide, again, better evidence based for decision making within the political arena. The hub is a open data project at heart, it is a platform provided by SWELL, which are linked data experts. The data on the hub currently is national data sets, mainly coming from census, O&S, all the central government departments that are publishing open data, but we're looking more and more to add our own local data from partners to increase the information that's available to help drive evidence based decision making. Being open means that we can collaborate on such projects, which helps us in financially pressured times. I won't labour the point, but the public sector is going through some serious cuts at the moment and we need to find more innovative ways to deliver our services. If we can engage with people through the publication of open data, then that's something we're keen to investigate and ultimately believe with. Also important to us because of the financial implications, economic growth. If the publication of open data can help drive the economy in Hampshire, it's often cited that open data will save the economy. If Hampshire can show the way, then that would be a good way to go about it. What implications do we have? Why are we doing this? We have a very long list of services to deliver, but ultimately we need to deliver services better to our public. We have got areas around our ecology, our landscape planners, we have development monitoring. We have relatively recently, within the last few years, become lead local flood authorities. All of this landscape analysis requires us to go out and do on-site surveys, basically the manual approach and by involving air photography and companies initiatives such as this, it will help us with that. South Downs and New Forest are two national parks that fall within the Hampshire area and they obviously have, at their heart, interest in landscape change policy that influences that and how their policies affect landscape change and what landscape change can then drive their policies. What imagery did we make available? Hampshire, as part of a consortium with some of the other districts and the blue lights, have purchased aerial photography over the years. Basically, when flying has been good enough, we have captured the image. It wasn't good enough between 2005 and 2013, believe it or not, mainly because of cloud cover. But where we've been able to capture it, we've held it locally, we've used it amongst the consortium, but more often than not we haven't fully exploited the power in the information that's held within the aerial imagery. Lots of people like it, it looks nice on the base map, people can put stuff over the top, but in terms of the information that we're extracting from it, the resource required to do that and the technology to do it has been a limiting factor. So, working with the likes of Tim and remote sensing offers up opportunities to exploit this further. The 2013 aerial imagery was captured at 12.5cm resolution. The company who captured that data for us then re-sampled it at 25cm, at which point we made it openly available along with some high data that was captured alongside.