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QGIS Planet

QGIS 3.44 Launches 3D Globe View with Enhanced Performance

QGIS 3.44 now features a 3D Globe View with support for 3D Tiles and point clouds. Improved rendering precision and performance make planet-wide 3D mapping possible.
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QGISの実践者になるために。『位置情報を扱う人のための実践QGIS』の紹介 - QGIS LAB by MIERUNE

『位置情報を扱う人のための実践QGIS』北海道でGISエンジニアをしている井口奏大(いぐちかなひろ)です。このたび秀和システム様より『位置情報を扱う人のための実践QGIS』というタイトルで書籍を出版いたしました。「養成講座シリーズ」の『位置エン本』『位置ベロ本』に次ぐ3作目となります。本書は『実践』シリーズとなります。執筆の背景『位置エン本』『位置ベロ本』はエンジニア向けのWebGISに関する解説...
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Crowdfunding QGIS 3D: Support Open Source Digital Twins

Help fund QGIS 3D enhancements for digital twins, including glTF export, CityGML, IFC, and performance upgrades. Campaign ends June 30, 2025.
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OPENGIS.ch at the QGIS.ch User Meeting 2025 in Bern

This past Tuesday in Bern, the Swiss QGIS community came together for the 2025 edition of the QGIS.ch User Meeting — and we at OPENGIS.ch were proud to be deeply involved across the entire event, from presentations to hands-on workshops.

Sharing Insights and Innovation

The day began with our CEO, Marco Bernasocchi, opening the conference with an update on the QGIS project, covering exciting news about the upcoming QGIS 4 release and the ongoing website revamp (slides here). Shortly after, he took the stage again to present the latest improvements in QField, including new features, user experience (UX) enhancements, and under-the-hood upgrades that continue to enable efficient field data collection (slides here).

In collaboration with Timothée Produit from IG Group SA, our colleague Isabel Kiefer presented tools and streamlined processes for installing, managing, and updating TEKSI (and other) modules. These solutions are a testament to our mission of simplifying complex GIS infrastructure in public and private organisations alike.

Later in the morning, our CTO Mathias Kuhn gave a compelling talk on Machine Learning and AI in QGIS, showing real-world use cases and technical innovations that bridge geospatial workflows with intelligent automation.

Strengthening QGIS Security

As part of our commitment to sustainability and professionalisation in open source GIS, we are also proud to be a partner of Oslandia in the QGIS Security Project, which Vincent Picavet presented during the event. This initiative aims to ensure that QGIS continues to meet the highest standards of security — a crucial foundation for its growing adoption in critical infrastructures around the world.

Hands-on with QField – in Three Languages!

In the afternoon, OPENGIS.ch hosted a fully booked, multilingual QField workshop, attended by 25 enthusiastic participants. The session provided hands-on experience for users who wanted to take their QGIS projects into the field and was an excellent opportunity to exchange best practices and tips from real-world use cases and get some sun 🙂

OPENGIS.ch Tools in Action

Even outside of our sessions, tools developed by OPENGIS.ch were featured prominently throughout the day:

  • QField played a key role in the Zermatt use case presentation, demonstrating its flexibility and robustness in alpine field operations.
  • The Model Baker plugin, to which we contribute heavily, was showcased with its new multilanguage support for QGIS models — a significant step forward for the Swiss context and its multilingual projects.

A Thriving Community

As always, the QGIS.ch user meeting was a reminder of the strength and passion of the Swiss open source geospatial community. A huge thank you to the organizers, speakers, and participants who made the event such a success — we’re already looking forward to the next one!


Stay connected:
👉 QField website
👉 QFieldCloud
👉 Model Baker plugin

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Geofabrikから都市全域のOpenStreetMapデータをQGISに追加しよう - QGIS LAB by MIERUNE

はじめに「Geofabrik」はOpenStreetMapのデータを提供しているWebサイトです。Geofabrikを使うことで、特定の地域のデータを簡単にダウンロードすることができます。 この記事では、OpenStreetMapのデータを国や地域ごとに切り出して提供しているGeofabrikの活用方法を解説します。Geofabrikを使って地域のデータを取得し、データをQGISへ追加し、さらに郵...
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Revue de presse du 13 juin 2025

Une GeoRDP rédigée à 100% par des plumes humaines, comme d'habitude. Au menu : une enquête sur la qualité de vos données géo, de la géo en Romandie, des nouvelles de la galaxie QGIS locale et globale, des tuiles, de l'art, et des vaches.
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OpenStreetMapのデータをQGISに追加しよう〜QuickOSMのインストールと使い方〜 - QGIS LAB by MIERUNE

はじめにQuickOSMとは、OpenStreetMapのデータを追加するためのQGISプラグインです。QuickOSMを使えば、必要な地域の必要なデータだけを素早く取得できるため、大きなファイルをダウンロードして処理する手間が省けます。この記事では、QuickOSMのインストール方法と、QGISにデータを追加する手順をご紹介します。OpenStreetMapについて詳しく知りたい方は、以下の記事...
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基盤地図情報の数値標高モデル(DEM)をQGISに追加しよう - QGIS LAB by MIERUNE

はじめに地形解析や3D地図作成には、高精度の標高データが必要になる場合があります。その際に便利なのが、国土地理院が提供する基盤地図情報の数値標高モデル(DEM)です。このDEMデータは、日本全国を網羅する高品質な標高データとして無料で利用できます。この記事では、基盤地図情報の数値標高モデルをQGISに追加する具体的な手順を紹介します。基盤地図情報とは基盤地図情報とは、地図データを使った分析において...
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QField 3.6 “Gondwana”: Locking on greatness

Building on top of the last release which introduced background tracking, this development cycle focused on polishing functionalities and building on top of preexisting features. The variety of improvements is sure to make our diverse user base and community excited to upgrade to QField 3.6.

Main highlights

One of the most noticeable improvement in this version is the addition of “map preview rendering”. QField now renders partial map content immediately beyond the edge of the screen, offering a much nicer experience when panning around as well as zooming in and out. Long-time QGIS users will recognise the behaviour, and we’re delighted to bring this experience to the field

This upgrade was the foundation upon which we built the following enhancement: as of QField 3.6, using the “lock to position” mode now keeps your position at the very center of the screen while the canvas slips through smoothly. This greatly improves the usability of the function as your eyes never need to spend time locating the position within the screen: it’s dead center and it stays there!

Reminder, the “lock to position” mode is activated by clicking on the bottom-right positioning button, with the button’s background turning blue when the mode is activated.

The improvements did not stop there. Panning and zooming around used to drop users out of the lock mode immediately. While this had its upsides, it also meant that simple scale adjustments to try and view more of the map as it follows the position was not possible. With QField 3.6, the lock has been hardened. Moving the map around will temporarily disable the lock, with a visual countdown embedded within a toast message informs users of when the lock will return. An action button to terminate the lock is located within the toaster to permanently leave the mode.

Moving on to QFieldCloud, this cycle saw tons of improvements. To begin with, it is now possible to rely on shared datasets across multiple cloud projects. Known as localised data paths in QGIS, this functionality enables users to reduce storage usage by storing large datasets in QFieldCloud only once, serving multiple cloud projects, and also easing the maintenance of read-only datasets that require regular updates.

QFieldSync users will see a new checkbox when synchronising their projects, letting them upload shared datasets onto QFieldCloud.

Furthermore, QField has introduced a new cloud project details view to provide additional details on QFieldCloud-hosted projects before downloading them to devices. The new view includes a cloud project thumbnail, more space for richer description text, including interactive hyperlinks, and author details, as well as creation and data update timestamps. Finally, the view offers a QR code, which allows users to scan it quickly and access cloud projects, provided they have the necessary access permission. Distributing a public project has never been easier!

Beyond that, tons more has made its way into QField, including map layer notes viewable through a legend badge in the side dashboard, support for feature identification on online raster layers on compatible WMS and ArcGIS REST servers, atlas printing of a relationship’s child feature directly within the parent feature form, and much more. There’s something for everybody out there.

Focus on feature form polishing

This new version of QField coincides with the release of XLSForm Converter, a new QGIS plugin created by OPENGIS.ch’s very own ninjas. As its title implies, the plugin converts an XLSForm spreadsheet file (.xls, .xlsx, .ods) into a full-fledged QGIS project ready to be used in QField with a pre-configured survey layer matching the content of the provided XLSForm.

This was a golden opportunity to focus on polishing QField’s feature form. As a result, advanced functionalities such as data-driven editable flag and label attribute properties are now supported. In addition, tons of paper-cut bugs, visual inconsistencies, and UX shortcomings have been addressed. Our favourite one might just be the ability to drag the feature addition drawer’s header up and down to toggle its full-screen state 🙂

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QField 3.6 “Gondwana”: Locking on greatness

Building on top of the last release which introduced background tracking, this development cycle focused on polishing functionalities and building on top of preexisting features. The variety of improvements is sure to make our diverse user base and community excited to upgrade to QField 3.6.

Main highlights

One of the most noticeable improvement in this version is the addition of “map preview rendering”. QField now renders partial map content immediately beyond the edge of the screen, offering a much nicer experience when panning around as well as zooming in and out. Long-time QGIS users will recognise the behaviour, and we’re delighted to bring this experience to the field

This upgrade was the foundation upon which we built the following enhancement: as of QField 3.6, using the “lock to position” mode now keeps your position at the very center of the screen while the canvas slips through smoothly. This greatly improves the usability of the function as your eyes never need to spend time locating the position within the screen: it’s dead center and it stays there!

https://videopress.com/v/kJg69l49?resizeToParent=true&cover=true&preloadContent=metadata&useAverageColor=true

Reminder, the “lock to position” mode is activated by clicking on the bottom-right positioning button, with the button’s background turning blue when the mode is activated.

The improvements did not stop there. Panning and zooming around used to drop users out of the lock mode immediately. While this had its upsides, it also meant that simple scale adjustments to try and view more of the map as it follows the position was not possible. With QField 3.6, the lock has been hardened. Moving the map around will temporarily disable the lock, with a visual countdown embedded within a toast message informs users of when the lock will return. An action button to terminate the lock is located within the toaster to permanently leave the mode.

Moving on to QFieldCloud, this cycle saw tons of improvements. To begin with, it is now possible to rely on shared datasets across multiple cloud projects. Known as localised data paths in QGIS, this functionality enables users to reduce storage usage by storing large datasets in QFieldCloud only once, serving multiple cloud projects, and also easing the maintenance of read-only datasets that require regular updates.

QFieldSync users will see a new checkbox when synchronising their projects, letting them upload shared datasets onto QFieldCloud.

Furthermore, QField has introduced a new cloud project details view to provide additional details on QFieldCloud-hosted projects before downloading them to devices. The new view includes a cloud project thumbnail, more space for richer description text, including interactive hyperlinks, and author details, as well as creation and data update timestamps. Finally, the view offers a QR code, which allows users to scan it quickly and access cloud projects, provided they have the necessary access permission. Distributing a public project has never been easier!

Beyond that, tons more has made its way into QField, including map layer notes viewable through a legend badge in the side dashboard, support for feature identification on online raster layers on compatible WMS and ArcGIS REST servers, atlas printing of a relationship’s child feature directly within the parent feature form, and much more. There’s something for everybody out there.

Focus on feature form polishing

This new version of QField coincides with the release of XLSForm Converter , a new QGIS plugin created by OPENGIS.ch’s very own ninjas. As its title implies, the plugin converts an XLSForm spreadsheet file (.xls, .xlsx, .ods) into a full-fledged QGIS project ready to be used in QField with a pre-configured survey layer matching the content of the provided XLSForm.

This was a golden opportunity to focus on polishing QField’s feature form. As a result, advanced functionalities such as data-driven editable flag and label attribute properties are now supported. In addition, tons of paper-cut bugs, visual inconsistencies, and UX shortcomings have been addressed. Our favourite one might just be the ability to drag the feature addition drawer’s header up and down to toggle its full-screen state :)

Learn More