Solomon 'Sol' Katz (August 3, 1947 – April 23, 1999) was an American software developer who pioneered geospatialcomputer software (a sub-category of GIS) and left behind a large body of work in the form of computer applications and format specifications while at the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. This early archive provided both source code and applications freely available to the community, including the Windows application PC-MOSS, where MOSS (Map Overlay and Statistical System) is the earliest known Open Source Geographic Information System. Katz was also a frequent contributor to many geospatial list servers.
Katz was born in Sweden in 1947 and moved to New York City at the age of 1. Yiddish was his first language, but he learned both Hebrew and English. After high school, he spent three years in the US Air Force, stationed in Germany. Following his brief military career, he decided to go to Brooklyn College in New York where he got his bachelor's degree in geology in 2.5 years. He then married his wife Hedy in 1969, and went back to Brooklyn College while teaching in New York Public Schools and got his master's degree, also in geology. After several years working for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in several states, he settled down in Lakewood, Colorado and decided to go back to school at the University of Denver to study computer science and earned a second master's degree. At this time, he also had two children—Shanna and Risa. Katz died on April 23, 1999, from non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
GFOSS Award
The Sol Katz Award for Geospatial Free and Open Source Software (GFOSS) is given to individuals who have demonstrated leadership in the GFOSS community.[1]
2005 – Frank Warmerdam – Developer of the GDAL/OGR library
2006 – Markus Neteler – GRASS GIS developer since 1998 and founding-member of Open Source Geospatial Foundation ( OSGeo )
2007 – Steve Lime – Leader of the MapServer Project
2008 – Paul Ramsey – Leader of the PostGIS project[2]
2009 – Daniel Morissette – Co-leader of the MapServer project and PSC of the GDAL/OGR library
2010 – Helena Mitášová – Contributor to GRASS, author, and promoter of FOSS4G in academia
2011 – Martin Davis – Developer of JTS, the Java Topology Suite
2012 – Venkatesh Raghavan – Founder of the FOSS4G community
2013 – Arnulf Christl – Co-founder of the OSGeo Foundation
2014 – Gary Sherman – Founder of the QGIS Project
2015 – Maria Brovelli – Advocate of FOSS4G and GeoForAll
2016 – Jeff McKenna – Longtime passion and leadership spreading FOSS4G and OSGeo around the world