11-17, 13:30–16:30 (Pacific/Auckland), WF610
Join us for QField Day 2025—a half-day of insights, innovation, and community. Discover how QField streamlines fieldwork through powerful features, plugins, and real-world use cases across various professional sectors.
Join us for the international QField Day!
Discover the latest innovations and powerful enhancements in QField. Discover how it streamlines field data collection, simplifies workflows, and empowers professionals and organisations across various industries.
Whether you're a long-time QField user, just getting started, or simply curious about cutting-edge field operations, this event is your chance to connect with the QField product team and gain valuable insights into how QField can elevate your projects.
From rapid mapping to AI, plugins to community building—and even leading research efforts like the EU-funded egeniouss project—get ready for a half day of inspiration, knowledge sharing, and exploring how QField empowers people to map and understand the world, solving everyday tasks and global challenges alike.
Marco Bernasocchi is an open-source advocate, entrepreneur and full-stack geoninja. He is the creator of QField for QGIS, currently serves as QGIS.org Chair, and is an Open Source Geospatial Foundation board member. In his day job, Marco is the CEO of OPENGIS.ch, which he founded in 2011.
A geographer by trade, Marco lives in a small Romansh-speaking mountain village in Switzerland, where he loves scrambling around the mountains to enjoy the feeling of freedom it gives him. Outgoing, flexible and open-minded, Marco fluently speaks five languages. The best thing is: He not only knows how to say it but also loves sharing his know-how.
Daniel has spent 15 years wandering around the geospatial industry in various roles, which has given him plenty of opportunities to see what works (and what spectacularly doesn't).
For the past 5 years, he's been hosting the Mapscaping podcast, where he's had the privilege of chatting with hundreds of geospatial folks - from brilliant developers building the tools we all use, to researchers pushing boundaries, to the unsung heroes keeping projects alive. These conversations have given him a front-row seat to watch how communities form, flourish, and sometimes flame out.