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Tagged: crime

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Ok, well, you might have heard of them, but I have not heard of Crimedar, Mapacrime and Sgo (SureteGlobale.Org). CloudTweak cites them as the crime mapping startups to watch in 2012.

CrimeDar is built on Bing and Silverlight and includes a crowdsourcing component, but has limited coverage (mostly in Michigan) with offical police and their data.

SGO appears to be a services company moving on to products. Per CloudTweak, a KML analysis file to be used on the platform of your choice. The solution is for law enforcement rather than the public, and will include crime analytics and hotspot analysis. The company is based in France.

Mapacrime is an offshoot of HarassMap (which is itself build on CrowdMap, which is built on Ushahidi) and uses crowdsourced information to track crimes in Pakistan.

It's hard to imagine any of these unseating CrimeMapping.com, CrimeReports and other efforts gathering momentum at least here in the U.S.

- CloudTweaks

by Adena Schutzberg on 12/28 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: cloud computing, crime, location based services

Monday, December 05, 2011

Led by their hard-charging professor, a former top Pentagon official, they [Georgetown students] have translated hundreds of documents, combed through satellite imagery, obtained restricted Chinese military documents and waded through hundreds of gigabytes of online data.

The result of their effort? The largest body of public knowledge about thousands of miles of tunnels dug by the Second Artillery Corps, a secretive branch of the Chinese military in charge of protecting and deploying its ballistic missiles and nuclear warheads.

- WaPo

Participants in the crime prevention event “R U Safe?” created a map of the College Avenue [Rutgers University, NJ] campus last night [Dec 1], highlighting areas most prone to crime using a smartphone application called “Mobile Mappler.”

Designed by Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy lecturer Wansoo Im, the app allows users to select areas where they feel vulnerable to crime, said Jerilyn Krakower, coordinator of “R U Safe?”

The app, built on Google tech, includes data such as lighting and crime and invites crowdsourcing information on where users feel unsafe.

- Daily Targum

West Hartford, CT is having its hydrants mapped. And the whole program is led by fifth graders. No mention of GIS thus far, though there is a wiki which will hold latitude and longitude.

"Where in the Blazes R U?" is the manifestation of an idea that Taylor first had on a morning run last winter, and has been made possible by a grant she applied for from the Foundation for West Hartford Public Schools combined with funding from the elementary school PTOs.

The project's goal is being implemented by the town's 5th graders, who are learning to use GPS technology to map the coordinates of all 1,500 fire hydrants in West Hartford. The students will be using a wiki to input the longitude and latitude data for each hydrant. The project will benefit town residents as well as the fire department, and is a great example of service learning, where kids go out into the community to solve a problem.

- West Hardford Patch

Nova Scotia Community College seems to be losing its geomatics program:

The three members of the Applied Geomatics Research Group, established in 2000, were given their notices last week and their jobs terminated Nov. 30.

Affected by the decision are senior research scientist Bob Maher, scientist Chris Hopkinson and project manager Jeff Wentzell. Scientist Tim Webster was not affected by the staff changes.

- The Chronicle Herald via @mapserving

by Adena Schutzberg on 12/05 at 06:02 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, October 06, 2011

In Southend on Sea, in Sussex, UK suspects released on bail for certain crimes have as a condition of their bail not visiting certain areas. How do they know which areas? They get maps. While some people will ignore such a requirement, Sgt Bill Potter, of the town’s beat section, said: “it’s been quite successful." One commentor notes this program only works if the suspects can read maps!

- Echo News

In Lamar County, MS fire insurance rates are going up. Why? Insurance companies are more carefully coding the fire risk for properties. That's meant that some homeownemers are seeing sharp increases.

It reached the point that Mike Chaney, the state's commissioner of insurance, stepped in, ordering that any insurer using a GIS system had to "implement any resultant incrementally."

I wonder if that means if the companies did not use GIS for the determination, they could jump the rates quickly.  I find it odd the technology was specifically mentioned in the order (pdf).

- Hattiesburg America

The Bahamas and Cuba have come to an agreement about a maritime boundary.

The geographic coordinates that form this medium line between The Bahamas and Cuba were generated by a software called ‘Clarisoft’ in conjunction with Geographic Information Systems (GIS).&nbsp; GIS, according to Antonique Strachan, a GIS analyst for the Bahamas National Geographic Information Systems Center (BNGIS), is a base system used to store, analyze and manipulate geographic locations.

- The Nassau Guardian

by Adena Schutzberg on 10/06 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Cleveland's GIS was expected in 2009 but finally went online in June 2011. There are seven different ArcGIS Server-based Flash/Flex apps on the Bing basemap. The local paper notes some limitations related to overlaying maps and up-to-date data on crime. The project came in, despite its delay, under the $31 million budget. Coming soon: the end of a $199/month contract for crime data.

- Cleveland.com

The names of NC 24 towns were printed in white instead of black in 10 percent of all 2011 DOT maps due to a "computer glitch."

New software is to blame, but it's not clear why just the town on that stretch of road were basically invisible. The tiny town of Zebulon (pop 4000) had a very vocal citizenry (officials were not aware of the problem) who let the state DOT know of the issue.

- News Observer

The Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources offers aerial images collected between December 2009 and April 2010 to the public for use in assessing flood damage resulting from Tropical Storm Lee. The data is for Bradford, Centre, Clinton, Lycoming, Sullivan, Susquehanna and Wyoming counties.  i-cubed agreed to waive a restriction that would have limited the data to governmental-use only until next June. The data are available at this website (choose PAMAP 2010 Imagery Service Now Available).

- Gant Daily

by Adena Schutzberg on 09/28 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Friday, September 02, 2011

Police in Taipei have started using a combination of Global Positioning System, Geographic Information System and security cameras and satellite images to boost their anticrime efforts.

It'll cost NT$2 billion (US$68.94 million) and can "integrate information provided by GPS, GIS and the “110" hotline telephone reporting system, to pinpoint the location of an incident so police can be quickly dispatched there."

The data described includes images from more than 13,354 digital cameras in the road surveillance system; an additional 27,000 high resolution cameras will be added by 2014. There is no discussion of how satelite images are to be used.

- GMA News

China announced that its mapping scientists have finished a 1:50,000-scale map database which will provide essential geographic reference to China's economic and social development, per an official with National Administration of Surveying, Mapping and Geoinformation. There was even a press conference about it!

 
Trains across India will have GPS enabled signboards in the compartments that note the speed and next station. A pilot was successful and the plan is to roll it out on trains across the country. Why?
According to the official, railways has been working hard in consultation with Geological Survey of India (GSI) to give final shape to the project. "Once the new device is introduced across the country, passengers travelling in AC coaches will easily know the stations or places passing through. It will be a great relief for them, especially during night journey as visibility is poor through AC windows," he said. 
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/02 at 04:42 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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