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Tagged: crime, education

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

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

WikiCrimes in Brazil, and similar initiatives in Venezuela, Panama, Mexico, Argentina and Chile, provide interactive maps that people can use to anonymously report crimes, describe what happened and pinpoint the location. In this way, crime mapping identifies danger zones - crime hotspots - within a region with generally high crime rates, to enhance people's awareness, preparedness and safety. 

- Al Jazeera English

The [Utah] Legislature’s Redistricting Committee did two things Monday that critics doubted would ever happen.

First, it adopted a map proposed by an ordinary citizen — Robert Horning, a software designer living in Logan — for new state school board boundaries.

Second, it let the news media into a backroom to watch a subcommittee negotiate how to redraw Horning’s map a bit before final adoption, allowing reporters to listen to frank discussion about protection of incumbents and local school board boundaries.

- Salt Lake Tribune

Google is crowdsourcing guides to its crowdsourced mapping effort, Map Maker. (Yes, that's meta.)

Now all Map Maker users can be part of an even broader community education effort, with the help of “Map Makerpedia.”

Makerpeda lets users make additions and edits on a variety of guides, which range from 101 material on using Map Maker to in-depth guides on specialized tasks, like mapping a local university. Map Makerpedia also highlights some of the major charitable projects from Google that have been built with Map Maker, including flood and disease mapping.

- Search Engine Journal

by Adena Schutzberg on 08/24 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Wednesday, May 04, 2011


How geographers can use computer mapping technology to help local residents better understand critical regional issues will be discussed during a Community Roundtable on Thursday, May 5, at SUNY Cortland.

David Miller, a SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor, will speak from 8-9 a.m. in the Park Center Hall of Fame Room. A question-and-answer period will follow. Refreshments will precede the lecture at 7:45 a.m.

Free and open the public!

- SUNY Cortland

Tufts University (just up the road) is using GIS to manage its library collections.

Recognizing the need to better manage both its facilities and its collections, Tufts Library administrators enlisted a team of university employees including Thom Cox, technical project manager, and Patrick Florance, GIS center manager, to help develop and implement a geographic information system (GIS)-based library information system that incorporated the library’s existing data management programs. 

- American Libraries

Journalism students from SMU in Dallas are working with data journalists to learn more about presenting data. From the project comes not only a current crime map for campus but a look back at crime in 2009. Tool of choice? Fusion Tables.

Attending college in an urban jungle like Dallas means SMU students can encounter crime ranging from third-rate mischief to life-threatening attacks. Explore our Light of Day campus crime portal, fueled by Google Fusion Tables, to find the most common crimes around campus and in your neighborhood. Also check out The Daily Campus for more Light of Day coverage.

- SMU Daily Mustang

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/04 at 03:06 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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