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Tagged: esri, esri

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

A City of Cornwall employee has been recognized for his efforts in creating a unique on-line mapping site for the City.

GIS Applications Specialist Denis Lalonde of the City of Cornwall (Ontario, CA) received the gold medal prize in the Best Web GIS category of the Best Geographic Information System Challenge Awards from the Ontario URISA chapter.. The awards are organized by the Ontario chapter of the Urban and Regional Information Systems Association (URISA).The app is built on MapGuide and includes city businesses, transit routes and times, property lines, addresses, subdivision plans, zoning, municipal utilities, points of interest, historical air photos.

- Cornwall Seaway News

Open-source development, because of its collaborative nature, moves faster. One dude writes it, another improves upon it. ESRI, a vendor of proprietary geographic information systems, and Microsoft, our database vendor, don't offer some of the advanced features my staff has created for a location-based business app using open-source tools PostgreSQL and PostGIS.

Because of the speed of innovation and advanced features of open-source products, we were able to create an app with a far faster end user response time than if we had relied on the two proprietary vendors. I'll take the agility any day, even though the skeptics have warned me of the dire consequences of using an open-source database.

-  Jonathan Feldman, contributing editor for InformationWeek and director of IT services for a rapidly growing city in North Carolina writing in a commentary titled Open Source: Why Are You Still Waiting? at InformationWeek.

Although some of the proprietary vendors such as ESRI were demonstrating at the [FOSS4GNA] conference, it's unclear what unique capabilities they can continue to provide given all the open source choices.

- From a recap of FOSS4GNA by Jim Collinsworth (published May 22 - not sure why) on the BreakThrough Technologies blog

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/23 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: esri, foss4gna, mapguide, open source

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

The OnStar Story

Jeff Joyner from OnStar General Motors started the day looking at one of the earliest location-based services, OnStar. It all started back in 1995 with a project then called Beacon. It morphed from a $2000 add-on for Cadallic owners in 1996, that supported some nine calls per day to a factory installed solution in 2000 that supported 5000 calls per day. By 2005, OnStar added month car diagnostic e-mails to car owners who had the service. In 2009, OnStar went to China and in 2010 GM began looking at injury severity after accidents. In 2011 the solution supports apps such as those to remotely lock a car or find it in a parking lot. In 2011, OnStar supports about two calls per second.

Among the other interesting tidbits, were the types of calls collected per month:

  • 2500 automatic crash reports (or air bag deployed)
  • 5600 emergency calls (subscriber needs help)
  • 7000 good samaritan calls (subscriber calling about others in need)

I also found it fascinating that GM saves $2-$3M in warranty costs, by sending those monthly “car checkup” reports.

Joyner also shared a touching recorded call of a young girl who noticed her mother was not driving the right way to get home. She pushed the OnStar button and police stopped her Mom. It turns out Mom was having a diabetic reaction and was in fact not “ok.”

I find it interesting that back in the 1990s the pull of location-based services and cell phones/cell phone technology was safety. I know my Dad loved it when I first got a cell phone for work. He felt better I could get help (via AAA) or call him at any time. Today, in 2012, the number of location-based apps and energy focused on safety seems so very small. The efforts seem so focused on marketing and entertainment.

Enterprise Location Intelligence: The BI/LI/Cloud Story

Sean Maday of Google, Chris Ovens of Esri and Glenn Kronschnabl of CoreLogic shared their “vision” of the state of Business Intelligence, Location Intelligence and the cloud.

Maday restated the irony of the current abundance of data, but balkanization of that same data and highlighted Google role as making those data useable. He also announced the rebranding of Google Earth Builder as Google Maps Engine. Ovens joined Esri from SpotOn Systems and started by not doing the “location advantage talk.” Instead he focused on his role on the  location analytics team, one that needs to adopt geospatial perspectives into the CIO’s world instead of dragging that CIO into our world. Kronschnabl highligted CoreLogic’s goal of offering a data play as well as a technology play,

The questions yielded some interesting comments from the panel (paraphrased):

Maday (Google) - Do analysis elsewhere; When you want to visualize, come to Google.

Kronschnabl (CoreLogic)  - Back in the day (I was with Cognos), adding location/mapping to BI was 4 or 5 on agenda, so “check box mapping” was enough. Now it’s expected by customers due to Google’s redefining expectations.

Kronschnabl (CoreLogic) - Customers now want APIs, but we still ship data. Our emphasis is on making the data easy to consume. We don’t know all the questions our customers may need to ask, so it’s best to put data in cloud and let users go wild.

Maday (Google) - Google’s play in the enterprise geo space does not involve the company offering professional services. Instead, Google offers platforms to support consumers, we blur with Fusion Tables, but don’t, for example, support multiple heatmap algorithms.

Maday (Google) - Google has done a lot of indoor mapping. (Google Indoor Mapping coverage)

Overs (Esri) We sort of do indoor mapping - facilities mapping. There are two ways to think of it:  geocentric-spatial at center vs geo-enabled take spatial to the existing systems.

Maday (Google) We think OpenStreetMap is a great thing, but it’s large cumbersome, needs styling, needs processing needed. But lots of Googlers contribute to it.

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/22 at 07:46 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: esri, google, lbs, li12, onstar

Monday, May 14, 2012

Esri's Director of Education, David DiBiase shared that Esri sales staff have been able to quote pricing for ArcGIS Online for Organizations (the product name is in flux) as of last Friday. The subscription offering allows organizations to skin the service, create and manage accounts and is expectedt to be popular with government, private sector and educational organizations. Pricing has not been made public. The official release is expected before the User Conference in July.

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/14 at 01:52 PM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: arcgisonline, esri

Tuesday, May 08, 2012

The National Center for Safe Routes to School and the League of American Bicyclists are behind the first-ever National Bike to School Day on May 9, 2012. There have been local and regional efforts in the past to celebrate a day of young people pedaling to school, but this is the first nationwide event. It's a spin off of Walk to School Day (that was every day of my K-12 experience...) and now the two share a webpage.

Even though most people know where their schools are (they get there all the other days of the year with or without a bike I hope), there is an Esri-powered interactive map to find and share routes to school. To do pretty much anything, you must create an account. I guess the idea is that responsible adults will add in crossing guards, hazards and the like.

This tool can be used to map the routes of daily walking and bicycling trips, special events, or walking school buses or bicycle trains.

You can:

  • enter school travel features such as crossing guards and traffic signals
  • draw detailed walking and biking routes to the school
  • add pick up time for walking school buses and bicycle trains

Share your routes in two ways: as a downloadable, printable file(PDF) or through a unique web address generated by Map-a-Route.

How to Map-a-Route:

  1. Create an account. Registered users can build maps and return to edit them at any time. Only the registered users can modify the routes they make.
  2. Build a route to school.
  3. Share it with parents, event partners, walking school bus leaders and other involved in walking and bicycling to school. There's no central search for routes because we want you to decide when you're ready to share your maps and how you want to share them.

I was disappointed that my high school (built circa 1970s) was not symbolized on the  basemap.  I wonder if any school buldings are?

- South City News

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/08 at 03:51 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: bike to school day, bikes, edu, esri

Monday, May 07, 2012

Teaching high school stduents and elementary students about GPS and having them use it to make maps is not a new idea. What is new in Urbana, IL is that the older students are teaching the younger ones. And, both groups are English as a second language students and the teaching and learning is occurring in English. My head spins considering how much learning could be going on in these hands on sessions.

- News Gazette

West Potomac High School students from Frances Coffey’s Advanced Placement Human Geography class were treated to a visit from Cathi Hoefler and Steven Keating from the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency recently. Hoefler and Keating discussed the importance of using data to better predict and respond to natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina and the 2011 earthquake off the coast of Japan and tsunami.

- Connection Newspapers

California State University, Fresno's Division of Continuing and Global Education has just announced a new online certificate program focusing on Geographic Information Systems (GIS), a field that uses digital technology to manage, map, analyze and display spatial information.

Classes in the 12 credit sequence begin in August. It's Esri-based (included in tuition).

- press release

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/07 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: edu, esl, esri, gps, nga, stem

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