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Tagged: esri, missouri

Monday, January 23, 2012

Here, we examine visually, through a series of maps, the association between obesity, diabetes, and sedentary transportation.

The maps are striking, but Anne Price and Ariel Godwin conclude:

... the relationship between sedentary travel and health outcomes can be misleading when additional contributing factors are not taken into account. While it is not our intent to claim a direct causal link between transportation modes and obesity rates, it is hard to deny the existence of some geographic patterns.

- Planetizen

Health Canada is drafting national guidelines for electricity-generating wind turbines that will establish a recommended minimum safe distance between the structures and homes. ...The Health Canada guidelines will deal with noise and shadow flicker, and will account for the power of the turbine, the size of the blade and local geography, [Dr. Moira] McKinnon [Saskatchewan's chief medical health office] said.

No doubt they'll need ot use GIS, once they figure out the details to manage noise and other impacts.

The Phoenix Star

The [second edition of the online] British Columbia Atlas of Wellness shows that northerners are more likely to smoke, eat unhealthy food and die sooner than their counterparts in Vancouver and Victoria.

- Times Colonist

Earlier this week, the Missouri Hospital Association launched www.MissouriHealthMatters.com. I recommend checking it out. The site contains quality of care and patient satisfaction data filtered through GIS technology with hospital specific information in a dashboard format. My thanks to David Dillon, MHA's VP of media relations, for giving me the heads-up on the website. I can attest to David's observation that the reports contain the same data as reported to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, "however the interface is much more user-friendly and locally-focused."

It uses ArcGIS Explorer Onilne, which took a while to load on my machine.

- Columbia Tribune

A RESEARCH OBSERVATORY based at NUI Maynooth [Kildare, Ireland] have unveiled a new online mapping tool that aims to show exactly how some parts of Ireland are covered by hospitals or schools.

The accessibility map, produced by the All-Island Research Observatory, highlights areas based on their proximity to facilities like hospitals, primary schools and secondary schools.

The map helps show diparities in services.

- The Journal.IE

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/23 at 05:45 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, January 19, 2012

The Berrien County, Michigan, Geographic Information System (GIS) is holding a seminar to introduce its new GIS provded by Schnieder Corporation. The session is free (I think), but using the GIS is not.

The cost of using the GIS website is $15 per day or $50 per month plus a processing fee compared to the previous website price of $10 per hour plus a processing fee.

- Niles Star

There are allegations the tourism board in Joplin, MO is handing out maps to encourage visitors to the tornado ravaged area. Officials say the map was created to respond to direct requests, rather than to promote such visits.

- Joplin Globe

Moscow has spent 20 billion roubles on its own map, hoping it will be used to crowdsource data on streetlight outages and the like. It should be online next month at atlas.mos.ru. The city feels maps from Google and Yandex can't do that job. I think Esri is doing the mapping.

Sergei Scherbina, Deputy Director at ESRI CIS- Moscow map service developer says the Moscow informational site will be updated frequently with more information and services for users.

Open data proponents are wary of the new map and how embeddable it may be.

- RT

The City Council of Bainbridge, GA has an agreement with the University of Georgia's Carl Vinson Institute of Government to develop a GIS (Geographic Information System) for the City. The $45,000 will put 7,300 parcels online in about four months.

by Adena Schutzberg on 01/19 at 02:59 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Launched a year ago, the website allows parents to view day care options and put their kids on waiting lists for all centres that meet their needs.

The new map, worth $231,000, will let parents look for licenced child-care providers along their route to work, for example, or near their home.

The website has placed more than 1,000 kids in child care in the five months since it's been fully implemented province-wide.

I wonder if the new map will encourage more placements. I wonder how much the original registry cost to put online. You must register to see the registry/map.

- Winnepeg Sun

A remarkable new online map lets people see hyperlocal U.S. Census information about Boston down to individual streets.

The “myNeighborhood Census Viewer” will soon include a vast amount of other info, ranging from police districts to the location of libraries, according to the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA), which created the map.

The map requires virtually no technical know-how. Users simply drag the mouse on an area—anything from a street to a block to the entire city—and the site instantly provides detailed Census data for it. The data is clearly presented as a pie chart.

I wish I agreed with the "requires virutally no technical know-how" part. I continue to find the Flex interface for ArcGIS Server apps hard to navigate. In particular, I don't find it follows the priciple of simplicity key to good user interfaces. Why all the different selection tools? Provide a default and hide the rest, please!

- Jamaica Plain Gazette

If you are sex offender in Springfield, IL and you are homeless, you won't be on the offender map. You will have to report where you live while not not in jail, but those locations are not on the map. Why not? Per  Greene County Sex Offender Registrar Lisa Simmons:

Simmons said the computer database doesn't allow for those locations to be entered. Only numbered street addresses can be entered, she said.

Morover, per state law a list of locations is required, but a map of them is not.

- Springfield News Leader

by Adena Schutzberg on 11/22 at 03:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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