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Tagged: location intelligence, lbs

Monday, November 28, 2011

ReadWriteWeb provided details on near field communication (NFC) might be used by foursquare to make it easier to check-in to certain retail venues without the need to open the app and manually perform a search. Using NFC, the user merely swipes the mobile device near an NFC tag. Since people merely forget to "check-in" this new option certainly facilitates the process and lowers the barrier to utilizing location-based apps. It might even further the benefits of location-based adverting. See also our coverage of Blue Bite (1, 2).

-- ReadWriteWeb

by Joe Francica on 11/28 at 12:02 PM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Today, we at Directions Magazine offer you a new way of getting news with the launch of "Channels," websites dedicated to specific industries or technologies. Please take a moment to visit the following and give us your feedback by writing to us at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address):

  • State and Local Government
    • Our channel for municipal and state government applications with a focus on standards, data compilation, and the interaction with federal initiatives, NSGIC and the FDGC.
  • Location-based Services and Mobile Computing

    • Our channel for mobile computing and location-enabled applications, from navigation to mobile resource management as well as social networking.
  • Location Intelligence and Business Geographics

    • Our channel for enterprise geospatial technology and business analytics with particular emphasis on the retail, real estate, banking, insurance, and transportation sectors.
  • Remote Sensing and Geospatial Intelligence/GEOINT

    • Our channel for earth observation and geospatial intelligence, from satellite and airborne platforms to sensor networks, 3D and LiDAR

      Our objective is to segment the news so that you’re getting the most up-to-date information on a daily basis that directly pertains to your interest. We hope to build upon these initial four Channels and bring you news on Health, Education, Computing, Energy and more. Stay tuned.
by Joe Francica on 01/05 at 06:47 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

In the days of "big iron" computing companies IBM, HP and DEC dominated. Then there was the era of PCs where Dell, Compaq, and Gateway had compelling price points. In geospatial, Intergraph provided an all in one solution with VAX, CLIX, and MGE. But the days of hardware relevance in geospatial have long since vanished. Any old PC will do; the computing power is there along with adequate graphics cards.

Enter "the cloud." Ah yes, the nebulous and yet undefined "geocloud." And what hardware is relevant for this new age of computing? The tablet, of course. Bypassing netbooks altogether, I am suggesting that tablets are relevant to geospatial like no other hardware in the last 20 years.

Here’s my reasoning: What is it that we really need to make maps fly off the page? Its visualization, of course. Now, it’s not exactly easy to take your desktop PC "door stop" with you to the field, nor is it likely that you’ll drag one of those huge touch screen tables either. And while very handy, your cell phone falls short of providing the big picture you really need.

Tablets are being built in many different form factors from the 9.7" iPad screen to the 7" Blackberry Playbook to the dual 7" screen Toshiba Libretto to the 12" ASUS Eee Pad. The big benefit is that they are all portable enough to carry without lugging big packs and all have network access with high resolution screens. You can whip these babies out on top of your pick up truck just like you would paper maps and not have to worry about them flying away. Such a deal?!

Tablets are Flash ready (most are!) with high resolution screens for excellent multimedia capabilities and many have built in cameras…some have two cameras! This is the hardware many in geospatial have been waiting for. You don’t even have to drag the GIS geek from the backroom to show off the pretty maps. Just throw down the "tab" in your next boardroom meeting with your VP and you’ll be promoted to be the next CLIO: chief location intelligence officer.

There is one problem. It’s the "geocloud." Just how much computing power moves to the cloud is a big question. Solutions that are platform hosts like WeoGeo and Skygone are compelling as are true solutions like Esri’s Business Analyst Online and Alteryx.

I think we’ll see a plethora of new solutions move to the cloud in 2011; I think we’ll even see Google offer image processing of satellite data online with Google Earth Engine, as an example of a "high powered" computing capability that we should expect; and I think we’ll see tablets deliver the end result of cloud-based solutions to more professionals. So, while computing power moves to the cloud (Amazon, Microsoft, whoever) and all communication becomes wireless (take your pick of carriers), tablets become the delivery mechanism to visualize geospatial information.

[I recommend reading ZDNets "20 iPad Competitors to watch" and CIO Magazine’s "Cloud Computing: 2011 predications"]

 

by Joe Francica on 12/14 at 11:22 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: cloud computing, lbs, location intelligence, wi-fi

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Today, Zillow.com launched their iPhone app and the one thing I can say is that it will probably cause a few Realtors to gasp for air.

Continue reading...

by Joe Francica on 04/29 at 07:44 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: lbs, location intelligence

Monday, March 16, 2009

I read this FOX News report on True Position’s new location platform called LOCINT that is designed for the tracking and location of cellular phone calls. The FOX News item seems to be confusing the product name with the broader category of "location intelligence" used by Directions Media’s as the name for our Location Intelligence Conference and others in describing the use of location technology for a variety of information technology applications. FOX News likes to inject its "fear and greed" factor by describing the technology as one used to track terrorists…but only where it’s legal. The news report goes into detail on why it can’t or shouldn’t be used in the U.S. For purely biased reasons, I found the report confusing but are we naming for the sake of naming: LOCINT…Do they mean GEOINT?

by Joe Francica on 03/16 at 08:55 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: lbs, location intelligence, tracking

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