Thursday, 7 April 2011

Beauty of Maps available in its entirety

Beauty of Maps

Almost a year ago, the BBC aired the Beauty of Maps, but we Americans couldn't watch it online. Well, now you can. The full documentary is available for your viewing pleasure on YouTube. The hour and a half film is broken up into 12 parts. They've actually been online since August of last year, but for some reason I'm just now hearing about it. Enjoy part one below.

BAE enhances geospatial-intel software

BAE Systems in California has added new capabilities to its geospatial-intelligence software for the importation of high-resolution imagery.
The company said its SOCET GXP software automates image processing for the importation of high-resolution imagery from scanned film and digital airborne sensors.
Film and digital airborne sensors are the primary data sources for many geospatial analysts, particularly in commercial and global markets where acquiring satellite imagery is often not feasible, it said. But BAE Systems has developed a step-by-step interface to simplify the frame import process, reducing the time required for image processing. Advanced image-processing algorithms assist operators with change detection, image classification, identifying anomalies and tracking patterns of activity over time.
"The Frame-Advanced sensor model is used in the geospatial production process from frame import through image registration to creating finished products," said Stewart Walker, director of product initiatives for the Geospatial eXploitation Products business. "Analysts can more efficiently and accurately create photogrammetric products, such as topographic map data and high-resolution digital surface and elevation models."
The company said its SOCET GXP v3.2 software adds automated tools for viewing and editing live video feeds and efficient tools for converting terrain analysis results from raster to vector file format.
Hyperspectral and multispectral image processing is extended with the capacity to analyze additional bands of image data, which minimizes the dependency on specialized software packages.
Using the tools, analysts can more precisely identify ground features such as distinguishing between camouflaged fatigues and trees.

OSI Geospatial signs $2.2 million contract with Britain's Royal Navy

OSI Geospatial Inc. has signed a $2.2 million contract to provide a fleetwide license for use by the British Royal Navy.
The navy currently used OSI's tactical navigation software and systems across 75 naval platforms, including submarines.
This new fleetwide licence enables the Royal Navy to establish a common software baseline across all of its current platforms.
The licence further enables the navy to deploy certain OSI technology across a wide range of new naval users ranging from small specialized craft and land based operations to new platforms.
OSI Geospatial, which is based in Vancouver and Philadelphia, provides systems and software to military, government, and commercial customers around the world.

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

Defining Location Intelligence

Lachlan James

Demand for Location Intelligence (LI) has grown rapidly throughout 2010 and this will continue in 2011. The ability to map, visualize and understand data form a geographical standpoint will become an increasingly important part of any Business Intelligence (BI) solution. Why? Because, according to IDC, more than 80 percent of the data collected by organizations has a spatial element and vendors are finally starting to offer integrated mapping with their BI platforms.


So what is Location Intelligence?

LI enables business analysts to apply geographic contexts to business data – LI combines location-based data with traditional metrics captured within a BI system. It helps answer a business problem by providing context to business data.

Take this scenario: Overall sales of ‘Brand X’ motor vehicles are down. There’s panic and pandemonium in the Some Car Company boardroom. Coffee is spilt, fists are clenched, and hasty proclamations are made. All the finger pointing, angst and premature job searching is too much to bear. Suddenly, Johnny Smith whips out his iPad 2. Using a cutting-edge BI product – let’s pick one at random, say, Yellowfin – Johnny is able to create a multilayered map, overlaying sales income by sales territory, and customer details by address. ‘A ha!’ The central northern region has no sales. Why?!

“Oh that’s right!” Exclaims Joe Blogs. “Under new legislation, only low emissions vehicles can be sold there now!”

A new marketing campaign targeting the central northern sales region with the new low emissions ‘Brand Z’ range of vehicles is launched. Johnny and Joe have saved the day. The sound of congratulatory backslapping echoes down the hallway.



The ability to overlay demographic or statistical data onto a map provides an additional level of analysis, both aiding, and adding to your interpretation of the data. By combining geographic data with traditional/standard business data, users are provided with the insights and context to make better decisions.


Location Intelligence: Gathering momentum since 2008

The prominence of LI has been mounting for a few years now. The emergence of this specific component of reporting and analytics was pinpointed by a Ventana Research report – Location Intelligence: Geographic Context Spurs Innovation – back in 2008.

When the report was released, Ventana stated that: “Location Intelligence will be one of the key technologies to enable business innovation and will be essential for achieving new levels of growth through improvement to business processes.”

Ventana Research’s CEO and Executive Vice President of Research, Mark Smith, noted that “The use of geography and location related information and technology is a contributor of business innovation and breakthrough performance.”

He stated that the research “found viral use of consumer mapping technology like Google in business but organizations are challenged in utilizing it to deal with the volumes and frequency of data that needs to be integrated.”

The report indicated that lack of awareness was the most substantial barrier to the adoption of LI in 36 percent of organizations. The potential market for this technology remains huge, with the report indicating that more than three-fourths (78%) of participants expressed willingness to utilize mapping viewers for business purposes. This was also coupled with the fact that less than one-third (31%) said they are confident or very confident that consumer mapping technology can satisfy business requirements.


What’s the difference between Location Intelligence and GIS?

Now, at this point, some of you might be wondering if LI is any different to Geographical Information Systems (GIS). Is LI just a fancy marketing term to re-guise an existing concept? The difference is this: GIS starts with geography. LI starts with a business query. Additionally, because GIS are purchased to address a geographic question, its usefulness is often siloed or departmentalized, unable to be used and applied to different business problems and metrics throughout an organization. LI can be.


Examples: Who can use Location Intelligence?

Ok great. LI has the ability to help solve a multiplicity of business dilemmas. So who else can use LI?

Well, as IDC flagged with their estimation that around 80 percent of organizational data has a location element, almost everyone can.

Some prominent examples include:

  • The mining industry: Being able to track, plot and understand the location of infrastructure and resources (or potential resources) is critical for corporations in the mining sector to properly assess the profitability of any given exploration or venture.
  • Insurance companies: Assessing risk enables insurance companies to structure a reliable, fair and profitable business model. Understanding the location of customers in relation to other location-based data, such as rates of car theft or frequency of severe weather systems by city, region or state, enables insurers to identify high or low risk cases and price them accordingly.
  • Airports and airlines: Mapping the location of aircraft is critical for obvious reasons. Further, combing the location of aircraft with other operational data can expose and answer critical questions. For example, what’s the maintenance record of the aircraft closest to a particular airport? Based on that record, is it reasonably safe to turn the aircraft around for back-to-back flights without a closer inspection and safety check?
  • Retail outlets: Tracking stock levels enable retail operators to coordinate warehouse deliveries to ensure individual shop fronts are always well stocked. Looking at sales of particular items by region or store also allows for more effective and efficient stock delivery. Additionally, new mobile applications, such as Foursquare, can actually detect when registered customers are near a store. Combing this data with customer transaction history, a text message can be sent to that customer when they are in the vicinity, alerting them to products and special offers that match their purchase history.
  • Transport and logistics companies: Monitoring the location of deliveries boosts the number of timely deliveries and allows for efficient dispatch and supply-chain management via accurate estimated time of arrival calculations.
  • Universities: Mapping a range of metrics helps universities offer better teaching and learning environments, facilities, and attract prospective students. Universities consume and produce a huge amount of data. Adding geographical components to student data can allow Higher Education institutions to develop more effective marketing campaigns by visualizing student intake by postal address; and more effective research grants can be made by assessing the number of incoming grants by geography. Additionally, facilities can be placed in the best positions on campus by tracking student traffic flow.
Despite the evidence and almost endless possibilities, many business leaders still seem unaware of the benefits of integrated mapping technologies. We aim to change that. Stay tuned for our next entry on LI, as we uncover some of its significant benefits.

Yellowfin: Making Location Intelligence easy.

Tuesday, 5 April 2011

Disaster Relief 2.0: Thinking Spatially Sbout Crowdsourcing

Thinking Spatially About Crowdsourcing
By Bronwyn Agrios
If Web 2.0 is the Web plus interactivity and conversation, then you can think of disaster response 2.0 as increased interactivity and conversation between responders, affected populations, concerned communities, governmental agencies, and NGO’s. Crowdsourcing and social networks are helping to fill the information gap in a timely manner when a disaster strikes. They provide more information about what is happening in the affected area.
In our work here at Esri the past several months I’ve learned a few important things about the usefulness of crowdsourcing in disaster response which I’d like to share.
1.     Social networks + location can connect you with your neighbor

Location-aware social networks have a huge potential for enabling communities to help themselves during a crisis. Consider this example from the Chicago snow storm this year. Ushahidi setup a platform that allowed Chicago residents to post both needs (plow needed) as well as solutions (extra shovel).
Providing this inherently spatial information in a spatial context can hopefully connect individuals and optimize the use of trained resources.
2.     Accurate locations lead to good decisions (poor location accuracy does not)
While spatial accuracy of content from social networks is really unknown, I have found that considering the type of social network I’m working with helps a great deal in this regard. Consider Twitter, people tweeting are not necessarily thinking about location and probably don’t even realize that their tweet could be used to gain insight into disaster response efforts.

Compare this to someone purposefully posting to a managed crisis response network that contributes volunteered information to the response effort. A network that produces actionable information is probably more likely to solicit actionable content.
3.     Spatial analysis is key
Performing spatial analysis allows you to transform data into intelligence by uncovering trends and correlations not visible in the raw data.

With an enormous number of reports, how can we make sense of the situation?

Visualizing reports as hotspots, or trends, gives us an idea of density. This map showing hotspots of road closures helps responders and citizens make decisions about how to travel. Hotspots also indicate several similar reports in an area helping to validate individual incidents thereby providing increased situational clarity.
There is great opportunity to use spatial analysis to make crowdsourced data actionable. I believe we are just beginning to take advantage of the immense power of these techniques.

Location-based marketing ‘is game-changing’

Companies establishing a pay per click strategy might want to look at their location-based marketing strategies in light of comments made recently by one expert.
In an article for Direct Marketing News, Carol Krol stated that this form of campaign enables firms to narrow down their targets.
She explained that companies might be able to advertise to consumers who are not only "in the mood to buy", but who are also located near a place where they can make a purchase.
Luke Gebb, vice-president of global network marketing at American Express described location-based marketing as a "game-changing" development.
Ms Krol noted that better technology for implementing this form of pay per click advertising strategy is becoming available, notably in the form of online maps showing customers where points of sale are situated.
This comes after senior research analyst at Econsultancy Jake Hird claimed it is increasingly important for smaller businesses to concentrate their efforts on localised search engine optimisation techniques.

Friday, 1 April 2011

Koala hot spots mapped out for survival. Is this an April fools? $8 Million??

THE battle to save Australia's cuddliest emblem has a new, cutting edge weapon.
 The Australian Koala Foundation today launched a new online koala map, which grades the quality of potential koala habitat nationwide.
The map was developed with mapping experts Esri Australia, whose online maps of Brisbane were used widely during January's floods, and is also helping with the response to the Japanese tsunami.
The foundation's Deborah Tabart said the $8 million map was developed using data from thousands of volunteer hours.



http://koalamap.savethekoala.com/

It would allow landowners to upload photos and videos when they spot koalas on their properties, or mark where a proposed road or building project could threaten them.
And it would also give developers and government information about the potential for koalas to be living on land subject to building, Ms Tabart said.
"If people understand and take this on board they could actually save the koala," she told reporters in Brisbane on Thursday.
"We're giving these maps to everyone, the 'good guys' and maybe even sort of the 'bad guys'.
"I'm hoping that they will see this as a very important planning tool."
The foundation believes there are as few as 45,000 koalas left - largely due to loss of habitat - and Ms Tabart says governments have reason to be "deaf" to the figures.
"I do not believe there is one government in this country that is committed to protecting koalas," she said.
"The koala is in so many places around this nation and it's under greater threat than it ever has been.
"We have coal seam gas, we have coal, we have development, we have roads and I can promise you that those companies make political donations and maps like this get in the way.
"These maps are a powerful tool for the community who normally ring me and ask me ... help us save the koalas."