Category: GIS

So you want to develop land?

September 12th, 2007 by Kim Albritton

Where do you begin? If you are new to development or new to a geographic area it can be a daunting task to find property.

In the past, developers or investors have found property through brokers, colleagues or by driving.  Advancements in technology, GIS (geographic information systems) combined with aerial photography, allow developers to search for land from their computer. 

How is this possible?  To make a long story short, many government agencies have moved their information on-line.  Everything from court records to property records.  The information is great, but searching the information can be difficult.  The only available search options are by parcel number, owner name or address.  Most often, when looking for a property, I would only know the characteristics I am looking for in a property: size (acres); general location (city) and zoning.

So, how can GIS help me find land?  GIS is an excellent tool for inputting criteria and obtaining results.  I could do the same thing in a spreadsheet document, but viewing data on a map is much easier.  To find the land I need, I would enter my search criteria in the area I want to search, say Polk County, and view my results either in tabular format or on a map. The map is important because now I can see what other buildings, subdivisions or roads are near the parcel.  Before GIS and aerial photography this was only accomplished by taking a trip to the location.  Think of the time saving potential!

How Can GIS be used in the Oil and Weather Industries?

August 21st, 2007 by Kim Albritton

I am sure you have heard or read about Hurricane Dean hitting the Yucatan Peninsula and then heading for Mexico. As a Florida native, this time of year is especially concerning for me with the possibility of hurricanes like Dean heading our way. Another interesting thing that happens during this time of year is the volatility in the markets, especially when a storm gets close.

How are the two related? Some of you might know that the Gulf of Mexico has many oil drilling platforms. Hurricane Katrina caused millions in damage and caused gas prices to peak to over $3.00 a gallon two summers ago. To put it into perspective, I found a really cool blog, The Oil Drum, that has posted some Google Earth images that have mash-ups (see previous post about mash-ups) of the weather.

Scroll to the second picture, and you can really get a sense of why the market is so volatile when a storm comes through the Gulf.

Images like the one on The Oil Drum are perfect examples of how GIS benefits everyone. As the saying goes, “a picture is worth a thousand words.” I think the map showing all the oil platforms along the Gulf coast speaks for itself.

GIS is also being used in the recovery effort for victims of Hurricane Dean. An organization called Map Action has already sent people to Jamaica. The organization has created maps of affected parishes and potential flood areas. In the days to come, they will have more maps.

Feel free to leave your comments on the storm or other sites showing GIS data.

What is GIS?

August 13th, 2007 by Kim Albritton

Over the last several months, I have received alto of feedback about our blog. The first thing everyone said to me was, “Yes I read it, but it did not make much sense to me.” While we all really love GIS here at GlobalMind and use it everyday, most people have not heard the term “GIS”. So, I thought I would give everyone some Internet sites that would provide good examples and descriptions about what GIS is and what it can do.

  • Spatial Thoughts has put together a great post about the different areas that GIS is used. Areas such as emergency response, urban planning, marketing, insurance, health care and disaster relief are some of the areas he talks about. He also links some of the topics to other posts or sites with more information. This is a good blog post about how people are using GIS to make decisions each day.
  • ESRI.com ESRI is the pioneer behind GIS technology. They wrote the GIS software that the majority of the GIS world uses.
  • GIS.com is a site by ESRI that works to educate people about GIS.

My Presentation from the Florida Geospatial Conference

May 10th, 2007 by Steve Gordon

Yesterday, I had the pleasure of giving one of the plenary presentations at the 2007 Florida Geospatial Conference at Cape Canaveral. The theme of the conference and the title of my presentation is Integrating Geospatial Data.

Following are the slides and some of the commentary. I ran the presentation as more of a workshop as opposed to a speech so some of the ideas expressed below are attributable to the group as a whole.

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What does integrating geospatial data mean?

I believe it means different things to different people. Its meaning is dependent upon context—the context of the data being integrated, the question to be answered by the melding of data and the people doing the integration.

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Google says there are about 905,000 web pages that talk about integrating geospatial data. Therefore it must be important!

It is important if it leads us to greater understanding of our business, organization and the world. Geographic visualization often has a transformational effect on our understanding of information. It allows us to perceive patterns that could not be seen in the same data if only viewed as records in data table.

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In the 1980’s and 1990’s the focus of our discussions on integrating geospatial data revolved around the technical problems of integrating different map layers into a single map.

We talked about map accuracy, scale and source lineage. While these issues still exist, I believe they are well understood and no longer represent a significant barrier.

During this time the related problem of data interoperability was a high priority in the geospatial community. Data interoperability is the idea that information in one software package can be read by another (often competing) software package. Data interoperability is no longer a significant issue either.

Today our integrations should be focused on bringing business data into geospatial systems for analysis and visualization to support decision making. After all, this is the unfulfilled promise of the geographic information system.

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Are we well integrated now? Yes and no.

We’re much better than we were a decade ago, but we are at the beginning of a new type of integration with non-geographic information. We’re at a tipping point and I think we’re going to see highly creative integrations of data from many sources. The information will be pulled together by its geography and will be visualized on a map.

In doing so we will understand patterns that we did not understand and find solutions that we could not find before. Where we are going will be transformational.

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Who’s in charge? You are! Why? Because integrations are context driven.

Gone are the days of standards committees that met for months and years to try to get 10 or 20 or 50 organizations to agree to use the same data model to represent real world objects inside the geographic information system. I was involved in some of these efforts and, looking back, they were mis-guided.

What we really need is data semantics. Semantics are definitions of sorts, where I can create my own model for, say, a road. In my model the road has attributes like “name” and “lanes.” You also have a model for roads in your GIS, but your road’s attributes are called “rdname” and “numlanes.” Semantics help our systems talk to each other by acting as a translator. In this case telling the two systems that “name” and “rdname” both store the name of the road.

The beauty of this is that now neither one of us needs to agree on a data model. I can use the model that makes sense for me and you can use the model that makes sense for you, but we can still share information because we have an easy way to translate between models.

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Unfortunately, we are usually the obstacle to data integration. People and politics are the most commonly cited barriers to successful integrations. We’ve tackled most of the big technical problems—they were easy to solve. Now we’re left with the people problem. It stems from the false premise that information is power. Information hoarded is not power, information shared is power.

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There are a number of new technologies that are making the integration of geospatial data much simpler. The most important new technology for data integration is web services.

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Google Earth is fueling a geographic awakening in society. People that would never know that GIS existed have used Google Earth or seen it on CNN. It’s given geographic visualization to the masses. It has more effectively communicated events such as the crisis in Darfur, Sudan than textual reports could.

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Mashups are great examples of the integration of geospatial and non-geospatial data. They are simple to implement, accessible by non-technical people and don’t require bulky client applications to view them.

Mashups are driven by a technology called web services. Web services are used to publish both data and computing functions over the web for others to use in their own applications. For GIS this is driving us away from redundant mapping where each organization often mapped base layers like roads, land parcels, topography and aerial imagery. It is driving us towards the concept of federated or distributed GIS. In this new concept an organization will focus on delivering the data and or analysis functions for areas where they are the experts. The organization will pull in the other basic data they need from web services created by other organizations.

Web services are also used in back office business systems. This means that we can use one technology to integrate geospatial and non-geospatial data in a mashup.

Some web services will be offered for free, while others will be for-pay services. That’s one of the beauties of the web service concept—it supports different business models. While we’d all like to get things for free, the idea of you get what you pay for still holds true on the web.

Some great examples of mashups can be found at:

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Geo-social networking builds on the social networking concept used on sites like myspace, facebook and flikr by adding a location to the information posted on those sites. Some of the tools for geo-social networking include:

These tools are changing the way we find things and I think they will make small businesses as easy to find as large national brands.

There are big societal trends that are beginning here. Small is overtaking big. Grassroots is becoming more powerful than the institution.

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GeoRSS is an emerging standard for adding location tags to RSS feeds. This has the potential to make is vastly easier to find information about what’s around you. It also has the potential to be the pipe that connects different GIS systems to one another and keep them updated as data changes. It’s just being formulated now, but has the potential to huge!

Read more at www.georss.org.

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So is all of this stuff just for college kids with a myspace account? Not by a long shot! The idea of geo-social networking is already being talked about for disaster response as evidenced by the LoSoNet Conference last year. When you think about it, it’s the perfect way to gather information from many different sources and visualize it on a map. It should make the task of gaining situational awareness much easier.

I can see the local fire station or police precinct or mobile response unit reporting on the conditions at their location. All of it will be done with simple web based tools (no expensive desktop mapping software). Then the crisis managers will see it all in one unified, map centric view. They’ll get the whole picture instead of just bits and pieces of information.

What a great way to use these “social” tools!

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Integrating geospatial data is personal—it depends on your context. So how will you do it?

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Why Aren’t Small and Medium Businesses Using Geography to Make Money?

May 7th, 2007 by Steve Gordon

Google Earth Screen Image

By now nearly everyone with a TV or a computer knows about Google Earth. It has brought a previously unknown technology—geographic information systems (GIS)—to the mainstream. It is helping fuel a geographic awakening in society where it is becoming easier to find things by their location in the world. So why aren’t small and medium businesses using geography to make better decisions and more money?

The technology and knowledge exist to help the local lawn care company or pest control outfit route it’s 5 or 10 or 15 car fleet. FedEx and UPS do it every day. The problem is that all of the tools are designed for FedEx and UPS and none are designed for Joe’s Lawn Care, Inc. But Joe could cut his fleet costs by 10%-15% if he used a routing tool.

Why doesn’t Joe have access to a simple tool that he can use to find the largest properties in town so he can target them for his next promotion? Or a map of medium to high-income family homes that he can use to plan where he should do business (because doing business all over town means a big gas bill)?

Even in today’s global and virtual economy, location is critically important to the operational success of 99% of all businesses. So, why aren’t small and medium businesses using geography to make money?

IT’S TOO HARD!

The problem is that the big guys in GIS technology—ESRI, Microsoft, Google and MapInfo—have built enterprise class systems (and great ones at that). But what small business need are focused, task specific tools that are dead simple to use and inexpensive (read no new computer or software to buy, install and maintain). Over the next 60 days we’ll be rolling out simple tools to help the Joe’s and Jane’s running the world’s small businesses leverage geography. We’d love to hear how you think location affects your business. Please leave us a comment below.