IMGS header_main florida tokyo Mapping and Geospatial Solutions Ingredients for A Geospatially-Enabled Knowledge Economy Dr. Terry Keating Map Middle East – April 2005 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 2 Session Intent A knowledge economy has been defined by economists as the one in which the generation and exploitation of knowledge plays the predominant part in the creation of wealth. According to some economic observers the world is witnessing a transition towards Knowledge Economy. Geo-information has become a key driver for the 'new knowledge economy' in the new millennium. Timely, adequate and rational information forms the key tenet in any knowledge-based economy. Geo-information is critical for social and economic development and hence a dedicated focus towards its inclusion and use is crucial to embark upon a knowledge economy. This plenary would call for building partnerships among the geospatial data producers and users within the public, private and academic sectors. It would also showcase the potential and significance of geo-information in business dynamics and economic planning. The plenary session would portray the role of geospatial information in enhancing aspects of knowledge economy April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 3 Today’s Discussion (Geospatially Enabled Knowledge Economy) 1.Definition elements… 2.Required focus… 3.Technology enablers… 4.Examples… 5.Summary… Examples use this color… April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 4 World Development Report, 1999 §“…knowledge has become perhaps the most important factor determining the standard of living… §…more than land, than tools, than labor… §…Today's most technologically advanced economies are truly knowledge-based.” • April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 5 Definition Elements (New Zealand Ministry of Economic Development) 1.Exploitation of knowledge plays the predominant part in the creation of wealth 2.Technology is key driver of economic growth 3.Associated with high-technology industries such as telecommunications and financial services 4.Society must have sufficient trained human capital 5.Knowledge workers include architects and bank workers, fashion designers and pharmaceutical researchers, teachers and policy analysts. 6.Commodity easy to export http://www.med.govt.nz/pbt/infotech/knowledge_economy/knowledge_economy-04.html April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 6 Required Focus (Ernst & Young – New Zealand Model) 1.National focus – with a sense of urgency 2.Vision with clear direction 3.Innovative, knowledge-based industries 4.Access to information superhighways 5.Fair, competitive marketplace 6.Avoid unnecessary regulation 7. April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 7 2581-22 1.Food 2.Shelter 3.Opportunity 4.Security 5.Education 6.Equality 7.Freedom • Without fundamental rights in place, it is difficult to build knowledge based economies. MA019S20 BF005S08 Click to view larger version of this photo education-kids-br equality 7912_equality April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 8 USA Trends 1.Collaborative public and private sector development 2.Developments largely market driven with some government funding, particularly of R&D. a.More than 60 % of workers are knowledge workers b.Since 1980, 55 % of work force is in a new job c.Two-thirds of new jobs in industries that pay more than the average wage 3.Value-added goods that incorporate technology and intellectual capacity that seldom compete on price alone. 4. Zuckerman, 1999 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 9 Technology Enablers (Geospatial Knowledge Economy) 1.Wireless & Telecommunications… 2.Computers… 3.Internet & world wide web… 4.Standards & interoperability… 5.Web services… 6.Global geospatial data… 7.International partnerships… April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 10 1. 1. Wireless & Telecommunications… 1.Worldwide revenue §$2.1 trillion in 2004 §Up 9.4 % from 2003. 2.USA market at $780 billion 3.Other regions spent $1.4 trillion. 4.USA industry will grow: §9.5 % compound annual rate, rising to $1.1 trillion §between 2004-2008. wires towersmall.jpg (7453 bytes) April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 11 Cellular Telephone Trend 1.75% of world population within range of cell towers 2.Universal access – relatively inexpensive 3.Start with phones – computers, internet later 4.Soon GPS enabled 5.Integrated within personal digital assistants 6. 6. FFXXGG cell B000184FYS 002 25045_pdi Nokiafuturefone2 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 12 Telecommunications Growth Areas. 1.Broadband Technologies –(DSL, Cable, Satellite, Fixed Wireless) 2.Mobile Communications 3.Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) 4.Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) 5.Wireless Internet Access (Wi-Fi) 6.Call Centers Mobile_Communications 267-1 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 13 Wireless Subscribers Growth April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 14 Smart Phone Shipments April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 15 SMS – Short Messaging Services April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 16 Cell Phones and E-911 Services 1.E-911 mandate stipulates centers must be able to precisely locate subscribers 2.More than 50 % of emergency services calls made from mobile devices 3.Impacts the development of location-based services April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 17 Computers (USA) 1.7 % of population have computers worldwide 2.USA accounts for over 40 % of the world's investment in computing. 3.USA computing capacity growing by more than 35 % per year. 4.USA companies invest heavily in new technologies and the necessary training. 5.There are five times as many computers per worker in the USA as there are in Europe and Japan. 6. Computers National Public Radio - 2005 students%2520working%2520at%2520computers computer_pic April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 18 img003 Internet and World Wide Web NUA Internet Surveys - 1999 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 19 Internet (worldwide) 1.Less than 1 % population connected worldwide 2.USA users create 90 % of all web sites 3. 3. eick_internet April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 20 Internet (USA) 1.One-fifth of households (20 million +) are on-line 2.30 million additional can access the Internet from networks at schools, universities, and workplaces 3.In total, there are 50-60 million on-line 4.10 % use the Internet to purchase goods and services 5.Internet has now been turned over to the commercial sector by the US government. • A Framework for Global Electronic Commerce (United States Interagency Working Group on Electronic Commerce, 1997 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 21 Standards and Interoperability… gos-pi April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 22 Data Standardization Transport Transfer Protocol Encoding/Packaging Format Implementation Model Conceptual Model CD-ROM, tcp-ip ISO 9660, http, ftp XML, DIGEST VPF, SDTS Application Requirements Business rules, usage Abstract model, UML ER Diagrams, XML Schema, ISO Application Schema After Doug Nebert - FGDC Here are some suggested objectives for each Standard: Develop agreement on a common conceptual data content model in a multi-sector environment based on an intersection of stakeholder functional requirements Express and document the entities (feature types), attributes, relationships, optionality, identifier and code schemes and include them as a supplement to the model Based on the conceptual model, publish specific guidance on the unambiguous encoding (exchange format) of a conformant data set as an Annex to the Standard Develop standards of comparable detail, organization, and scope with guidance on where they should be applied Implied: Promote implementation of interoperable web services of Framework data for use by multiple applications and users April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 23 Interoperability 1.Data interoperability –applications understand the same sets of geospatial data. 2.Application interoperability – several applications can work together to solve a problem. 3.Web interoperability – Developers and users worldwide can share services 4. j0300520 Example is scaleable vector graphics April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 24 Standards Setting Entities 1.W3C – World wide Web Consortium a.http://www.w3.org/ 2.ISO: International Organization for Standardization 3.Open Geospatial Consortium… April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 25 Regional Coordination Geospatial Standardization OpenGIS Consortium, W3C Interoperability interfaces (Implementation Specifications) ISO TC 211 Foundations for implementation. (Abstract standards) National Standards Content standards, Authority for data Endorsed practices and specifications SDI Other NSDIs GSDI After Doug Nebert - FGDC April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 26 Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) 1.Vision: Complete integration of geospatial data and geoprocessing resources into mainstream computing. 2.Mission: Build interface specifications for accessing and processing geospatial data in an interoperable way. 3.Approach: Use a consensus process. 4.Certify participation – International consortium of 250+ companies, government agencies and universities, founded in 1994 in the USA compliant_3d International consortium of 250+ companies, government agencies and universities, founded in 1994 in the USA April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 27 OGC Participation April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 28 j0254490 •Self-contained, modular applications that can be described, published, located and invoked over the web. XML/GML Spatial Web Service Spatial Data Requesting Application Web Services… It is now as easy as reading a paper map to leverage spatial data (not sure what this means) MD> No special software or expertise is required to leverage spatial information inside the enterprise. Web mapping technology has made this possible. Prior to web mapping, expensive software, expertise and training was required to use digital spatial data. Web mapping has in effect got us back to the simplicity that was using a papare map but with the added flexibility and capability of digital systems….all of the benefits without the complexity. The additional challenge of spatial web services is how to exchange and present the results of the XML exchange between applications Geography Markup Language (GML) is available today April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 29 Example: Adding Value to a Mapping Web Service… © MapQuest.com April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 30 …Adding Value Through Imagery. April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 31 Web Services Evolution Client Server (SQL) World Wide Web (Web GIS) Open Interoperability Stand-alone (proprietary DBMS) Peter Woodsford Keynote ISPRS Turkey Seamless Computing April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 32 Web Services Adoption CSU673 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 33 Web Services With Interoperability 1.XML industry standard as technology enabler. 2.Build on current web-based applications 3.Software spontaneously discovered, combined, and recombined to provide solutions to users' problems and requests. 4.Moves users from map displays and ‘file transfers’ to transactions in real time. 5. • Sun Journal:-http://www.sun.com/executives/sunjournal/v5n1/feature1.html The trend moves software away from monolithic, fat-client-hosted and -maintained applications toward a new development model that is often called "Web services......... April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 34 WMSviewer.com WMSviewer.com (free to everybody that wants to implement a open standards based spatial data portal) –Includes source code –Implements WMS and Context interfaces April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 35 1.Open (metadata) 2.Accessible (catalog) 3.Served (web services) 4.Licensed (in many cases, free) 5.Standardized Global Geospatial Data April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 36 CIS Accounting Estimating Engineering Enterprise Applications Open Geospatial Data. Graphics Location Connectivity Ownership Relationships Geofacilities Model Geofacilities Model CIS Accounting Estimating Engineering Enterprise Database April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 37 Accessible For Everyone… April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 38 Global Data -CitySphere [USEMAP] More… http://www.globexplorer.com/ April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 39 Global Access (Tsunami) 1.Fair market value 2.National & commercial data providers 3.Web delivery mechanisms northern shore before IKONOS Landsat IRS Radarsat Space Imaging Primary Operations Center Remote Operations Center Aerial Imagery Transportable Ground Station Regional Operations Center Regional Operations Center Regional Operations Center More… Why global data is important. 26-Dec 2004 > April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 40 Elevation Data Repositories. •http://www.globalterrain.com/ April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 41 Image Data Repositories. 1.Satellite Images. 2.Aerial Imagery. 3.LIDAR and Radar Images. 4.Federal, State and Local data repositories. interlocken lmk image Clearview $100’s of millions annually NextView $100-500M to competing satellite firms. Aerials Express Globexplorer April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 42 Avenza Systems Inc. •Released MAPdata World, a three-part set of royalty-free GIS map data covering the world at 1:15 million scale. http://www.avenza.com/products.mapdataworld.html April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 43 Microsoft - Terraserver April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 44 Global Mapping (1992-2007) 1.Develop free digital maps of world 2.1:1 million scale; 1 Km resolution 3.Layers: a.Transport b.Frontiers c.Hydro d.Population e.Elevation f.Vegetation g.Land cover h.Land use 4. 4. 4. 4. http://www.iscgm.org/ April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 45 Kazakhstan [USEMAP] http://www.iscgm.org/ > April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 46 1.Academic 2.Private 3.Local 4.National 5.Global 6. Partnerships Click here for GSDI Home Page April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 47 worldmap Geospatial Partnerships 1.Global Spatial Data Infrastructure Association 2.INSPIRE – Infrastructure for SPatial Information in Europe 3.The USA National Map concept 4. GSDI logo April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 48 Examples 1.The US National Map initiative 2.Location-based services (LBS) 3.Road centerlines (USA) 4.Dubai municipality – LBS April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 49 The National Map Example (USA) April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 50 1.Partnering a.National Spatial Data Infrastructure (NSDI) b.Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC c.Geospatial One-Stop Initiative 2.Federal, State, local and private partners 3.Access, integrate, and apply geospatial data at global, national, and local scales. 4.Providing data and tools over the Web, and making updated topographic maps from the digital data. The National Map Example (USA) April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 51 Multi-agency Data Contributors 1.Nationwide coverage of transportation, hydrography, elevation, land cover, and cultural features. 2.Political boundaries 3.Digital Chart of the World (1:1m) 4.Geographic Data Technology road centerlines 5.National Hydrography Dataset 6.Digital Terrain Elevation Dataset 7.National Elevation Dataset. 8.National Land Cover Dataset 9.Cultural features include populated places and cities 10.Geographic Names Information System April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 52 Geospatial Issues Considered 1.Data licensing a.NRC Data Licensing Report 2.Partnering effort 3.Incentives, 4.Roles and responsibilities, 5.Research, and 6.Product dissemination. http://www.nap.edu/catalog/11079.html April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 53 Research Grants Provided 1.Database development 2.Data distribution 3.Exchange of data/products 4.Feature generalization 5.Standards development 6.Web mapping services 7.Workshops, training, technology transfer April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 54 Geospatial One-Stop (USA) http://www.geo-one-stop.gov/ gos-pi April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 55 Service Customer Land Base KUB Mobile Form mobiletctrace Location-Based Services… April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 56 What is a Location Based Service? Mobile Person Service Provider Other Systems April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 57 Technology Drivers - convergence Data Networks GPS enabled Handsets Mobile Positioning Spatial Datasets FFXXGG telcotower Briefly touch on changes to the handsets, data networks, mobile positioning and spatial datasets over the last year and expectations for the next few years. April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 58 By 2006… •You (and a billion others) will: 1.Have a smart phone, Bluetooth enabled, on at least a 2.5G network 2.Your smart phone will be positioning capable to 50-100m. 3.You will have access to a wide range of Location Based Services, many using accurate, navigable map datasets. telcotower FFXXGG exclamation April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 59 Location-based Services (LBS) • Information to field • Enterprise Integration • Customer Service Employee Services Tracking Services Emergency Services Information Services • Medical • Crime • Distress • Vehicle Tracking • People Tracking • Assets Tracking • Lifestyle Information • Business Information • Traffic Information Location-Based Services Applications April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 60 1.Tier 1: Census Bureau road centerline data 2.Tier 2: Private sector enhancement 3.Tier 3: Transportation industry adoption 4.Tier 4: Further data sets enhance usage 5. • 1. Leveraging geospatial data and technology to create wealth Road Centerlines Example April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 61 Tier 1 – US Census Bureau Road Centerlines http://www.census.gov/geo/www/index.html April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 62 TIGER Road Centerline Topology http://www.census.gov/geo/www/tiger/tiger2004fe/TGR04FE.pdf April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 63 Tier 2 – Navteq Intelligent Roads 1.NAVTEQ data is onboard most in-vehicle navigation systems sold in North America and Europe. 2.Supports a new generation of navigation services a.Internet websites b.Enterprise/Fleet/GIS solutions c.Location Based Services (LBS). j0227669 bridges Amtrak image April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 64 http://navteq.com/markets/market.html April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 65 Tier 3 – Vehicle Navigation Systems http://navteq.com/markets/vehicle.html April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 66 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 67 Tier 4a –Radio Traffic Updates §SIRIUS Satellite Radio §NAVTEQ to provide traffic data §SIRIUS First Traffic audio service §Accidents §road closings §Incidents §Integrated with in-car navigation systems. • • Initially, the service will cover 30 markets but will expand to more than 50 markets in the near future April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 68 Tier 4b –Roadside Assistance http://www.onstar.com/us_english/jsp/index.jsp April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 69 http://www.microsoft.com/mappoint/default.mspx Another LBS example… April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 70 MapPoint Diagram MapPoint Location Server… Worldwide potential April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 71 Microsoft’s MapPoint Location Server 1.Connects to wireless networks extracts latitude-longitude 2." … provide real-time location services (including) mobile operators Sprint, Bell Canada, O2, and TeliaSonera 3.…about the relationship between the Federal Communications Commission's E-911 mandate and these technological developments. "They are absolutely married,“ 4."Many operators are … working with us, to monetize the investments made" to comply with the FCC…” GIS Monitor – March 2005 Matteo Luccio April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 72 AutoDesk… http://locationservices.autodesk.com/index.htm April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 73 AutoDesk’s Location Services 1."light weight solutions" …to make existing applications more "location-centric" 2."All they need is a URL and a password and their employees' cell phone numbers.” 3.For $15 per month, companies with 20 to 50 employees can have a working system. 4.“..that $15 per month investment can generate $600 per month in additional revenue." Joe Astroth, AutoDesk interview GIS Monitor – March 2005 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 74 Yahoo Consumer Maps Example… April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 75 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 76 April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 77 New USA Data Set (no cost) April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 78 Google (Keyhole) April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 79 Germany April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 80 Transportation Web Services… Kansas DOT RCRS image2 Routing vehicles April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 81 NDOR4 Nebraska Department of Revenue Enterprise Web Portal Ability to display imagery and inventory images – for example link to bridges and intersections April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 82 South Carolina DOT Evacuation Decision Support Solution Real-time updates of weather, routes, traffic counts presented graphically. SCDOT Implementation by April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 83 Online video logs with roadway following Penndot globe video_log Pennsylvania DOT Integrated Web Applications geodecisions Cyber Systems 1. Another example of the different attributes that are available for modification. April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 84 USA Military Traffic Management… Geospatial Web Information Portals April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 85 Uses satellite communications Updates each 15 minutes Tracks 800 vehicles Across the USA April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 86 Dubai Municipality Example [USEMAP] http://vgn.dm.gov.ae/webcam/burdubai.html# > April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 87 …And Visualization Tools [USEMAP] More… April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 88 Geospatial Globalization Summary (Knowledge Based Economy) 1.Fundamental human rights required 2.Technology infrastructure in place 3.Standards & interoperability 4.Market-driven economy 5.Private - public partnerships 6.Global access 7.Critical for economic development April 2005 Keating Geospatial Economy Page 89 Contact Information Dr. Terry Keating, Executive Vice President Chairman, Z/I Imaging 230 Business Park Blvd. Madison, AL 35757 USA terry.keating@intergraph.com P: +1 (256) 730-5688