Currently viewing the category: "infrastructure"

When we launched GeoCommons three years ago we had high hopes that it would turn into the vibrant community that it is today.  However, I must admit that from a technological standpoint we did not fully predict what the underlying GeoIQ platform would become – a complex, scalable set of [...]

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August and September have been a busy time for hurricanes throughout the Caribbean and the Gulf of Mexico. Seemed like we just finished posts on Gustav and Hanna – now we have Ike. As part of our hurricane tracking we’ve been pairing different hurricane indicators with critical energy infrastructure (see the earlier blog on Continue Reading

NPR ran a story on Monday’s Morning Edition entitled “Security Officials Seek to Block Some Online Maps”. The story centered around local government officials refusing to release electronic maps of what they call “critical infrastructure,” such as water mains and fire hydrants. Specifically the story of Steven Whitaker’s futile quest to obtain infrastructure data [...]

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One of our core missions at FortiusOne is to enable many more people to explore, create, and share maps – to democratize geospatial capabilities. Even in government markets, which have been big users of GIS tools, the expense and technical sophistication required often cause bottlenecks in the preparation of maps. Government customers are also [...]

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One of the natural questions to follow a tragic event like the I 35W Minneapolis bridge collapse is where are there other bridges that could suffer a similar fate. In our last post we talked about the National Bridge Inventory, the valuable information contained in it, and the difficulty working with it.

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