Title: Geoinformation perspectives on innovation and economic growth
1Geoinformation perspectives on innovation and
economic growth
- Antony Cooper
- Operating Unit Fellow
- Built Environment Unit, CSIR
- South Africa
2Geoinformation perspectives on innovation and
economic growth
- Scientific development, innovation and the
knowledge economy - Geoinformation, innovation and economic growth
- User generated content
- The nature of geoinformation
- Spatial data infrastructures (SDIs)
- Addresses
- Location-based services
- Business geographics
- Intellectual property rights, standards and
curation - Conclusions and acknowledgements
3Innovation
- Innovation does not come from organisations, but
from individuals - Innovation will happen whatever the circumstances
- Governments can stifle innovation
- Through excessive bureaucratic procedures (red
tape) - Banning access to certain data, services or
products - Often done to protect State corporations
- Or governments can encourage and facilitate
innovation - Innovative entrepreneurs can threaten the
viability of protected State corporations
4Innovation
- The Internet facilitates distributing services
and data across national boundaries - Eg the virtual globe Google Earth (released in
2005) - Poses a threat to national mapping agencies
- Creates opportunities by stimulating public
awareness of geoinformation - Creates opportunities for mapping agencies that
encourage innovation - CODIST is essentially a political gathering
- Needs to leverage its authority and networks to
source funding - For projects and to implement its recommendations
- UN ECA CODIST need to encourage African
governments to provide - Legislative frameworks, policies and service
delivery that enable innovation and hence
economic growth - Sed fugit interea, fugit inreparabile tempus.
- But meanwhile it is flying, irretrievable time
is flying Virgil 29 BCE
5Google Earth image of the Ghion Hotels garden
6User generated content
- A geobrowser is the desk-top interface to a
virtual globe - A markup language lets one customise a virtual
globe/geobrowser - Eg the Keyhole Markup Language (KML),
- Drape geoinformation over the virtual globe
- Attach content to a location
- Eg photographs, video or sound recordings
- Share geoinformation or content with others
- Virtual globes and geobrowsers
- Promote awareness of geoinformation
- Facilitate production of user-generated content
and open data archives - Can be of uncertain quality
- Facilitate folksonomies or collaborative tagging
- Classification and identification of content by
general public, not domain experts - Often linked to virtual social networks
- But tend to lack metadata
- Many users think that the virtual globes display
real-time satellite imagery! - Pose threats to those who
- Try to restrict access to information
- Dont understand the impact on their business
models
7User generated content in Google Earth How
good are the data?
8The nature of geoinformation
- Info about all objects or phenomena
- Directly or indirectly associated with a location
- On, above or below the Earths surface
- Real and imaginary objects and phenomena
- Exist, existed or might have existed, and that
are planned, proposed or simulated - Agricultural research (Clause 25)
- Precision farming
- Arable land exploration for high-value crops
- Crop health monitoring
- Assessing how agriculture practices will need to
be adapted to counteract climate change - Supporting SMMEs
- Exploiting micro-payments to deliver specialist
services
9Spatial data infrastructures (SDIs)
- SDIs can drive economic growth
- Recognised by European Directive for INSPIRE
- SDI can stimulate development of added-value
services by third parties - For the benefit of both public authorities and
the public - Access to information often prevented by
legislation or government control of the
information source - Eg mapping being controlled by the military
- Yet there are virtual globes providing masses of
high resolution data for free - Though perhaps of unknown quality and without
adequate metadata - Limiting access to information inhibits economic
growth - European Directive on reuse of public sector
information - Digital content production has created many jobs
in recent years - Particularly in small emerging companies
- PSI important primary material for digital
content products and services - Facilitating re-use of PSI should help economic
growth and job creation
10Addresses
- Geographical identifiers (such as addresses)
enable data integration - Computers might prefer coordinates humans
prefer identifiers and context - Even with global positioning (GPS) devices and
virtual globes - Eg hierarchy of names such as street, suburb,
town, province and country - Addresses facilitate service delivery not just
for mail - Eg open a bank account, buy on credit, obtain a
passport, vote - Provide citizens with a social status, a sense of
identity - Maintaining customer data bases
- Send out invoices, ordered goods and promotional
material - Retail outlet planning
- Spatial analysis of customer addresses and
shopping patterns - Routing delivery vehicles and managing their
loads (ie combining part loads) - Save costs and make deliveries more predictable
- CODI-Geo workshop on addresses
- Functional addressing system generates downstream
economic activities - Unfortunately, many African countries do not have
comprehensive addressing systems
11Location-based services (LBSs)
- Use location of a device to provide personalised
services to the user of the device based on their
location - Exploit availability of dynamic geoinformation
and trackable mobile devices - Eg real-time traffic conditions, weather data
and CCTV surveillance - LBS applications
- Find the nearest pizza outlet when a stranger in
town - Determine which nearby hotels have vacancies
- Turn-by-turn in-car navigation systems (often
with spoken directions) - Traffic congestion avoidance
- Finding a person (such as ones child).
- Some countries require mobile phone operators to
support LBS for enhanced 911 - Enables response to emergency calls from mobile
phone without the caller having to give their
location - Enables reverse 911 to send alerts about a hazard
in an area to those there - Services related to a remote device being tracked
- Real-time estimates of bus arrivals for display
panels at bus stops - Managing vehicle fleets
- Tracking containers or parcels during shipment
12Business geographics
- Integrating customer data and operational data
- Customer relationship management (CRM)
- Customer segmentation
- Target marketing
- Analysing market penetration
- Clean and manage customer data
- Insurance
- Assessing and managing risk
- Precision underwriting
- Identifying and avoiding accumulation of risk
- Detecting insurance fraud
- Hazards modelling and the spatial distribution of
risks - Motor insurance based on driving patterns
- Real estate
- Link photographs and video footage to properties
for sale - Mapping property transactions
- Inherent value of a neighbourhood embedded in
property prices - Value properties more accurately
13Standards
- More value investing in standards rather than in
patents - Get early access to current technologies and
thinking - Can assert ones interests in the standardization
process - Lower economic risk and costs of ones own RD
- Promote competition and facilitate
interoperability - Africans should not just be passive recipients of
standards - Africans need to be active in planning and
developing standards - Ensure standards are appropriate for African
conditions and meet African needs - Local standards need a massive investment for
implementation - Small local market available to support the
standard - International vendors tend to implement
international standards - International standards development can be done
via email - Can gain access through international
organisations if ones country is not a member - Eg UN ECA is a Class A Liaison to ISO/TC 211,
Geographic information/Geomatics
14Digital curation
- Issues of African academic journals and books not
yet available digitally - They don't get picked up by search engines such
as Google Scholar - Reducing the likelihood of African research being
cited and used by others - Diminishing the value of research done in Africa
- Some defunct journals have valuable material but
no custodian - Proceedings of African conferences
- Might only exist in the private collections of
conference attendees - Project reports and data sets unlikely to form
part of national archives - Collections of photographs, films, videos and
audio recordings - More vulnerable to degradation than paper
documents - Crucial records of oral histories
- Tangible objects of scientific or cultural value
worth preservation - Eg historic scientific equipment, cultural
artefacts and original manuscripts - Digital archives are far less robust than
paper-based archives - Digitizing them is a decidedly complex issue!
- Probably wise to retain the analogue archives for
the foreseeable future - Use the digital archives to provide easy access
to the content - Insufficient attention paid to preserving
archives that are already digital - Rapid changes in hardware and software and data
formats
15Acknowledgements
- UN ECA, for the invitation to make this
presentation and for the financial support - CSIR, for the financial support
- Sives Govender, for helping me with this
presentation - ?
16Thank you!
- Antony Cooper
- Operating Unit Fellow
- Built Environment Unit, CSIR
- PO Box 395, 0001 Pretoria, South Africa
- Email acooper_at_csir.co.za
Sed fugit interea, fugit inreparabile tempus But
meanwhile it is flying, irretrievable time is
flying