Title: Geospatial science and technology 20042024: Seven forecasts
1Geospatial science and technology 2004-2024
Seven forecasts
- Keith C. Clarke
- Professor and Chair
- Department of Geography
- UC Santa Barbara
- kclarke_at_geog.ucsb.edu
22004 and 2024
- What is the state of geospatial computing today?
- What are the issues today?
- What will geospatial computing be like in 2024?
- What issues will be of concern then?
- Seven forecasts along the way
3Computing in 2004
- Average car hosts 50 computers (embedded
computing) - PC 3GHz barrier and GB/ approaching 1.0
- HPC approaching tens of Teraflops
- GRID computing initiative at NSF
- Low cost supercomputing e.g. Beowulf clusters
- Mobile wireless based on 802.11x etc
- Internet possibly approaching a billion nodes
- Windows vs. Linux, but many more
4Computing issues in 2004
- Building the cyberinfrastructure
- The digital divide
- The where of computing
- User interfaces The end of GUIs, WIMPs, and the
desktop - Wireless internet
- Who owns software in the network era?
5Geographic information technology in 2004
- Countering industry trends
- GPS mature, GLONASS, Galileo, GPS II, indoor?
- GPS and GIS tightly coupled e.g. IVNS
- Mobile GIS
- The data fire hose
- Cellular phones and location technology E-911
- New generation of space imaging
- Interoperability and standards
- Google search on geographic information
system2.97M hits
6What will the issues be in 2024?
7Forecast 1 Ubiquitous GIS
- Computing will be ubiquitous, distributed, mobile
and on-demand
8Cyberinfrastructure
- aka Grid computing
- NSF Vision for next era of computing
- integrated suite of computational engines,
mass storage, networks, digital libraries and
databases, sensors, software and services (NSF,
2003). - Can include human users and the user interface
- NSF (2003) Revolutionizing Science and
Engineering Through Cyberinfrastructure Report
of the National Science Foundation Blue-Ribbon
Advisory Panel on Cyberinfrastructure Atkins
report.
9Cyberinfrastructure vision
- Services available on demand
- Independence of source
- The computer is the network
10Geospatial elements of the GRID 1. GPS
Source U. Minnesota IVS Lab
11GPS Accurate, but multipath, etc
Green Trees Purple Buildings Image courtesy of
Kevin Knight
12Geospatial elements of the GRID 1. Portability
13Forecast 2 Wearable GIS
- We will wear our computers, not sit in front of
them
14Wearable GIS
http//www.itmedia.co.jp/broadband/0309/18
15UCSB Battuta project
16Field Test Prototype YAH, Map view, text off,
perspective on
17Field Test Prototype YAH, Image view, text off,
perspective on
18Field testing Track logs
19Xybernaut Poma
20Forecast 3 No more data problems
- The National Map will be complete
- The National Spatial Data Infrastructure will
support the economy, government and education
21The USGS vision of The National Map
- A database, providing public domain core
geographic data about the United States and its
territories that other agencies can extend,
enhance, and reference as they concentrate on
maintaining other data that are unique to their
needs. - Needs
- Up-to-date
- Real time access
- Support public safety and welfare
- The Problem Current paper maps are on average 23
years old
22USGS Vision
- Ambitious, challenging and worthwhile
- Nationally consistent
- Includes pointers to multiple scales and data
types, e.g. Imagery - Flexible enough to be subdivided by any pertinent
set of geographic units, e.g. Congressional
districts, health districts, watersheds, etc. - Sets goal of rapid turnaround of map revisions (7
days)
23Benefits (NRC Report)
- The nation has a vested interest in ensuring
rapid implementation of a nationally integrated
spatial database to meet national needs,
including national security, environmental
protection and land stewardship. - Benefits
- Natural resources
- Prevention of loss of life and property
- Reduction of duplication and waste
- Economic spin-offs to geospatial business
community - Shared work and value enhancement to partners
24NAS National Map Vision
- Two inherent levels of the project
- (1) Nationally consistent digital map coverage
maintained at one or more spatial scales - The blanket
- Already exists at coarser scale (The National
Atlas) - (2) Patchwork of local data with varied scale,
source, accuracy, spatial extent, ownership
models, resolution, thematic content, etc. - The quilt
- Data are contributed by partners
25The metaphor
Independent patches, different sizes, shapes
needs coordination
One weave uniform coverage
26The metaphor (ctd)
27National Map Viewer
28DOQQ plus DLG streets
29DRG plus DLG streets
30NLCDB plus DLG streets
31Seamless data download
32Other components of the NSDI (Portals, standards,
services, data)
- Geospatial Onestop
- Geography Network
- EROS Data Center
- FGDC Standards
- Alexandria Digital Library
- State data centers e.g. Teale in CA
- MapQuest
- NAVTEQ, etc.
- Counties, municipalities, universities, tribes,
etc.
33Forecast 4 Wired universe
- Data will come from everywhere and go to anywhere
34High resolution imagery
35Sensor networks Webcams, connected motes and MEMS
36Spatial search Google local
37Location-based services Location knowledge and
sensitivity
Courtesy HCI Group Cornell Univ.
38Forecast 5 Interfaces
- GUI and WIMP will be dead, long live perceptual
and multimodal computer interfaces
39Gesture recognition and AR
Images/Movies courtesy of Mathias Kolsh, UCSB
40Software demonstration Battuta
41Software Demonstration AR hand tracking
42Forecast 6 Methods
- Spatial analysis and visualization will be
accepted methodologies across many disciplines
and applications
43Spatialization
44Computing issues in 2024
- Network monitors itself, who sees?
- Spyware and security vs Personal privacy
- Who pays for services?
- Who are the digit police?
- Competing solutions and liability
- The limits of accuracy
- Tractability envelope New methods
- Simulation is everywhere, for everything
45Geospatial issues in 2024
- Who owns your lifeline? (Huisman and Forer, 1998
students in Auckland)
46Keiths Daily Commute
47Forecast 7 Geospatial privacy
- Your geospatial data rights will be under threat
48The threat from commerce
- Minority Report
- I dread the day when I am woken from a sound
sleep by a noisy, flashing advertisement
projected on my retina urging me to download a
new free Web-browser, one that I cannot turn off
without mentally focusing on a dark grey
Decline button hovering at the far range of my
peripheral vision. (Clarke, 1999).
49The threat from government
- FOIA vs. Mapping the Risks
- Scott McNealy of Sun Microsystems
- "You have no privacy - get over it."
50Come a long way, but a long way still to go!