Title: Leading Technology The Next Generation
1Leading Technology The Next Generation
- Information and Conservation Technology
- National SRC Meeting March 7th , 2005
- By Jack Carlson David Anderson
2Business Drivers
- Enabling Conservation
- Customer Self-Service
- Mobile Delivery of Services
- Leveraging Government External Partnerships
- Capturing and Mining the Institutional Knowledge
of NRCS
3Technology Drivers
- Business Application Frameworks, Portals, Content
and Document Managers - Interoperability through Web Services
- Data Warehouse/Storage Infrastructure
- Object Modeling System (OMS) Framework
- Mobile Data Collection Integration
- Improved Remote System Administration
- Tablet PCs Phone Integration
- Spatial Analysis Tools
- Broadband Wireless in the Field
- Fully-Meshed Networks
4What may be different in the future
- Fewer offices, organized around watersheds.
- Technical knowledge and expertise built around
watersheds. - Watershed war-room in the main field office.
- Customer self-servicing
- Producers use My.USDA, ProTracts, and the
Customer Statement to manage their cost-share
agreements. - Producers service their conservation plans using
commercial software containing the Conservation
Plug-In. - Increased leveraging of private sector resources
- Technical service providers use commercial
software containing the Conservation Plug-In to
service producer conservation plans and
cost-share agreements. - Producers submit data from field and harvest
monitoring tools on farm machinery through the
Conservation Plug-In to meet cost-share agreement
requirements.
5What may be different in the future
- Increased mobility and access
- The field conservationist may drive a vehicle
with internet broadband capability for training,
outreach, and servicing remote areas. - Area and regional experts will service customer
needs over the wide area network. - Transparent access to corporate databases enables
resources to be marshaled throughout the agency
to service important regional and local needs. - NRCS employees will use FSA applications, and
vice versa, to improve workflow. This could
extend to other agencies (USFS, BLM, BOR, EPA,
state DNR, etc).
6My talk will focus on three specific technologies
- Delivering information through Business
Application Frameworks - Managing natural resource models with OMS
- Conservation Plug-in
- Data interoperability and delivery via Web
Services
7Business Application Frameworks
- Business driven interfaces
8What are Business Application frameworks?
- Basically portals (some call them dashboards or
desktops) tailored to support specific business
processes like natural resource assessment - Frameworks include
- A common user interface
- A common way to access data and information
- Ability to use and apply decision support models
- Access to common tools like navigation,
digitizing, printing, uploading GPS points,
downloading and uploading data, - Ability to customize for individual needs and
store or upload your work
9Examples of three Business Application Frameworks
- SmarTech Inventory analyze resource data,
formulate and evaluate alternatives - Field Engineering tools plan and implement
engineering practices - Web Soil Survey on-line soil survey, soil
interpretations, and integration with other
natural resource data sets
10SmarTech
Soil Map
Evaluate Soil Erosion
Soil Interpretations
Nutrient Management
Animal/Forage balance
Pesticide runoff and leaching
- Digitize Area of Interest
- Upload GPS points
- Upload data
- Download data
Arial Photograph
Topographic Map
Transportation
- Select Natural Resource Assessment tools
- Tools are ran for selected area of interest
Common Land Unit
Conservation Easements
Select Data Management Tools
- Select data to display
- Local data (on your hard drive)
- Web services from anywhere
11Object Modeling System - OMS
- NRCS, in concert with the Agricultural Research
Service and US Geological Survey has adopted the
Object Modeling System (OMS) framework for - Conservation Technology Transfer
12Object Modeling System (OMS)
Computing framework for 1. Decomposing existing
natural resource models into their component
parts 2. Developing new components (re-usable) 3.
Building new models with available components 4.
Replacing components in existing models 5.
Linking models to action agency (NRCS) user
interfaces and databases
13Legacy Monolithic Model/Tool Design
USER
Model 1
Model 2
Model 3
Interface
Interface
Interface
Model Engine
Model Engine
Model Engine
Data Files
Data Files
Data Files
Soil Climate Plant/Crop
Soil Climate Plant/Crop
Soil Climate Plant/Crop
14Models Contain components often share data
requirements
USER
Business Application Framework
Crop Growth 1
PS2
Crop Growth 1a
Crop Growth 1
PS1
PS 1
Hydrology 1
Hydrology 2
Hydrology 2
Erosion
Wind
Leaching 1
NRCS Data Warehouse
Soil Climate Plant/Crop
15With OMS Models Are Built Using Re-Usable
Modules or Objects Standardized Data
Erosion Model
Leaching Model
Crop Growth 1
PS2
Crop Growth 1a
PS 1
Hydrology 1
Hydrology 1
Erosion
Leaching 1
Crop Growth 1
Crop Growth 2
Hydrology 2
Hydrology 1
PS 1
Erosion
PS2
Crop Growth 1a
Wind
Climate Generator
Crop Nutrient Uptake
Leaching 2
Net Present Value
Leaching 1
Object Modeling System Repository (OMS Central)
16Conservation Plug-in
- Leveraging Government External Partnerships,
Private Industry
17Open Source Conservation Plug-In
Early 2005
JDOffice
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19USDA Customer Statement
Summary of Customers activity with
USDA Customer gets USDA account to access their
statement On-Line March 3, 2004 Currently taps
data in NRCS and FSA warehouses
20USDA Customer Statement
- Conservation Plan Data and Farm Loan data
- Provides Conservation Program data
- Contract amounts
- Payments
- Contract balances
- Conservation Plan Maps and FSA Common Land Unit
Data
- Service Center Contact information
Payments by NRCS and FSA
21Data Interoperability and Delivery via Web
Services
- Data Information
- anywhere, anytime, anyplace
- IT COULD HAPPEN
22Gateway/Portal to Multiple Web Services
Internet
Internet
One-Stop-Shopping Portal/Gateway
- TerraService/ TerraServer
- ArcWeb Services/ g.net
- OGIS Web Services
23Data Ortho Imagery Source GDW/Web Farm Fort
Collins, CO Extent National Coverage Uses
Visualization, Backdrop for Digitizing,
Measurements
Calculate Acreage
Measurement
68.77 Acres
Digitizing
24Digitized planned pond and drainage area using
contour data form Web Service at Fort Worth and
Ortho Image from web service from Fort Collins.
25Huerfano County Colorado
Soil Survey Source Web Service GDW/Fort
Collins Availability 2,100 Soil Survey Areas
Public Land Survey Source Web Service BLM,
Denver CO Section, TWP, Range Availability 12
Western States
Ortho Image Source Web Service GDW/Fort Collins
CO Availability National Coverage
26State Boundaries (Downloaded to Laptop from
GDW/Resource Data Gateway)
Soil Conservation District Boundaries (Web
Service from GDW Fort Worth)
NRCS Offices (Web Service from GDW Fort Collins)
Common Resource Areas (Web Service from GDW Fort
Collins)
Watershed Sub basins (Web Service from GDW Fort
Worth)
27Web Soil Survey
All products of the Soil Survey available on the
web, plus integration with other natural resource
data
- Alpha Release January 2005
- Beta Release April 2005
- Public Release June 2005
28WSS Products
- Multiple Report Products
- Standard Soil Survey Manuscripts (PDF)
- Text, tables, and maps by SSA
- Customized Soil Resource Reports (PDF)
- Map units only within AOI
- Content is specifically chosen by user
- Thematic Maps (with tables and text)
- Different format from Soil Survey Manuscript
- SDM Tables as Supplemental Tables
- Soil Map with labels on Ortho backdrop for an AOI
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31Field Office Business Tools Coordination Council
- key leaders in the agency work from a corporate
perspective and to assure all elements of
critical agency applications are fully
coordinated, integrated and implemented
32Field Office Business Tools
33FOBT Council Members
- Dana York, Associate Chief, Chair
- Kathy Gugulis, Deputy Chief, Strategic Planning
and Accountability - Dwight Holman, Deputy Chief, Management
- Tom Christenson, Deputy Chief, Programs
- Larry Clark, Deputy Chief, Science and Technology
- Bill Puckett, Deputy Chief, Soil Survey and
Resource Assessment - Deputy Chief Representatives
- Director, Operations Management Oversight
Division - CIO Director, Information Technology Division
- Director, Financial Assistance Programs Division
- Acting Associate Deputy Chief, Science and
Technology - Director, Soil Survey Division
34END
USDA-NRCS Information Technology Center Fort
Collins, Colorado
35Client User Experiences
NRCS Business Application Framework
Browser User Experiences
Soil Interps Eco Sites Climate Info
- Common
- Geospatial
- Components
- Navigation
- Area of Interest
- Digitizing
- GSP Upload
- Other
My.USDA
Object Modeling System (OMS) Contains Science
Components
Program Applications Customer Statement My
Contracts My Conservation Plan Resource Analysis
Tools (RUSLE2, PST, Soil Interps
Common Features Check-In/Out Permissions Doc
Uploads
Customer Self Service
ProTracts
eFOTG