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Internet and GIS

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... true operational GIS in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada by the federal Department of ... http://www.mapquest.com. http://housingmaps.com. http://wikipedia.org. Thank you ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Internet and GIS


1
Internet and GIS
  • Presented by Indu Hulisandra
  • Student ID 336532

2
Internet
  • Definition The Internet is a global system of
    interconnected computer networks that interchange
    data by packet switching using the standardized
    Internet Protocol Suite (TCP/IP).
  • It is a "network of networks" that consists of
    millions of private and public, academic,
    business, and government networks of local to
    global scope that are linked by copper wires,
    fiber-optic cables, wireless connections, and
    other technologies.

3
Internet
  • History-
  • A 1946 comic science-fiction story, A Logic Named
    Joe, by Murray Leinster laid out the Internet,
    its strength and weakness.
  • The USSR's launch of Sputnik spurred the United
    States to create the Advanced Research Projects
    Agency, known as ARPA, in February 1958 to regain
    a technological lead.

4
Internet
  • After much work, the first two nodes of what
    would become the ARPANET were interconnected
    between UCLA and SRI International in Menlo Park,
    California, on October 29, 1969 .
  • The ARPANET was one of the "eve" networks of
    today's Internet.
  • The first TCP/IP-based wide-area network was
    operational by January 1, 1983

5
Internet
  • by late 1994 there was growing public interest in
    the previously academic, technical Internet.
  • By 1996 usage of the word Internet had become
    commonplace and the World Wide Web became a
    common name.

6
Internet
  • Common usage
  • E-mail
  • The World Wide Web The www is a huge set of
    interlinked documents, images and other
    resources, linked by hyperlinks and URLs.
  • Remote Access.
  • Collaboration- Eg Instant messaging.
  • File sharing.
  • Streaming Media.
  • VoIP- Voice telephony

7
GIS
  • Definition A geographic information system
    (GIS), also known as a geographical information
    system, captures, stores, analyzes, manages, and
    presents data that refers to or is linked to
    location.
  • GIS applications are tools that allow users to
    create interactive queries (user created
    searches), analyze spatial information, edit
    data, maps, and present the results of all these
    operations.

8
GIS
  • History
  • About 15,500 years ago on the walls of caves near
    Lascaux, France, Cro-Magnon hunters drew pictures
    of the animals they hunted. Associated with the
    animal drawings are track lines and tallies
    thought to depict migration routes.

9
GISHistory
10
GISHistory
  • In 1854, John Snow depicted a cholera outbreak in
    London using points to represent the locations of
    some individual cases, possibly the earliest use
    of the geographic method

11
GIS
  • The year 1962 saw the development of the world's
    first true operational GIS in Ottawa, Ontario,
    Canada by the federal Department of Forestry and
    Rural Development. Developed by Dr. Roger
    Tomlinson, it was called the "Canada Geographic
    Information System" .
  • CGIS was used to store, analyze, and manipulate
    data collected for the Canada Land Inventory
    (CLI)an initiative to determine the land
    capability for rural Canada by mapping
    information about soils, agriculture, recreation,
    wildlife, waterfowl, forestry, and land use at a
    scale of 150,000

12
  • In 1964, Howard T Fisher formed the Laboratory
    for Computer Graphics and Spatial Analysis at the
    Harvard Graduate School of Design
  • In 1970 'SYMAP', 'GRID', and 'ODYSSEY' the
    seminal code and systems served as the
    inspirational source for the commercial
    development.
  • Late 1980s , commercial vendors of GIS software
    emerged.

13
Internet and GIS
  • Traditional GIS can only serve dedicated users
    with sophisticated software and hardware
    resulting in limited impact to the public.
  • The rise of the Internet has created an
    infrastructure ideally suited to the widespread
    distribution and dissemination of geographical
    information
  • The Internet technology as a digital
    communication medium enhance the capability of
    GIS data and software application by making them
    more accessible and reachable to wider range of
    users, planners and decision makers.

14
Internet GIS
  • It is a means for GIS users to exchange GIS data,
    conduct GIS analysis and present GIS output in
    the form of maps.
  • The Internet GIS applications provide all or
    almost all functionalities of traditional GIS
    software.
  • The client on web can work with GIS data
    interactively on the Web browser without owning
    GIS software on his/her local machine

15
Internet GIS
  • Client/server concept- A client/server
    application has three components
  • 1. a client,
  • 2.a server, and
  • 3.a network.
  • The client sends a request to the server, which
    processes the request and returns the result to
    the client, the client then manipulates the data
    and/or results and presents to the user.

16
Internet GIS
  • The Internet GIS applications can categorize into
    two major categories
  • Server side application
  • Client side application

17
Internet GIS
  • Sever side application
  • Web browser is used to generate server requests
    and display the results.
  • An Internet GIS server usually combines a
    standard Web server, a GIS application server and
    the GIS databases server
  • The user (s) sends the request from web browser,
  • web browser transferred the request to a web
    server and web server passes the request to a GIS
    application server.

18
  • GIS application server runs an address-matching
    routine, generates a map graphic, converts the
    graphic to Web format, wraps the image in HTML
    and sends it back to the Web server,
  • which then returns the response to the client as
    a standard Web page.

19
  • Advantages of Server Side Internet GIS
  • Application Development and maintenance is easy.
  • Application can be assessed through any Standard
    Web browser.
  • All most or all the important functionalities of
    GIS can be performed at server end.
  • Handling of large databases is easy with latest
    developments.
  • Low bandwidth is sufficient.
  • Centralizes administration of data and GIS
    application software.

20
Internet GIS
  • Client Side Internet GIS
  • The client support GIS operations
  • A part of application or full application is
    installed in client's machine.

21
Internet GIS
  • Advantages of Client Side Internet GIS
  • A document/graphics standard is not required.
  • Image quality is not restricted to particular
    format.
  • Not restricted to single-click operations.
  • Excellent performance for operations that occur
    locally.
  • Less Internet traffic required.
  • More users friendly.

22
(No Transcript)
23
Source- http//gislounge.com/ll/webgis.shtm
24
Internet GIS
  • Application areas
  • Biological resource conservation and management
  • Disaster management and mitigation
  • Spatial data infrastructure
  • Business Process Outsourcing
  • Facility and utility management

25
EXAMPLES
  • http//www.housingmaps.com/

26
  • Disaster Management Agency

27
Examples
  • http//www.mapquest.com/

28
  • http//www.geabios.com/

29
  • http//www.mapmyindia.com

30
bibliography
  • http//www.directionsmag.com/article.php?article_i
    d280trv1
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageGeaBiosOpenLasz
    loSatelliteMappingApplication2.PNG
  • http//www.bisindia.org/internet-gis.aspx
  • http//www.tec.army.mil/gis/
  • http//www.mapquest.com
  • http//housingmaps.com
  • http//wikipedia.org

31
  • Thank you
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