GeoConnexion
 
Home
 
Geo: International
 
This month's issue Online News Online Articles
 
GeoConnexionUK
 
This month's issue Online News Online Articles
 
GEOlympics
 
GeoRisk
 
GeoResources
 
Recruitment Directory Events Education Subscription Contact Details Media Pack Autumn Company Showcase ISPRS - Information From Imagery FIG - International Federation of Serveyors
 
Login
Email: Password:

 

Forgotten your details?
Click here
 
 
Click here to download Adobe Acrobat Reader

Geo: International > News > News Item

Microsoft, ESRI to Help Improve Homeland Security

REDMOND, Wash., and REDLANDS, Calif. — Nov. 20, 2008 — Microsoft Corp. and ESRI together are driving Homeland Security innovations to more effectively help protect citizens, prevent and solve crimes, and enable counter-terrorism through software. The newly formed collaboration will combine the best capabilities from both organizations in geospatial and collaborative technologies, and will result in advanced intelligence for state and local data fusion centers and emergency operations centers.

An intended product of this collaboration is the FusionX Appliance, a baseline IT architecture for fusion centers, which will provide users with advanced collaboration and geospatial intelligence capabilities by combining the power of ESRI’s ArcGIS Server Advanced Enterprise with the collaboration capabilities of Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007.

FusionX will enable homeland security and law enforcement personnel to analyze previously disparate data sets in a mapping context and easily share that information in near real time with relevant stakeholders. FusionX will enhance the abilities of fusion center directors at the strategic and tactical level, enabling them to visualize patterns and trends to help prevent future acts of terrorism and crime, and facilitate a faster and more informed response when necessary. Through the intake of raw data such as fire, police and citizen reports, FusionX will allow for geocoding and mapping of the data to help detect man-made acts of terrorism and crime, such as organized, gang and drug-related activity. Critical GIS data is made accessible and shareable, replacing current collaborative analysis methods that rely on paper exchange and e-mail.

The IT architectural features of the appliance include the following:

· Sophisticated management dashboards through the advanced monitoring, modeling, analysis and planning capabilities of ArcGIS Server and Microsoft Office PerformancePoint Server 2007

· ESRI ArcGIS Server Advanced Enterprise, Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007, Microsoft Office PerformancePoint Server 2007, Microsoft SQL Server 2008 and access to terabytes of high-quality pre-rendered base maps and imagery

· An advanced situational awareness portal with support for GeoRSS feeds, Keyhole Markup Language (KML) feeds and other data that will be integrated in the SharePoint environment for access control features and information sharing

· Best practices and foundational content specific to anticipated operator and analyst requirements. Customers will be able to customize the software as necessary, but the goal is to deliver capability that is usable after only minimal configuration.

“Our police forces, sheriff departments and fusion center managers are increasingly relying on collaboration tools that help them connect the dots in a world of asymmetrical threats,” said Gail Thomas-Flynn, general manager of State and Local Government at Microsoft. “Microsoft and ESRI’s FusionX Appliance provides the layman- to expert-level technology that can facilitate the intake, analysis, visualization and dissemination of information to the right person, at the right time, in the right place.”

The FusionX Appliance will deliver advanced geospatial and collaboration capability with minimal configuration and maximum ease of use, yet at an affordable price. It will be extensible so as to grow with the needs of an individual customer. The FusionX Appliance also will allow for the scaling of its technology architecture framework to a broader set of federal, state and local domestic security and public safety agencies with capabilities such as geoprocessing and geoanalytics.

“We understand what it takes to provide secure and mission-critical capabilities in ways that leverage the technologies that many customers already own,” said Russ Johnson, public safety industry manager at ESRI. “And that is extremely important in this economic climate.”


For more information visit:

Information on the programme


Geo: International

 

Past Issues - Archive
GEO-12 Set for Sell Out… More…
09 February 2012, 10:58am
2012 IEEE GRSS Data Fusion Contest… More…
09 February 2012, 8:46am
Mobile Apps as part of a Geo Inventory Challenge… More…
09 February 2012, 8:18am
Geospatial Leadership Award for Infotech Chairman… More…
09 February 2012, 8:03am
Better assessment of lakes with remote sensing… More…
27 January 2012, 12:23pm
UNITAR boosts rapid mapping capacity with UAVs… More…
19 January 2012, 11:03am
Space and its benefits: a top priority for Europe… More…
19 December 2011, 9:19pm
Dashboard on the go… More…
19 December 2011, 9:19pm
Confidence is key to women’s spatial skills… More…
09 December 2011, 12:48pm
This Month's Burning Issue...
Each month we select a hot topic and a leading figure in the industry to write about it.
This month's burning issue:

Adopting Cloud computing can save money, but good governance is essential to manage the risk argues Mike Small

REDMOND,, Wash.,, and, REDLANDS,, Calif., —, Nov., 20,, 2008, —, Microsoft, Corp., and, ESRI, together, are, driving, Homeland, Security, innovations, to, more, effectively, help, protect, citizens,, prevent, and, solve, crimes,, and, enable, counter-terrorism, through, software., The, newly, formed, collaboration, willMore…


Website content & images remain the intellectual property of GeoConnexion Ltd. All rights reserved