DocumentCode :
2408278
Title :
Mass storage for delivery of maps and documents to the field
Author :
Morey, M.E.
fYear :
1997
fDate :
35486
Firstpage :
42583
Lastpage :
42588
Abstract :
As service organisations such as the utilities, maintenance companies, and the police, rescue and emergency services strive to become ever more effective they increasingly seek to apply information technology (IT) to their field operations. Historically, service based organisations have evolved electronic information systems as a central office facility, usually commencing with billing systems, progressing to client databases, client history, and command and control systems. In some cases, elaborate map based geographical information systems (GIS) are developed. Mobile field staff must regularly call at the office, often in person, for data and instructions. These office based IT systems are sophisticated and expensive facilities whose considerable benefits were not usually enjoyed by the field operational personnel. The paper discusses some real examples of the practical application of IT in the field, and develops a notional `data availability requirement´ for a typical field mobile worker. From this `data availability requirement´ we proceed to assess the balance between communications (radio) based information delivery and mass storage based delivery. Mass storage, in this context is seen as a wide band, but low update rate, communications media. The author develops this further with estimates that give a forward look at mass storage capacity trends compared with mobile radio data trends comparing these against the data availability requirement
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
iet
Conference_Titel :
Engineering the Benefits of Geographical Information Systems (Digest No.: 1997/105), IEE Colloquium on
Conference_Location :
Capenhurst
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1049/ic:19970586
Filename :
637235
Link To Document :
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