Wanderings, musings and kinetic chatter

The value of knowing where things are...

With the ever-evolving technology made available via the internet and cell phones, information is virtually at your fingertips wherever you are. I can remember writing research reports in grade school using the Encyclopedia as your main source for information. If you still needed more information, you had to go to the library and look through the card catalog (do they even have that anymore?!) to find where the book was located. It was usually a long and tedious process. So what if you read something that wasn’t going to benefit you for that particular project? You still learned in the process. This is virtually obsolete anymore with the invention of the internet. You simply go to your favorite search engine (Google, Yahoo, Bing) and type in ANY topic you are interested in and have virtually 100,000 matches. Whether they are relevant or useful is up to you to decipher, but the information is there for us to access.

Using the Geodexy program gives you a portable workstation where you can not only access existing data; you can also enter data from anywhere you are. Custom forms can be created (geared specifically towards the data being collected), pictures can be taken, and also record the GPS coordinates of your current location. The data is stored on your phone/device and can be instantly uploaded to the Web, viewable from anywhere.
Now I’m sure you are thinking “Why this is important?”
You can extend your reach from wherever you are with the location leverage information. If you are out in the field collecting data and aren’t sure if you went to all your locations for the day, the device can tell you what statistics have been collected and what hasn’t. Your boss can view the information instantaneously, once uploaded. With everything being directly saved to your mobile device, it can never get lost. How many times have you written something down on a post-it note or piece of paper, knew (or at least thought you knew) where you put it, and either couldn’t find it or couldn’t read what you wrote down. Guilty! The device takes these types of errors out of the equation because everything is collected and entered on the spot. Data is no longer trapped on someone’s clip board until they have the time to input the information into the computer.
But what is the value of the device if you don’t know where things are to collect them?
To figure out where you want to go, you have to know where you are.
Generally speaking, what is the value of knowing where things are? It’s not like someone in life is going to give you a gold star because you know where the nearest McDonald’s is located. There might not necessarily be a reward for knowing where things are, what some might consider useless knowledge now with the ever handy GPS device, but there is value. It’s up to you to determine what that value means to you.

Posted by Mary Nelson Mon, 20 Jul 2009 18:12:00 GMT


Have you seen the new Geodexy Tablet release?

The Spatial Networks product team catches CEO in the act of dishing on Geodexy.

More Geodexy videos at: http://www.youtube.com/user/geodexy

Posted by Mike Hapner Fri, 08 May 2009 11:41:00 GMT


Geography is irrelevant!

Geography is irrelevant. In today’s interconnected, globalized economy and communications culture, geography no longer matters. Both ends of an internet connection may physically terminate at two computers thousands of kilometers apart, across oceans and continents, but there is no real difference in the location of those two points. They are essentially coincident, both in the abstract and in the real-time nature of connectivity. Geography is irrelevant in so many ways, due in part because of the technological advancements in communications, geospatial technology, consumer behavior and education, content and choice.

For many, geography has ceased to exist as a define subject in schools and universities around the world, save the dedicated Geography Departments of a small percentage of Universities. It is no longer even a subject worthy of it’s own course title. It has become subsumed in the realm of social sciences, always condescended to by the more defined sciences; biology, physics, math, chemistry, economics. Geography is so irrelevant that it does not even garner a seat at the executive table at any Fortune 500 company, nor is it granted Cabinet status for the President or even any State Executive Office.

With so many complex and pressing issues facing Government and business today, why is geography so irrelevant? The rate of change in our globalized world leaves no time for geographic comprehension and appreciation. Our own Kanesha Price recently conducted a small geographic literacy survey at a local college campus, and while they did score better than the national average, the questions were surficial and encyclopedic in nature. If Americans are near bottom in understanding even these “low hanging fruits” of geographic literacy, is it any wonder why policies and strategies lack any real application and appreciation for more meaningful geographic issues. The simplest conclusion must be that geography is no longer relevant.

Think more about it – GPS navigation devices lead us to and fro, there is no need to retain mental maps or think about location; we have countless media outlets telling us all we need to know, but it matters little where the who did what and when to whom. Celebrity anchors bedazzle viewers with mangled explanations of geospatial technology and shine a blazing spotlight on just how irrelevant geography appears to be to just about all but the ivory-tower big-brain academics. I am surprised the term “geography” still has a place in Webster’s, aren’t you?”

Posted by Anthony Quartararo Sat, 30 May 2009 11:14:00 GMT