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GeoWorld February 2013

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Web Mapping eBook Order your exclusive copy today for only $19.95 GeoTec Media introduces Web Mapping, a themed collection of GeoWorld magazine���s best and most thought-provoking feature articles written by renowned authorities in the industry. THE ESSENTIAL VO ICE OF THE INDUST RY W EB M AP PI NG BY BRANDO N THOMPS ON Emergency Care Semantic Web GIS Will Take Us across the Threshold A Web-Based Spatial System Assists Patient Evacuation during a Mass Casualty ���The Internet was supposed Web GIS BY BRIAN GUSTAFSON to homogenize Stop M everyone by connecting us all. Data Leaks the Instead, what it���s allowed is silos of interest.��� ��� Seth Godin, On the Tribes We Lead Use Web GIS to Collect and Use Information BY CAROL- ANNE ALBERT SON Data Issues BY SANDIP ROY, VIKRANT KARANDIKAR AND R. GANKHUYAG any aspects of life in North America changed in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks that took place in the United States on Sept. 11, 2001. In addition to the implementation of new security protocols and the strengthening of those already in existence, there also were more subtle changes. Within the medical community, for example, it became evident that existing strategies for managing mass casualty incidents (MCIs) were insufficient when dealing with large-scale terrorist attacks. This clearly was recognized in a statement by the American College of Surgeons (ACS), acknowledging that a smoother integration of rescue, decontamination, triage, stabilization, evacuation and definitive treatment of casualties was required to provide the best care to the greatest number of people in a mass-casualty situation. The following quote by ACS highlights the need for increased efficiency: ���Disaster management poses challenges that are distinct from normal surgical practice. It requires a paradigm change from the application of unlimited resources for the greatest good of each individual patient, to the allocation of limited resources for the greatest good of the greatest number of casualties.��� L IO���S ROAR Mongolia���s Countrywide Land Information System 19 $ New Reality Industry Trends Disaster Management BY OFER AMRAM International GIS Developed speci���cally for the geospatial academic environment, Web Mapping is the perfect teaching tool and a must-read for undergraduates, graduates, researchers, policy makers and others interested in GIS fundamentals, especially those working in a Web-based environment. Now Available! 95 . Pro vid ing One-S ata top Access to Ontario D I Order online at n 1999, Land Informat ion Ontario (LIO) hired its first organizat staff and opened its offices in downtow ions to collect high-reso n Toronto for Ontario with a vision that lution satellite imagery Ontario���s geospati at significant cost al data could be savings for all partners. well managed, accessib le, easy to integrate able. Eleven years and afford- Collabora and many achievem tion ents later, this vision is becomin Data Exchange g a reality. Today, LIO is recognize The Ontario Geospat d for its active participa ial Data Exchange organizations and tion in of more is a community working groups as than 400 public-se well as providing ctor organizations advice, education and use digital geograph that share and coordination for major imagery ic information about data initiatives. Through and The Data Ontario. Exchange allows partnerships and organizations to collaboration, at LIO manages provincia share data no cost under a l datasets such single legal agreeme as the Ontario Road Network, Ontario nt. The Data Exchang Parcel and Ontario e eliminat es the Trail Network. LIO makes these need for traditional data sharing and hundreds of agreeme nts, which other datasets available to registere legal and adminis reduces d users at no charge. trative costs for LIO also coor- data. dinates partnersh distribut ing ips among publicIt also reduces and private-sector data collectio n and maintenance costs. www.geoplace.com/ebooks 1

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