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Geotimes April 2003 Lisa M. Pinsker |
Mapping secure boundaries for data In deciding what geospatial information could pose harm to the country if made public, government agencies must think like terrorists. |
Geotimes March 2005 Naomi Lubick |
Cities at Risk From Below As urban centers expand, people build more and more underground spaces that remain unmapped. Their interconnections during natural hazards such as floods are a potential threat, according to researchers. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2008 |
U.S. Marine Corps installs advanced geospatial technology across 65,000 desktops U.S. Marine Corps officers wanted to help their personnel use and share digital maps online, so they turned to TerraGo Technologies in Atlanta. |
National Defense January 2009 Magnuson & Rusling |
A Domestic Counterterrorism Agency? It's a Numbers Game The question of whether to create a standalone domestic intelligence agency for counter-terrorism comes down to some cold, hard math, said The Rand Corp. in a recent study. |
CIO August 1, 2002 Daintry Duffy |
GIS Goes Worldwide Dropping costs and simplified usage makes geographic information systems (GIS) technology a mainstream tool. |
Knowledge@Wharton |
GIS Holds Promise of Launching Next Big Information Revolution Geographic information systems, or GIS, have the potential both to improve private and public sector decision-making and to advance our understanding of place in the social sciences. |
D-Lib Mar/Apr 2015 Justin B. Sorensen |
Reconstructing the Past Through Utah Sanborn Fire Insurance Maps: A Geospatial Approach to Library Resources This article describes the Digital Scholarship Lab's endeavor to convert these valuable resources into research driven geospatial datasets, providing a new format for how the library information is presented. |