Posts Tagged ‘Mapping’

Take a Sneak Peek at Mokena Police’s New Crime-Mapping Software

December 30th, 2011

Want to look at past crimes in your neighborhood, get alerts about new crimes in a section of town you designate and even search sex offender data on your iPhone?

Starting next month, you can.

On Wednesday, the Mokena Police Department offered members of the media a sneak peek at CrimeReports, the new crime mapping software the department plans to make public Jan. 23. Police Chief Randy Rajewski will present CrimeReports to the village board the same day.

As approved in the village budget that started in July, the police department will be paying less than $5,000 a year for two services from CrimeReports.com: CrimeReports, a public online map of police data, and CommandCentral, which will generate maps, statistics and other data for the department to use internally when planning how best to divvy officers.

“This is going to revolutionize the way we patrol,” Rajewski said.

CrimeReports
CrimeReports, available online or through a free iPhone app, will allow residents to see crimes in their area, all mapped out. You can search by date, time, area—even mark off different sections of town you care about to get e-mail alerts when something happens by your parents’ house or your child’s school.

Twice a day, the police department servers will upload every completed police report from murders to pedestrian stops, “everything that generates an official police report,” Rajewski said.

What will it show?

The date and time the crime occurred
The block where it happened (the police station would be the 10900 block of Front Street instead of 10907 Front St., for example)
The most serious charge (a DUI case would not also mention that the driver wasn’t wearing her seat belt, for example)
Past crimes at that location
An identifier code a reader can tell police if they want or have more information about the crime
Detailed information on local sex offenders with exact address and the most recent photo the department took during registration
“It gives a snapshot of what occurred, but not in such detail it identifies a victim,” Rajewski said.

Each crime will also have two links: “Send to friend” and “Submit anonymous tip about this crime.”

Clicking “Send to friend” will send the information to an e-mail address of your choosing. Clicking “Submit anonymous tip about this crime” will take you to Crime Stoppers of Will County.

Crime Stoppers, which the village already uses, has a 24- to 48-hour response time in getting information to the department. Rajewski said. He said he hopes “common sense” will make people just call the department directly when the information they have is more time-sensitive.

What won’t it show?

Exact street address of crime
Lesser charges from the same incident
Car crashes where no one was arrested
Crimes where a juvenile is the suspect
Crimes more than a year old
Information from incomplete reports
Screenshots of Mokena’s map are included as the photos in this article, but to play around with the system for yourself, go to CrimeReports.com and type in either “Plainfield” or “Joliet.”

CommandCentral
While the public CrimeReports take out some of the information—stuff that can identify victims and the 500 to 600 little fender benders the department sees a year, for example—all the data will be visible for the internal CommandCentral.

Each morning at roll call, officers can see a detailed map of where crimes occurred in town, where crimes occurred within officers’ beats and graphs and charts breaking down the crimes.

Similar to the old “pin maps” officers used to find hot spots where to deploy patrol officers, the CommandCentral information will show officers where to go and what to be prepared for. Officers can get to that information from any computer with Internet access to search through it themselves.

Although the department could have gotten either CommandCentral or CrimeReports individually, Rajewski said the department opted for both not only for transparency, but for perspective on how the public views crime.

“Sometimes, we get caught up in our own world in terms of what we see,” he said.

The services together cost less than $5,000 a year, Rajewski said. The only new equipment the department bought for this was a larger monitor to display CommandCentral maps to all the officers during morning roll call, he said.

“Overall, we’re only investing a few thousand dollars a year in terms of our ability to do this,” he said.

Source:http://mokena.patch.com/articles/take-a-sneak-peek-at-mokena-police-s-new-crime-mapping-software

HP Updates Dependency Mapping Software

August 15th, 2011

Hewlett-Packard has updated its dependency mapping software to help customers figure out which departments are using which systems and applications, to enable chargeback programs and other management tasks.

Dependency mapping helps data center architects uncover the connections between applications, servers and storage systems, so that when they consolidate systems, replace legacy gear or do virtualization projects they don’t accidentally break something in the process.

“We’ve found that most data center managers know with a fair degree of accuracy about 80 percent of what’s in their data center. It’s the other 20 percent that keeps them up at night,” said Jimmy Augustine, a group marketing manager in HP’s software division.

HP’s tool is called Discovery and Dependency Mapping Advanced Edition (DDMA). A data center architect can enter an IP range and the software examines SNMP traffic, data packets and other data to map out the topology of the IT equipment. It also looks at executable files on servers to see which applications are installed.

The new feature announced Monday is what HP calls a collector portal, a Web interface that lists the applications and dependencies the software has uncovered. Customers then manually enter which departments and services are using which applications.

The data can be used for chargeback purposes, because companies can now see what resources are being used by each department. If several departments are using the same application, the costs could be split among them. Or if a data center wants to retire equipment in a consolidation project, for example, it can see which departments it needs to contact for approval.

The feature is part of what HP calls its Data Center Transformation Accelerator Package for DDMA, which is free to existing DDMA customers, Augustine said. The data from DDMA is stored in HP’s Configuration Management Database.

Dependency mapping has become more important as customers undertake virtualization and cloud computing projects, which increase complexity and make it easier to overlook dependencies, Augustine said. “We see a lot of customers buying our [DDMA] product specifically for a data center transformation project,” he said.

For companies that don’t want to do the work themselves, HP is also offering a new service package built around the DDMA updates. “It’s a three-step process that includes discovery, planning and consolidation,” Augustine said.

DDMA is licensed according to how many servers a customer wants to run discovery on, he said. He couldn’t immediately say how the service package is priced.

HP releases DDMA updates every three to four months. In June it released Content Pack 9, which added the ability to discover Microsoft Exchange 2010 and IBM AS400 servers, and enhancements for IBM mainframes and Windows PowerShell.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/238038/hp_updates_dependency_mapping_software.html

New software allows Utahns to redraw legislative, congressional districts

April 25th, 2011

New mapping software on the state’s website will allow citizens to draw up proposed districts without having to calculate the impact on the number of constituents in each district every time a boundary is shifted, the Deseret News of Salt Lake City reported.

Legislative policy analyst Leif Elder said he tested the new software with the average citizen in mind.

“It’ll give them a chance to do that and say, ‘Here’s what I would propose.’ I think that’s a good thing,” he said.

Elder is scheduled to demonstrate a similar software program for lawmakers during the first meeting of the Legislature’s Redistricting Committee on Monday in Salt Lake City.

But whether the novelty of being able to map out new boundaries boosts interest in redistricting remains to be seen, said Gigi Brandt, vice president of the League of Women Voters of Utah.

“For some, it won’t make any difference,” she said. “But I would hope younger people who are more computer savvy, they’ll want to play with it.”

A new group, Represent Me Utah, is trying to keep the pressure on lawmakers to fairly redraw district boundaries. The group includes Republicans, Democrats and independents.

A decade ago, the state was accused of gerrymandering by some. Critics cite the 2nd District congressional seat still held by Rep. Jim Matheson, D-Utah, which shifted from mainly the Salt Lake City area to include large swaths of rural Utah.

Kelli Lundgren, co-chairwoman of Represent Me Utah, said the user-friendly mapping software will be welcomed.

“I’m excited they are doing that for the public,” she said. “But what I would love to see is that they actually use input from it.”

The final decision is up to the Legislature, which is expected to be called into special session by Gov. Gary Herbert later this year to approve new boundaries.

The new mapping software should be available soon on the state’s website.

Source:http://www.dailyjournal.net/view/story/e9ebcf9832f643758517665331cafd80/UT–Redistricting-Utah/

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