Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning

There are many examples of GIS application in planning such as urban land-use planning, cultural heritage conservation, coastal zone management, and the design of structure plans for sustainable economic development. All these applications are dealing with systems in which natural and human factors...

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Main Authors: Sabri, Soheil, Muhamad Ludin, Ahmad Nazri, Majid, Mohammad Rafee
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: 2013
Subjects:
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author Sabri, Soheil
Muhamad Ludin, Ahmad Nazri
Majid, Mohammad Rafee
author_facet Sabri, Soheil
Muhamad Ludin, Ahmad Nazri
Majid, Mohammad Rafee
author_sort Sabri, Soheil
collection ePrints
description There are many examples of GIS application in planning such as urban land-use planning, cultural heritage conservation, coastal zone management, and the design of structure plans for sustainable economic development. All these applications are dealing with systems in which natural and human factors are interconnected. But an issue that should be addressed is to what extent the current information technology is able to connect all these parts together? Contemporary improvement in information technology made the computer so imbedded in our everyday practices that we use it without having to think about it. Thus, computing is becoming truly ubiquitous and is available anywhere anytime. Advances in the internet facilities and devices, such as high speed wireless networks, mobile middleware, and smart technologies, has pushed the concept of ubiquitous computing to the forefront of GIS research and development. There are developments in this regards, these are such as GeoWeb 2.0, voluntarily geographic Information (VGI), and Mashups, whereby the application of cloud computing was possible in visualizing urban air pollution and emergency responses to ensure the safety and security. These advancements therefore, have changed the conventional facet of macro and micro spatial planning. Every possible information system such as residential, medical, business, environmental, governmental, and the like can be linked through ubiquitous computing technologies and acts as a virtually one system which works for society. However, the journey to achieve a true ubiquitous GIS is not without challenges. Despite the current potentials there are many issues and obstacles need to be addressed before GIS can to be truly ubiquitous in planning context. Perhaps four criteria as explained by Goodchild et al (1997) can be applied to ubiquitous GIS in planning very well: the system must be distributed (data storage, processing and user interaction can occur at locations that are potentially widely scattered), disaggregated (the monolithic systems are replaced by 'plug and play' components designed to interoperate through conformance with industry-wide standards), decoupled (system must be able to access a number of components over many networks required to complete a specific task) and, interoperable (system is based on an "open" system).
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spelling utm.eprints-631472017-06-15T02:00:47Z http://eprints.utm.my/63147/ Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning Sabri, Soheil Muhamad Ludin, Ahmad Nazri Majid, Mohammad Rafee TH Building construction There are many examples of GIS application in planning such as urban land-use planning, cultural heritage conservation, coastal zone management, and the design of structure plans for sustainable economic development. All these applications are dealing with systems in which natural and human factors are interconnected. But an issue that should be addressed is to what extent the current information technology is able to connect all these parts together? Contemporary improvement in information technology made the computer so imbedded in our everyday practices that we use it without having to think about it. Thus, computing is becoming truly ubiquitous and is available anywhere anytime. Advances in the internet facilities and devices, such as high speed wireless networks, mobile middleware, and smart technologies, has pushed the concept of ubiquitous computing to the forefront of GIS research and development. There are developments in this regards, these are such as GeoWeb 2.0, voluntarily geographic Information (VGI), and Mashups, whereby the application of cloud computing was possible in visualizing urban air pollution and emergency responses to ensure the safety and security. These advancements therefore, have changed the conventional facet of macro and micro spatial planning. Every possible information system such as residential, medical, business, environmental, governmental, and the like can be linked through ubiquitous computing technologies and acts as a virtually one system which works for society. However, the journey to achieve a true ubiquitous GIS is not without challenges. Despite the current potentials there are many issues and obstacles need to be addressed before GIS can to be truly ubiquitous in planning context. Perhaps four criteria as explained by Goodchild et al (1997) can be applied to ubiquitous GIS in planning very well: the system must be distributed (data storage, processing and user interaction can occur at locations that are potentially widely scattered), disaggregated (the monolithic systems are replaced by 'plug and play' components designed to interoperate through conformance with industry-wide standards), decoupled (system must be able to access a number of components over many networks required to complete a specific task) and, interoperable (system is based on an "open" system). 2013 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed Sabri, Soheil and Muhamad Ludin, Ahmad Nazri and Majid, Mohammad Rafee (2013) Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning. In: 8th International Symposium of the Digital Earth, ISDE 2014, 26-29 Aug,2013, Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/18/1/012176
spellingShingle TH Building construction
Sabri, Soheil
Muhamad Ludin, Ahmad Nazri
Majid, Mohammad Rafee
Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning
title Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning
title_full Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning
title_fullStr Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning
title_full_unstemmed Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning
title_short Ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning
title_sort ubiquitous geospatial concept in evolution of the macro and micro spatial planning
topic TH Building construction
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AT muhamadludinahmadnazri ubiquitousgeospatialconceptinevolutionofthemacroandmicrospatialplanning
AT majidmohammadrafee ubiquitousgeospatialconceptinevolutionofthemacroandmicrospatialplanning