GIS: An invisible evolution
Geographic information systems eventually will be just another part of the overall IT infrastructure
Within the next five years, geographic information systems will no longer
be considered a separate entity, but will instead be just another part of
the overall information technology infrastructure, according to David Sonnen,
senior consultant for spatial data management at IDC Research.
Driving that is the move by major database vendors to incorporate spatial
data into the data types handled by their products.
"That's the major trend now," he said. "Oracle has managed to do that
almost completely, and other companies such as IBM and Informix are well
on the way to doing the same. Eventually, Microsoft will also enable its
SQL Server to handle GIS data."
Beyond that, companies are working to include spatial intelligence into
their knowledge management and business intelligence solutions. And the
even newer providers of Web services are rushing to include location-based
capabilities in their offerings.
"In the future, the ability to handle spatial information as a part
of the IT infrastructure will be the basis of an organizing principle for
all kinds of data," he said. "It will enable powerful tools for homeland
security, organizing corporate data and so on."
Then people will no longer buy GIS solutions as such, he said. Instead,
they'll buy their regular Oracle Corp. or Informix software database products
with geospatial functions included "and GIS will become invisible."
Robinson is a freelance journalist based in Portland, Ore. He can be reached
at hullite@mindspring.com.
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