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You are here: Home / Articles from Spatial Media Authors / The Future’s ‘Cloudy’ (and that’s a good thing)

The Future’s ‘Cloudy’ (and that’s a good thing)

September 7, 2012 By Editor


 

One industry that is characterized by continuous improvement is information technology. An IT innovation for business that has begun to penetrate the mainstream of business activity is enterprise cloud computing, which utilizes groups of computers in various locations that aggregate data storage as well as Internet gateways for network access from any location. The result is a level of data processing power and storage that rivals those of local or wide-area networks–accessible to work groups that are spread out across countries, continents or the entire globe.

Also, unlike company intranets that were utilized in business starting in the 1990s, enterprise cloud computing does not require significant IT infrastructure staffing for system maintenance at the local level. Now the individual worker has access to a powerful, work group-specific data storage system from anywhere. That’s the idea behind enterprise networks like Topcon Positioning Systems’ Magnet cloud-based enterprise solution and cloud-enabled family of software applications that was introduced to the public at Intergeo 2011 and launched in March 2012.

As the name implies, Magnet was developed to pull together the efforts of field crews, office staff–and, significantly, for the first time–managers. Now, all work groups can quickly share access to project data, check the current status of ongoing work, take advantage of inter-company chat communication, and manage the projects over vast distances. Topcon developed the system to follow its vision of providing customers with a necessary business collaboration system to streamline workflow between management, office applications and the mobile workforce.

The result is a highly centralized, robust, accessible group of software solutions. The "system" of software products is designed to be a quantum leap beyond the "shattered" systems that have been commonly used in the past. The latter has consisted of individual software packages with low-priced, disparate software programs from competing vendors that are not ideally compatible.

Moreover, Magnet is a turnkey system that does not require IT and network staff to design, implement and maintain. The only major adjustment that work groups might have with cloud computing is trusting that the data is "in the cloud" because storage devices to which they have grown accustomed–like a hard drive or flash drive–is not being used.

Four Elements

Continue reading the full article on Amerisurv 

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Filed Under: Articles from Spatial Media Authors, SPATIAL MEDIA AUTHORS Tagged With: Articles, Articles from Spatial Media Authors, The Future's 'Cloudy' (and that's a good thing)

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About Editor

Glenn is a geographer and a GIS professional with over 20 years experience in the industry. He's the co-founder of GISuser and several other technology web publications.

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