smarter decisions adimulam vinay babu interoperability and commonality in systems
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SMARTERDECISIONS
Adimulam Vinay Babu
Interoperability and Commonality in Systems
Interoperability
The ability of the forces to train, exercise and operate effectively together between systems and subsystems, effectively and efficiently.
At the strategic level : achieve and maintain shared interests against common threats.
At the operational and tactical levels : shape the environment, manage crises, and win wars.
Interoperability can be achieved only if there is attention paid to standardization during the design of a Program/System.
Edge Frontier
A Complete Middleware Platform for Intelligent Convergence of Devices, Systems, and Networks.
Specifically, EdgeFrontier can:
•Enable connectivity between diverse devices, systems, and networks through communication methods (including TCP/IP, UDP, serial, HTTP, SNMP, WMI, message queue, and web services); support the reading and writing of files and databases; and enable connectivity to systems via third-party and
custom application programming interfaces (APIs) •Serve as a mediator between diverse systems, devices, and networks, including support for
protocol/format encoding/decoding and data transformation •Provide real-time, edge-of-network event processing, including data filtering, correlation, anomaly detection, and notification/alert generation •Provide a policy engine for configuration of event or policy-based actions•Enable distributed processing and event or policy-based actions to be automated throughout the network infrastructure•Distribute data as network data, data files (e.g., text, Excel, XML, binary, etc.) and for databases (e.g., Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle, MySQL, etc.) for use with enterprise systems and interface platforms
Building Common Operating Picture
Commonality in Base Data
Commonality in Overlays – Symbology
Commonality in Measurements & Units
Commonality in User Interface experience
Base Data
Scanned MapsCADRG
Satellite Images8Band MSS,
Radar,
Hyper spectral
Terrain DataDTED
DSM/DEM
Point Clouds
Vector DataDGN
mdb
Base Data
Various Enterprise & External Data Sources
Oracle
SQL Server
MapInfo
ESRI
.xml
.gml
WFS / WMS ......
Microstation
AutoCAD
MS Access
Satellite Imagery
Aerial Photography
CADRG/ADRG
CIB
DEM
DTED
UAV Data
Military Symbols - Introduction
•Every country has their own symbology and their own marking patterns•There have been various subsystems developed/integrated, continuing effort to integrate different ground based sensors(Radars & EO) to these subsystems is ongoing activity . •Markings interchanging within and across the subsystems has added to this challenge.
Military Symbols – General Concepts
•The Common Warfighting Symbologies are broadly categorised into
•Symbols.- describe point locations with necessary assessed attributes
•Graphics. - extend to a line or area demarking the area of operations
Military Symbol - General
Military Symbols – Affiliation
Symbols within a rectangle indicate a military unit, within a triangle an observation post, and within a circle a supply point
size of military
Military Symbol Graphics - General
These demark the area and Lines 35
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Military Symbols
These Symbols are mostly Complex Geometry features, and represented as
• Point• Line• Polygon• Compound
A point feature is represented by one or more points on a map that represent the location of a feature. A point can also represent features that cannot be mapped at the defined map scale. Points can have an orientation, that is, they can be rotated. Elevation control points, oil wells, and manholes are all examples of point features.
A linear feature is represented by one or more lines and/or arcs. What appears on the map to be a single line may actually be line segments strung together to form a single feature. Rivers, railroad tracks, utility lines, and roads are examples of linear features.
An area feature is represented by closed boundaries. Each boundary may or may not contain one or more holes, and the boundaries and holes themselves may be composed of one or more lines and/or arcs. Counties and land parcels are examples of area features.
A compound feature may have point, linear, and/or area geometry within the feature class or even within a single feature
Military Symbols
For Painting Tactical Picture the military symbols need to be dynamic
Topology On the Fly
Functional Attributes
Spatial based Statistics
Dynamic Query Pipes
IMGRS Lat/Lon with Map sheet No.
Elevation
Measurements & Units
Most Modern User Experience..
Integrating Solution for Tactical Picture
Image Processing Photogrammetry GIS Enterprise