And normally, in the absence of an interruption of Internet service,
all this mapped informaton would be publicly available to all comers?
I would have thought that emergency responders had significant privacy
requirements, which seems inconsistent with Google's TOS.


On Oct 29, 6:25 pm, ashore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> It's a fairly conventional Computer-Aided-Dispatch app'n.  A emergency
> response team has members or vehicles at known locations, and an
> incident is reported at location x, a street/highway address.  The
> latter is geocoded, and directions from the nearest unit is presented,
> but other units may be clicked-on, with directions shown.
>
> There's a good bit of database work associated with both response-unit
> and incident data, for status, performance reporting etc.
>
> Automatic notification is included, by email and/or cell/text, on
> events associated with each.
>
> (In effect, the application is a version of an IT ticket-writing one,
> which in fact, it originally was.  I added the m,apping functionality
> and expanded the other stuff as needed.
>
> AS
>
> On Oct 29, 6:14 pm, boomerbubba <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > I still don't understand what the functionality of your application
> > is, beyond just viewing some maps.
>
> > Could you at least summarize that, and even post a link to your
> > existing public web site?
>
> > On Oct 29, 6:01 pm, ashore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > Guys, thanks heaps for the responses.  All truly appreciated.
>
> > > A little better explanation of the situation I'm addressing:  I have
> > > this web/Gmaps/PHP/MySql application I've written, and the concerns
> > > raised in portions of the user community (those oriented to emergency
> > > comm's) is that it's all well and good for the 99.999% of the time
> > > when situation is normal, but they/we are here for that OTHER time
> > > period, when the Internet isn't.  And SOME level level of capability
> > > is needed then,  including some map-based capability even if it's not
> > > the whole shebang. In effect, a graceful degradation.
>
> > > Then, local multi-user operation;  Cd be one guy at the server, cd be
> > > n locally-connected.  (It's the Internet connectivity that's gone, not
> > > the across-the-room connections.)
>
> > > I'd love to be able to simply (hah!) port the app'n fm its GMaps
> > > components to some other map base, if that other map base cd be self-
> > > contained on the server - Internet-free.  And keep the PHP/MySql
> > > intact to the extent possible.
>
> > > As suggested by Lance Dyas and Barry Hunter, I looked at Open Street
> > > Map and Open Layers, and they really do look like they meet the needs,
> > > although they look kind of young.  And i wish there were some kind of
> > > manual/text.  (In English; I note the German book.)  Fascinating
> > > initiatives!
>
> > > Sans Internet, there's be no geo-location function or driving
> > > directions presumably, but that'd be livable-with I expect, since it'd
> > > be available when Internet connectivity was restored.  There'd be a
> > > good bit of work in generation the maps where they don't yet exist,
> > > but I see a good body of editors available to help do that.
>
> > > Thanks, guys.  You've all been a big-time help!
>
> > > AS- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
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