April 24, 2009
From the moment the first commercial relational
database was used in GIS, Oracle positioned itself as a leader in the
field. People have since been continuously looking for more complete
features in commercial GIS and GIS applications, in order to increase
overall capability. Once we were able to store geometric data, indexing
mechanisms and SQL extensions, we could undertake more complex
commercial GIS problems. Indeed, it became possible to reach a much
wider customer base, and to access more enterprise data. Based on the
knowledge of the requirements manifested by its installed customer
base, as well as by making alliances with some GIS companies, Oracle
has strived to satisfy the needs of the geospatial community. In turn,
the community has helped to improve the product.
Oracle Spatial is a product designed to manage location-based
information within an Oracle database. It allows users and application
developers to easily integrate important data within corporate decision
making applications. Spatially referenced data were historically stored
by proprietary file systems and specialized applications. Such
partitioned architecture eliminated the combined potential of the
geographic features along with their descriptive attributes. Easily
integrating them made it possible to provide a way for companies to
maximize input from their data, while minimizing costs. Indeed, this
new storage paradigm is crucial in expanding the applications of
geospatial information.
The use of one single mechanism for both localized data and business
information provides access to the openness, reliability and
performance made possible by the use of a relational database
management system (RDBMS). Mission critical applications, spatially
referenced data warehousing and business intelligence have leveraged
access to geospatial information from one federated source. This new
access to a more geographic perspective of enterprise information has
allowed companies to become more location intelligent.
Through its partnerships with companies including Autodesk, Bentley,
e-Spatial, ESRI, Intergraph, 1Spatial, MapInfo and Star Informatics,
Oracle has come to be perceived as a key platform in the evolution of
the GIS industry. Those companies understand that simplifying data
management allows them to focus on their core competencies of analysis
and design. Furthermore, features now standard in all versions of the
database have gained the interest of new customers and new types of
partners. And location-enabled business rules and application-logic can
be applied to customer relationship management, asset management,
marketing and sales applications
Oracle Spatial's support of topological data structures, as well as
raster data management, in addition to the product's scalability and
security features have made it a popular choice among information
technology managers. These features are essential to the evolution and
mass adoption of geospatial technologies, and have facilitated
interoperability.
The vast majority of GIS application providers sell a product that is
compliant and interoperable with the Oracle Spatial storage mechanism
in order to store geometric data and their corresponding descriptive
data. Many also take advantage of its specialized components such as
Workspace Manager, GeoRaster and dynamic segmentation, benefiting from
better access to data, parallelism, security mechanisms, complex views
and geometric integrity, all from the database itself. Those
organizations are interested in what Oracle has to offer because they
can see the benefits of having just one centralized depot for spatial
data, to which it is much easier to add business logic. It is true that
they also benefit from a central data store.
It is becoming more and more natural to build applications using such
data warehouses and to capitalize on the fact that you can add spatial
criteria to any type of SQL request. In addition, formats such as XML
and GML that are becoming popular facilitate the integration of that
content into content-sharing applications and business portals. Such
applications can be built in Java and take advantage of the available
APIs, thus providing a more effective development environment in which
to create vertical applications.
Many new applications are taking advantage of geospatial technology
allowing decision makers better business insights to their operations.
Business value will flow from a higher return for their technology
dollars as organizations begin to reduce the time it takes to route
vehicles, comprehend market potential, and find the highest and best
use of land and its assets, just to name a few examples. It is a key
step toward developing a location-enabled enterprise.
Ed. note: This article originally appeared in Directions
français and was translated into English by our
colleague
Jean-Louis Duchesne.
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| Right, Oracle Spatial is the leader in the commercial database world. I'd like to mention that PostGIS is the leader in the OpenSoure database world and its capabilities are very equivalent to Oracle. |
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