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Relief workers in Haiti use GINA System’s live, interactive mapping software, installed on their mobile device, to efficiently track the disaster site and locate people in the field.
Courtesy of Microsoft |
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Redmond, Wash., USA - September 1, 2011
When
Zbyněk Poulíček participated in
Microsoft Imagine Cup last year, his dream to make an impact was already coming true - the project his team created with
Windows Embedded technologies was helping relief workers during
natural disasters halfway around the world.
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Czech Republic students, co-founders of GINA Software s.r.o., (from left) Zbyněk Poulíček, CEO; Boris Procházka, and Petra Bačíková Černá show off their Geographical Information Assistant (GINA), which helps rescue workers coordinate with each other and navigate difficult terrain.
Courtesy of Microsoft |
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“The initial intention was to create an interesting project for my diploma work, but Imagine Cup changed my point of view and inspired me to form a team to start the GINA project,” said
Poulíček,
who is now the co-founder of GINA Software, based in the Czech Republic.
“During development, the earthquake in Haiti was a very important milestone when we realized the significant potential of our concept.”
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Humanitarian workers from the Czech Republic are using GINA in Haiti to navigate rough terrain and build a field hospital.
Courtesy of Microsoft |
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Poulíček and his team members, Petra Černá and Boris Procházka, knew only what they could see on TV about rescue efforts during the January 2010 earthquake.
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The GINA (Geographical INformation Assistant) Project introduces an innovative software system for mobile equipment offering navigation in difficult terrain, co-ordination of teams and the efficient exchange of geographical information. Its features make it an ideal tool for rescue teams, expeditions and other groups operating in extreme environments.
Courtesy of GINA Software |
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Reports showed emergency workers unable to locate people trapped in destroyed buildings because they lacked the proper communications equipment, demonstrating the need for an information-sharing tool that
provided up-to-date information about the situation.
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The GINA (Geographical INformation Assistant) Project introduces an innovative software system for mobile equipment offering navigation in difficult terrain, co-ordination of teams and the efficient exchange of geographical information. Its features make it an ideal tool for rescue teams, expeditions and other groups operating in extreme environments.
Courtesy of GINA Software |
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The team decided it needed to create a mobile system that improved the efficiency of the rescuers while also ensuring their safety.
Today, relief workers in disaster-stricken countries, including Haiti and Japan, use the geographical information assistant (GINA) mobile application that Poulíček’s team imagined.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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GINA System provides interactive-mapping software that allows rescue teams to coordinate and exchange geographic information through mobile devices.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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Similar to a paper map, on which people can draw or stick pins to point out specific coordinates,
GINA lets users insert their own locations through pictograms and share their updates with other mobile devices that have the software installed.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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This real-time technology is ideal for emergency workers and teams who need to have an accurate overview of rescue sites and track people in the field.
Before even competing in
Imagine Cup, Poulíček said his team contacted Hand for Help, offering GINA software to assist with search efforts during the Haiti earthquake.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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When GINA’s interactive mapping features proved successful in Haiti, the team turned its project into a professional endeavor by launching GINA Software.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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Now the company regularly supports relief agencies, as well as businesses seeking to lower costs for planning logistics and secure field workers and equipment.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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The GINA System mobile application runs on Windows Embedded Handheld, which provides a robust and flexible solution that works well with the
sturdy, industrial, mobile terminals used by GINA.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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Windows Embedded Handheld also meets key line-of-business scenarios and boosts productivity of the mobile enterprise workforce by enabling users to capture, access and act on
business-critical information where and when they need it.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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“What people can achieve thanks to advanced technology is what counts, and embedded technologies help transform great ideas into concrete solutions that will help solve severe problems,” said
Olivier Bloch, technical evangelist, Windows Embedded at Microsoft. “Embedded technologies can and should enhance processes, getting information shared and analyzed faster and more efficiently, therefore helping solve lots of issues faced in remote locations, where the technologies commonly used in developed countries do not exist.”
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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The most challenging step for creating GINA System was designing an application that worked in the most desperate circumstances.
Windows Embedded platforms and technologies enable developers to create systems that respond to the need for flexibility, connectivity and mobility within harsh conditions and critical situations, such as those created in the aftermath of the
earthquakes in Haiti and Japan.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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By utilizing
Windows Embedded Handheld, the
team could design its own protocols and data encodings in a familiar development environment and trust that the
application would work almost everywhere.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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Currently,
GINA is used mostly by rescue workers and security professionals for team coordination and safety, but as its client base grows, the company is expanding beyond its
original design to meet the needs of other industries based on client feedback.
For example,
GINA Software intends to use next iterations of the application to collect information about biological hazards in the environment, which the company will then release to the general public.
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Courtesy of GINA Software |
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“GINA System turned from a student project to a serious business very quickly, and it is a great motivation that, with our solution, we can help to make the world at least a slightly better place,”
Poulíček said.
To learn more about
GINA System and how it can help keep situations under control, visit
http://www.ginasystem.com
More information about
Windows Embedded products is available at
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsembedded/en-us/windows-embedded.aspx
Source: Microsoft Corp.
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/default.mspx
Geographical INformation Assistant - GINA
GINA is an interactive map software for mobile devices permitting navigation in difficult terrain, teams coordination and effective exchange of geographic information.
Due to its features,
GINA is destined for crisis management centres, rescue teams and other groups operating in difficult conditions.
GINA is also used as an tool for effective enterprise management.
Thanks to the support of cadastral and satellite maps, GINA can also be used for geodetic surveys or for urbanistic works.
GINA is easy to control, because the use of the application has been inspired by an ordinary paper map.
Just like you can draw on a map with a pen and stick a pin of various colours in it,
GINA enables you to insert your own drawings, and in place of pins,
GINA offers pictograms.
However,
GINA allows much more - inserting photographs or short videos, made using an in-built camera.
All this works in real time, so that inserted data are immediately available to all members of your team.
The same map can be thus viewed by an unlimited number of users, regardless of their current location.
Source: GINA Software s.r.o.
http://www.ginasystem.com/
Video
GINA System - Video Presentation
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBQtuPBdC6c&feature
Video
GINA (Geographical INformation Assistant)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EaeprS_6V48&feature
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