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Application Redesign

Application Redesign. Workshop 1: Quality Management for Geodata FIG Commission 3, 5 and 7. FIG General Assembly in Munich, Germany Monday October 9, 2006 10:30-13:00 Room 21a. Reasons for application redesign. Reasons for migration to different GIS software

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Application Redesign

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  1. Application Redesign Workshop 1: Quality Management for GeodataFIG Commission 3, 5 and 7 FIG General Assembly in Munich, Germany Monday October 9, 2006 10:30-13:00 Room 21a

  2. Reasons for application redesign • Reasons for migration to different GIS software • GIS base software is no longer supported by vendor • Developments of system enhancements are getting more and more expensive due to old base technology • Change of hardware and/or operating system required  GIS software does not run on new system • New system architecture required (e.g. web-based) • Reasons for migration to a different application schema • Application schema does not support all requirements • If different GIS software has to be chosen, it may require a different data model • Some business processes are not supported by the old application schema

  3. Actions • Strength - weakness and opportunities - threats (SWOT) analysis • Redesign • System architecture • Interfaces • Application schema • Functionality • Migration • Transfer of data • Transfer of functionality • User interfaces • Testing • Employees training • Roll-out Quality-Management

  4. SWOT analysis • Emphasis on • Implications on costumers • Economical benefits • Business opportunities • Transition phase • Involvement of user community

  5. Data migration • Especially migration process has to be accompanied by QM • Experience shows: data quality usually improves when adapting to a new application schema • Data errors show up: • Not closed polygons • Selfintersecting lineStrings • FeaturePropertyValues that are in the wrong domain • Is this our experience as well?

  6. ISO/TC 211 Model driven approach Application schema development Open Geospatial Consortium • GML: Definition of standardized data types in XML Schema Unified Modelling Language standard: rules eXtensible Markup Language Schema

  7. Example for land management cadaster • ALKIS-predecessor ALK was outdated • Graphical oriented • No object structure • E.g. parcel consisted of an object parcel-Nr and boundary lines – the area feature was not explicitly modelled • Complex analyses on parcels were not possible (although the system was all about management of parcels) • Many users relied on the ALK data for their business processes • Especially utility companies

  8. utility data 25 14.95 25 5.75 • chances structure? • chances content? Implications to the costumer • What happens if the underlying cadastre data cadastre data • chances geometry? • chances format?

  9. has impact on web feature services (WFS) has impact on web map services (WMS) format is “fixed“ • Structure • Change or redesign of application schema • Content • Updates to the database due to changes of the real world or due to error correction • Geometry • Change to CRS / datum, new survey with more accurate data, combination of old survey data with GPS data • Format • Raster (e.g. GeoTIFF) • System-specific (e.g. e00, oracle-dump) • Proprietary or de-facto standards (e.g. shape-file, DXF) • Application-specific (e.g. EDBS, WLDGE) • Standard (e.g. GML)

  10. Conclusions • Interoperability on a technical level is solved (more or less) • Interoperability on business logic is an issue • Users have to get involved in the redesign • Migration has to emphasize on • data consistency • functionality • continuity in business processes

  11. Questions for discussion • Which business processes are involved? • How do costumers benefit from a redesign? • How can costumers get involved in the redesign process at an early stage? • How do standards support a redesign? • Do web-services make a difference?

  12. Thank you for listening! What is your experience?

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