Vol. 2 Issue 5
October 2007

Writing an introduction for the Azavea Journal is kind of like driving a monster truck in the demolition derby down at the Savannah civic center. It takes brains, brawn, and nerves of steel. But when the deed is done, and bits of mangled steel are all strewn around us, we know we'll get everyone's attention! Are we getting carried away? Yes, maybe ... but who wouldn't want to know about the enormous amount of data we have added to Cicero (our elected official lookup), the release of PhillyHistory Mobile, the use and significance of GIS in trauma center siting, and the 3 new colleagues we are welcoming to our team? Welcome to another edition of the Azavea Journal!

PhillyHistory Mobile Version Released: Carry Philly in Your Pocket and Become a History Sleuth!

"... it can be adapted to virtually any historic, cultural or commercial asset."

We have just launched the mobile version of PhillyHistory. It is now accessible from most cell phones, handheld computers and other mobile devices enabling anyone to search the more than 45,000 historic photos currently on the PhillyHistory site at anytime and from anywhere.

PhillyHistory Mobile can serve pedestrians and visitors curious to see what their surroundings used to look like; organizers of historic tours; and teachers who are interested in making their history curricula more interactive. It has a simple search screen in which you can enter an address or intersection of nearby historic or cultural sites. The resulting display returns a map of the area showing coordinates for various historic and cultural assets in close proximity, accompanied by photos of those assets.

This innovative mobile website leverages Sajara, our web-based digital asset management software. It was built on ESRI’s ArcGIS server technology and ASP.NET 2.0 Mobile Controls. The greatest advantage of Sajara is that it can be adapted to virtually any historic, cultural or commercial asset. It can be applied to cultural resources of any kind (murals, architectural assets, and paintings), tours, real estate, the restaurant industry, and environmental information.

The mobile website has been tested for browsers on various devices using device emulators including the Pocket PC, Openwave, Sony Ericsson and many more. It’s designed to work on phones with Internet browsers that support wml, html or xhtml.

PhillyHistory Mobile is an extension of PhillyHistory.org, developed by Azavea in 2004 to help the City Archives preserve its deteriorating and aging photographic memories, PhillyHistory.org attracts thousands of unique visitors each month. Its e-commerce module supports funding of the project and creates revenue through the sale of prints and digital photos. New images from the City Archives’ estimated two million photos are uploaded and viewable from both PhillyHistory media at a rate of two thousand per month. And now you can take a mobile tour of Philadelphia’s past from a handheld computer or other mobile device, visit mobile.phillyhistory.org and enjoy your ride on what Philadelphia Magazine has called “your own flux-capacitor-fueled DeLorean”!

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More in Vol. 2 Issue 5, October 2007 (2 of 6 articles)