Posts tagged ‘CAP’

A Question for Vendors of Emergency Management Software

I wrote a little ditty that explains the value of what FEMA’s Disaster management program offers to vendors, open source developers and even contract developers in the Emergency Management and Public Warning Domains. It is a question that users of such software might ask their vendors. Take a look.
See my Contact Info if you would like some help getting started

Are you OPEN? [1]

Can you connect using standards?
Are you open to all?
Or are you a silo?
Using “standards” to stall?

Our open web service
Connects all kinds of apps.
A middleware instance
To share more than “CAPs.”[2]

We have a web service
Based on EDXL [3]
That helps apps connect
Yet encapsulate well.

Hard wired integration
Is not what we do.
You connect via service
As captured by you.

You decide layout
And your design form
But connect to all others
Using standards as norm.

We make it straightforward.
Your connection is clean.
The boundaries work well.
You control what is seen.

You have the power.
We provide pipes,
For transferring data
Of all defined types.

With data described
Using DE [4]
So intelligent routing
Can come to be.

We provide access.
You set the rules
In the tags that you set
In the DE through your tools.

We then connect others
As desired by you.
And they get your data
As you want them to.

They can format the layout
In their own way.
Connected, yet separate
With their own say

Into how to display
And how to reuse
And so can all others
Unless you refuse.

You can work independent,
Yet use standards to share.
The best choice to ensure
Service to all; everywhere.

Gary A. Ham – May 14, 2009

[1] FEMA – Disaster Management Program – Open Platform for Emergency Networks
[2] OASIS Common Alerting Protocol
[3] OASIS Emergency Data Exchange Language
[4] OASIS EDXL Distribution Element

New Common Alerting Protocol Application On Source Forge

The new poller/poster for FEMA’s Open Platform for Emergency Networks is now on Source Forge. Lee Tincher from Evolution Technologies reworked some of my old code to make in work directly with both Oracle and MySQL databases. I must admit that his solution is much more robust than my original test code. On the other hand, I did write the foundation connection code. :–) Let’s hope we get a lot of interest. This could make emergency alert sharing in a non-proprietary environment actually work. Even better, lets make it work in a multi-proprietary environment using OASIS EDXL Standards for communication through a level playing field Government supplied middleware infrastructure. This was my dream when I worked on Disaster Management. Maybe it can actually happen.

Emergency Messaging Portal Lives On

The Disaster Management – Open Platform for Emergency Messages (DM-OPEN) was recently moved to hopefully permanent quarters at the Stennis Center in Mississippi.  After a bit of testing, those of us who believe in the Emergency Messaging as Government Infrastructure concept have noted that response time has improve significantly.  This should my the work that Lee and I are doing to extend open source connectivity for OASIS Emergency Management Standard Messages easier to sell to other vendors and government programs.  Let us build to CAP, EDXL-DE, EDXL-RM and HAVE.  Folks, it is there.  It works.  Lets use it, so they cannot take it away!

Open Source for DM-OPEN

Lee Tincher from Evolution Technologies is building some new open source connection code for DM-OPEN that adds to my previous test code. This addition will include database connection code for oracle and MySQL that will let developers retrieve Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) alerts from DM-OPEN and directly put them into a relational database for further processing. We plan to put the updated code up on the EM Forum site for others to use as desired. Cool stuff. Eventually we plan to add to this code so that it handles Emergency Data Exchange Language (EDXL) Distribution Element (DE), Resource Messaging (RM), and Hospital AVailability Exchange (HAVE). Emergency Managers every where – While I am of some assistance, Lee is doing real work that supports you! I am sure that he will appreciate your gratitude and support.