Urban Space Datalization and Geospatial Information

2021 ◽  
Vol 141 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-26
Author(s):  
Toshikazu SETO
Author(s):  
Rufia Andisetyana Putri ◽  
Erma Fitria Rini ◽  
Murtanti Jani Rahayu ◽  
Isti Andini

<p class="Abstract"><em><span lang="EN-GB">Information technology in the last ten years has become a necessity of public service. From the decision-making process to the digital display of data, information technology makes the storage, renewal and updating process much more efficient and easier to access. The dynamic utilization of urban space requires an efficient and easy-to-use database system. The purpose of this study is to determine the capacity of village resources as the front guard of planning in improving public services based on geospatial information. This study took places in Jebres and Pucangsawit sub-district. This research uses descriptive method to describe urban resource capacity in using geospatial information system. The results showed that 65% of the sub-district officers and 30% community have not been able to use geospatial information system properly. It shows that the capacity of human resources to run geographic information system in Jebres and Pucangsawit sub-districts are still need to improve.</span></em><em></em></p>


2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suzanne Ballard
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Harris

This essay draws upon the author’s performance script Fall and Walter Benjamin’s The Arcades Project as a provocation for considering the ways performance texts provide a threshold for somatic inquiry, and for recognizing the limits of scholarly analysis that does not take up performance-as-inquiry. Set at the Empire State Building, this essay embodies the connections and missed possibilities between strangers and intimates in the context of urban modern life. Fall’s protagonist is positioned within a landscape of capitalist exchange, but defies this matrix to offer instead a gift at the threshold of life/death, virtual/real, and love/loss. Through somatic inquiry and witnessing as threshold experiences, the protagonist (as Benjamin’s flaneur) moves through urban space and time, proving that both scholarship and performance remain irrevocably embodied, and as such invariably tethered to the visceral, the stranger, risk, and death.


Author(s):  
Zbigniew W. Czerniakowski ◽  
◽  
Tomasz Olbrycht ◽  
Monika Kucharska-Świerszcz ◽  
◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-98
Author(s):  
E.U. Pozdnyakova ◽  
Keyword(s):  

2012 ◽  
Vol 53 (3) ◽  
pp. 321-341
Author(s):  
Beata Tarnowska

Summary This article examines the urban themes in Leo Lipski’s micro-novel Piotruś: An ApocryphalTale from 1960. The narrative relies on both traditional realism (for the most part) and the 20thcentury subjective point-of-view technique to represent urban space, which in this case belongs to be a well-defined geographical location. The use of personalized narrative perspective turns the urban space of Tel Aviv-Jafa - heterogeneous and subject to differing assessments - into a labyrinth, closed, dense, expanding horizontally, chthonic, and alien.


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