How a geospatial nervous system could help us design a better future Jack Dangermond

Transcriber: Ivana Korom
Reviewer: Krystian Aparta

Simone Ross: Jack, I would love you
to tell us what Esri is

and also why GIS is so important.

Jack Dangermond: So it is a company,

it builds software products
that are used by millions of people.

Kind of like a platform technology,

but not literally platform.

It builds tools that help people
do their work better.

And that’s a very general statement,

but helps them do their work better
using geography as a science

and visualization
as a science and technology

to help them make better decisions,

or help them be more efficient

or help them communicate
what they’re doing better

It’s kind of mapping.

I mean, the way normal people
would think of it as map-making.

So this organization has 350,000
organizations that we support.

They’re our customers, you might say.

And they range from NGOs,
thousands and thousands of them,

working in conservation
or humanitarian affairs,

to large corporations,

but our majority of users
are in the public sector,

in cities and counties,

in national government agencies,

and they’re basically running the world,

that’s the way I would say it.

SR: So right now, we hear a lot
about companies using tech

to improve the world,

but it sounds like that has always
been baked into your DNA.

JD: I grew up as a young kid in a nursery,

my parents were servants,

and they started a little nursery
to help put me through school,

that’s the way I saw it.

They were immigrants and they grew plants.

They were attracted to landscaping,

which I grew up understanding,

so I went to design school,

first environmental design school

and then landscape architecture
and then city planning.

And in that progression,

I came to understand very clearly
the idea of problem-solving,

because that’s what design
really is about,

you see a problem
and you come up, creatively,

with something that solves the problem.

And at Harvard,

I started to get engaged
with systems and computing.

And I realized, wow, this was in the ’60s,

you know, when the environmental movement
was still just in its birthing,

I saw, “Wow, you could actually apply tech
to environmental design.”

And so this idealism that often happens
when you’re in school,

you know, “I can really do something!” –

well, I loved the idea
of taking systems theories

and technology

and applying it to environmental
design problem-solving.

SR: Do you call Esri a tech company?

JD: We started doing little projects,

you know, locating a new town,

locating a store,

locating a transmission line,

doing environmental studies
as a foundation, using tech,

to be able to make decisions,

which were largely design decisions
or planning decisions.

And we did that for about 10 years.

Just gradually growing
as a professional services company,

all the time continuously innovating tools

that would help us do our projects better.

And this idea of continuous innovation.

I mean, we invented some of the first
digitizing tools for maps,

we invented some of the first
computer map-making tools.

We invented the first
spacial analysis tools

that were commercial in nature.

And over that decade or so,

customers began to say,

“Gee, I’d like to do that work
that you’re doing, Jack.”

So we started to think
about the idea of a product,

that is, our technology that we applied
on project by project

could actually go into a product
that people could use everywhere.

And the big idea of this product, Simone,

was the integration of information
using geographic principles.

Bringing all the different
factors together

to not only first help us do the projects,

but then build these systems
that help other people do the projects,

and then later build systems.

So we went from a project company
to a product company

that built systems that helped
organizations do their work better.

SR: What you’re doing, I believe,

is sort of the integration
of human and built systems

with natural systems.

And then helping people visualize that

and figure out then how
they can design and build for that

in a better, smarter way.

Is that accurate?

JD: That’s one aspect of it.

We sometimes call that geodesign.

We digitize or abstract geography,
the science of our world.

You know, Simone, all of the factors
that you think about,

I think of as layers.

Physical features, environmental features,

demographic features.

We bring all of those things
together in a GIS

and then by overlaying those things,
we can actually do better designs.

We design with all
the factors holistically.

That’s what actually,
as a student, got me excited,

because I saw you could bring
all of the “ologies,”

all the geology, the sociology,
the climatology, all together,

and then make better decisions on that,

so I think of geography
as the mother of all sciences,

because it’s an integrative technology.

And then digital geography,
what we call GIS,

allows us to be able
to use that instrument

to empower the transformation
of how people make decisions.

They can look at the whole,
not just one factor,

not just making money,
not just conserving land,

not just this or that.

It’s optimizing many factors
at the same time.

Yeah, so in the retail sector,

people like Starbucks
or Walgreens or Walmart,

all the big retailers,

both here in the US but in the UK,
all around the world,

use geographic factors
to pick the right location.

They look at the demographics,

the traffic,

and then the large insurance companies
and reinsurance companies

look at all the different factors
that are necessary to understand risk.

And they overlay them and they model them

and they visualize high-risk areas
or low-risk areas.

In disaster response,

whether it’s fire, or like today,
the big earthquake in Turkey,

there’s a whole cycle of work
that has to happen

when disasters happen.

You know, response, recovery,

all these work activities are underpinned
by having good information.

And that information
is geographic in nature.

So disaster response, public safety,

health and looking at issues today
that are troubling all of us

in the areas of social equity.

Where is there disparity?

And when something
like the pandemic happens,

or unemployment
due to the economy happens,

we can look geographically and see
these factors all coming together.

So it’s like your mind does in many ways.

I mean, we built a tool
that allows you to abstract reality

and see it,

and then look at all the relationships
between these factors

in order to create understanding.

So Richard Saul Wurman, the founder of TED

often describes us
as an understanding organization.

“You’re all about understanding, Jack,
it’s not about technology.

Your users use your tools
to create better understanding.”

And the way he describes it is
understanding precedes action.

This is essential to our work.

SR: And it is a platform
that you’re building,

so you’re sort of connecting all these
different areas of knowledge, right?

JD: Today, we have what we call Web GIS.

So GIS lives in the web

with distributed centers of information
that are pulling data out,

georeferencing,

and using location as a way
to do the integration.

We might call it mashing up
different layers

from distributed services
or distributed sources of information.

And our users are now bringing
this knowledge together dynamically

in things like smart cities

or the popular vernacular
these days is digital twins.

So all of that geographic reality

can now be beamed into organizations,

whether they be emergency
response organizations

or utility organizations or government.

And any of the different departments,

whether they be law enforcement

or you know, science,
climate change, biodiversity,

all of that series of issues
that we’re facing today

can be enriched by not only bringing
together the information in real time,

real-time measurement seen on maps,

but also integrating those
like using spatial analysis

or location analysis to look
at the relationships and patterns.

You see, it’s not just seeing it,

it’s also explicitly understanding

the relationships between something
like breast cancer and pollution

that might exist
in a particular geography.

And saying, “Aha,

we can quantitatively understand
these different factors

and, as a result, respond.”

SR: So you can do that

because you are putting
all these different layers on

and then you help visualize that.

JD: Visualize it,
but also spatially relate them

with math and modeling.

So it’s not just a matter
of visually overlaying material,

it’s a matter of connecting the geometries

or the factors or the features
on these maps to each other,

like your mind does.

SR: I have to read this,
because I don’t want to get it wrong.

You had said at some event last year,
the Geodesign Summit –

which sounds fascinating
to me – you said,

“Transformation is not just about change,

it’s about leaving behind the past
to focus on the future.”

So can you talk a little bit about that?

JD: Historically, we have been
at the effect of the environment.

I mean, this is the history of the world.

The world constrains us
in what we can do as human beings

and we often adapt and adopt
to various environmental situations.

This field of geodesign

is about bringing geographic
systems and knowledge

into the design process

so that we can actually
be guided by nature

and be more sensitive to it

so that we can be responsive
to the greater forces of the environment

and do it in such a way
that we can take –

it’s thinking of the world as a garden.

It’s like gardening,

you must pull out the weeds,
you nurture your plants,

you take care of certain things,

you make sure things are watered.

And at this point,

because of the way we are organized,
and the way we think

and the way our information
is brought to us,

we don’t think as a garden,

we don’t think holistically,

we don’t think of the relationships
that are in our lives,

that are affecting our lives.

And as a result, we’re careless,

we’re polluting the environment,
we’re messing it up.

I mean, on steroids,

I mean, the world is really in trouble
at this particular point.

I mean we have the crisis of COVID,

but my God, COVID is just a little wave.

What’s coming behind us
is the climate change issue,

which is not so easy to fix.

There’s no vaccine that’s simply applied.

And then behind that,
there’s the loss of biodiversity

and behind that,

it’s sort of unraveling
what has taken billions of years

to be able to put together.

And so, as human beings,

my sense is we’ve got to be
more responsive to take care of our place.

SR: It’s transformation
with science and design

as opposed to transformation

brought on or foisted on us
by rapid tech change.

It sounds very deliberate.

JD: It’s very deliberate.

Again, when I was a student,

I got the vision or thought

that we could actually do
environmental planning

and design and development better
by thinking holistically.

Bringing all the factors together.

And when I launched Esri,

we were starting to do projects better

because we could integrate
all of the factors

into the design projects.

Then as we started building systems,

they were first small, focused systems
for a particular department,

like an engineering department in a city

or a planning department,

or a forest management organization

or an oil company.

They could do their work better
by considering all the factors.

Then –

And that transformed the way
projects were done,

and it transformed human activities
in these different departments.

From there, we started to move on

to the idea of transforming
entire organizations.

This meant entire enterprises.

So from projects to systems
to organizational transformation

where you could actually
have organizations by intention

look at all the factors.

And we have so many examples of this.

And now, there’s a fourth phase
that we’re very engaged in.

Those three phases involve
certain kinds of technology innovation,

but the fourth phase is resting on the web

with web services,

and its intention is not to transform
simply one organization at a time

or one project at a time,

it’s to transform society

so that we can raise the bar
with geographic consciousness

and geographic knowledge

to see what our human
footprint is causing.

And this is so transformational,

because people don’t want to mess up,

they want to know what to do

and they want to put the foot down
in the right location,

they don’t want to mess up
wetlands by intention,

they want to design with nature.

SR: So you’re talking about what you call
a geospatial nervous system.

JD: Yes, building
a geospatial nervous system

will allow us to guide
society in such a way.

And in a way, it’s not
somebody guiding others,

it’s not like that at all.

It’s like the internet itself.

It’s an interconnected network
of serving knowledge,

sharing knowledge,

and using each other’s knowledge.

That is, multidisciplinary knowledge,

different kinds of science knowledge

to be able to see and understand

before action.

All we’re doing is building tools

that interconnect different
organizations' information.

And independent actors
running in independent organizations

all around the world

are building something I like to call
this geospatial infrastructure.

And they’re layering it on top of the web.

It’s like one agency is serving
their information

and another one is able to use it
with their own information

and therefore make better decisions,

make more sustainable decisions.

Now, they’re still all independent actors.

I mean, there’s no control,
there’s no orders from headquarters.

What this is is a fabric
that’s emerging very rapidly.

Let me give a practical example.

The Pacific Gas and Electric corporation,

a very large organization
here in California,

one of the largest utilities in the world,

is sharing their outage
and utility information over the web

with the State of California fire people

and emergency management people,

so that they can act better
and vice versa.

So they’re sharing and collaborating
through geographic information

in whole new ways.

And the FEMA, the large federal
emergency management organization

is sharing their emergency
management information

with states and cities

who are overlaying
their data on FEMA data,

which is overlaying on top
of NOAA’s information on the weather

and the tracking of satellites, and so on.

So this web-based, internet-based system

is allowing the fusion of information
from many different actors.

And independently,

these actors are able to more
holistically solve their problems.

SR: Do you think we can overcome
these challenges?

JD: Today, both because
of our increased consumption patterns

and the overpopulation of the planet,

we’re in severe trouble.

So what we can do is, I think,

minimize the impact of population,

we can optimize the work that we do,

we can save energy,

we can do all of these various things.

And I have a very positive
feeling about the future.

This is what drives me day and night.

I mean, I have had that vision
for over 50 years

that we must do this.

It’s not a question of the outcomes,

it’s the only way that I can think of
to create a sustainable future.

We must apply our best science,

we must apply our best design
and critical thinking,

we must apply our best systems theories,

we must apply our best technologies,

in concert,

to be able to address the great challenges
that we are all facing.

And Esri, as an organization,

has always been and will always be
all about bringing those forces together

to be able to support
organizations independently

doing their work
in this more holistic way.

That’s the big vision.

SR: So what advice or guidance

would you give to a young
entrepreneur today

who, sort of, wants to use
tech and science

to, you know, if not save the world,

transform the world or improve the world,

because obviously, that’s where
a lot of the hope and the potential is.

So as someone who has been doing this
for quite some time now,

what would your advice be
to someone like that?

JD: Well, there’s so many
different opportunities

to be able to work
and contribute in the world.

I was very lucky with parents
who were servants

and they taught me
to be in service to others.

This was a great value gift.

When I went to Harvard,

there was also a philosophy there
to be in public service,

to be able to focus your life,
to be able to give back.

And Harvard has been a huge contributor
to those in public sector.

In the UK, Oxford and Cambridge
had that same kind of philosophy

of growing the next generation
that’s in public service.

So I think service is one of the elements.

The second one is really being
about staying focused on your vision.

For me, my vision was this idea
of bringing systems theories

and science and technology together

to be able to do better problem-solving.

First with design
and now whole organizations

and society in general.

That didn’t just happen,

it was thoughtful time spent
by myself and with my wife

to think about what
we should with our life.

And we were really lucky.

We found this great thing
that we were passionate about.

We thought and visualized,

“Yes, this is really something
we could actually do.”

We had no idea where it would go,

but at least we picked
a segment of our interest

to be able to follow this passion
and we lucked out.

And we didn’t sell out, we lucked out.

We were very fortunate to live
very modestly for several decades

to build up this organization

and stay focused on our purpose.

So my suggestion is,
find something that you really love,

that you really can contribute to,

that really supports your idealism,

and don’t sell out for money
or venture capital

or borrow money,

none of that actually winds up
in being able to retain your idealism.

SR: So I think there is so much happening

on the intersection of tech
and life science right now

that is so exciting,

but also at this intersection
that you’re talking about as well,

and very much, I think,

will be part of the solutions
for us going forward.

JD: I think that this big step
of Web GIS that we’re into right now

will happen over the next few years.

And it’s, in some ways, just in time.

Like the UN has organized their SDGs,

these global sustainability issues,

into this Web GIS platform.

We’re building a system which is bottom-up
and country by country,

that allows all the SDG reporting
to be able to tell the world,

like they did with COVID,

what’s happening
with the other 290 indicators.

Whether it’s, you know, women in politics

or whether it’s loss of forests
or water quality,

this is a big deal.

So it isn’t just organizations anymore.

We’re starting to see
unifiers, integrators

of the individual systems
into this system of systems,

which I think can talk to the world
and transform the world.

This is essential

if we are going to evolve
to a society that’s sustainable.

SR: Great.

I think that is a perfect place to stop.

Thank you so much.

This was really wonderful.

I’m really, really glad
that we got to do this.

抄写员:Ivana Korom
审稿人:Krystian Aparta

Simone Ross:Jack,我希望你
能告诉我们 Esri 是什么

以及为什么 GIS 如此重要。

Jack Dangermond:所以它是一家公司,

它构建的软件
产品被数百万人使用。

有点像平台技术,

但不是真正的平台。

它构建的工具可以帮助人们
更好地完成工作。

这是一个非常笼统的陈述,

但可以帮助他们更好地完成工作

一种映射。

我的意思是,普通人
会认为它是地图制作的方式。

所以这个组织有 350,000 个
我们支持的组织。

你可能会说,他们是我们的客户。

他们的范围从成千上万的非政府组织,

在保护
或人道主义事务中工作,

到大公司,

但我们的大多数用户
来自公共部门

、城市和县

、国家政府机构

,他们基本上是在运行 世界,

我就是这样说的。

SR:所以现在,我们听到很多
关于公司使用技术

来改善世界的消息,

但听起来这
已经融入了你的 DNA。

JD:我小时候在托儿所长大,

我的父母是仆人

,他们开办了一个小托儿所
来帮助我完成学业,

这就是我的看法。

他们是移民,他们种植植物。

他们被景观所吸引

,我从小就理解这一点,

所以我去了设计学校,

首先是环境设计学校

,然后是景观设计
,然后是城市规划。

在这个过程中,

我开始非常清楚
地理解解决问题的概念,

因为这就是设计的
真正意义所在,

你看到一个问题
,然后创造性地

提出解决问题的东西。

在哈佛,

我开始
涉足系统和计算。

我意识到,哇,那是在 60 年代,

你知道,当环保运动
刚刚起步时,

我看到,“哇,你真的可以将技术
应用于环境设计。”

所以你在学校时经常出现的这种理想主义

你知道,“我真的可以做点什么!” ——

嗯,我喜欢
将系统理论

技术应用于环境
设计问题解决的想法。

SR:你称 Esri 为科技公司吗?

JD:我们开始做一些小项目,

你知道,定位一个新城镇,

定位一家商店,

定位一条输电线路,以

环境研究
为基础,使用技术,

以便能够做出决策,

这主要是设计决策
或规划决策 .

我们这样做了大约 10 年。

逐渐成长
为一家专业服务公司,

一直在不断创新工具

,帮助我们更好地完成项目。

而这种不断创新的理念。

我的意思是,我们发明了一些最早
的地图数字化工具,

我们发明了一些最早的
计算机地图制作工具。

我们发明了第一个

商业性质的空间分析工具。

在那十年左右的时间里,

客户开始说,

“哎呀,我想做
你正在做的工作,杰克。”

所以我们开始
思考产品的想法,

也就是说,我们逐个项目应用的技术

实际上可以变成
人们可以在任何地方使用的产品。

Simone 这个产品的主要理念是

利用地理原理整合信息。

将所有不同的
因素结合在一起

,不仅首先帮助我们完成项目

,然后构建这些系统
来帮助其他人完成项目,

然后再构建系统。

因此,我们从一家项目公司
变成了一家产品公司

,该公司构建了帮助
组织更好地工作的系统。

SR:我相信你

正在做的是
将人类和建筑系统

与自然系统相结合。

然后帮助人们将其可视化,

然后弄清楚
他们如何

以更好、更智能的方式为此设计和构建。

那准确吗?

JD:这是一方面。

我们有时称之为地理设计。

我们数字化或抽象地理学,
我们世界的科学。

你知道,Simone
,你考虑的所有因素,

我认为都是层次。

物理特征、环境特征、

人口特征。

我们将所有这些东西
放在一个 GIS 中

,然后通过叠加这些东西,
我们实际上可以做出更好的设计。

我们
从整体上考虑所有因素。

作为一名学生,这实际上让我感到兴奋,

因为我看到你可以把
所有的“逻辑学”、

所有的地质学、社会学
、气候学放在一起,

然后在这方面做出更好的决定,

所以我想到 地理学
是所有科学之母,

因为它是一门综合技术。

然后,
我们称之为 GIS 的数字地理学

使我们
能够使用该工具


推动人们决策方式的转变。

他们可以看整体,
不只是一个因素,

不只是赚钱,
不只是保护土地,

不只是这个或那个。

它同时优化了许多因素

是的,所以在零售领域

,像星巴克
、沃尔格林或沃尔玛这样的人,

所有的大型零售商,

无论是在美国还是在英国,
在世界各地,都

使用地理因素
来选择合适的位置。

他们查看人口统计数据

、流量,

然后大型保险公司
和再保险公司

查看
了解风险所需的所有不同因素。

他们覆盖它们并对其进行建模,并将

高风险区域
或低风险区域可视化。

在灾难响应中,

无论是火灾,还是像今天
的土耳其大地震,当灾难发生时,

都有一个完整的工作周期

您知道,响应、恢复,

所有这些工作活动都
以拥有良好信息为基础。

这些信息
本质上是地理信息。

因此,灾难应对、公共安全、

健康以及当今在社会公平
领域困扰着我们所有人的问题

哪里有差距?


发生大流行病


经济导致失业时,

我们可以从地理上看,看到
这些因素都聚集在一起。

所以这就像你的大脑在很多方面所做的一样。

我的意思是,我们构建了一个工具
,让您可以抽象现实

并看到它,

然后查看
这些因素之间的所有关系

以建立理解。

因此,TED 的创始人 Richard Saul Wurman

经常将我们描述
为一个理解组织。

“你只关心理解,杰克,
这与技术无关。

你的用户使用你的工具
来创造更好的理解。”

他描述它的方式是
理解先于行动。

这对我们的工作至关重要。

SR:这是一个
你正在构建的平台,

所以你在某种程度上连接了所有这些
不同的知识领域,对吧?

JD:今天,我们有了所谓的 Web GIS。

因此,GIS 存在于网络中,

具有分布式信息中心,这些信息中心
正在提取数据、进行

地理参考,

并使用位置作为
进行集成的一种方式。

我们可以将其称为

从分布式服务
或分布式信息源中混搭不同的层。

我们的用户现在正在将
这些知识动态地整合

到智能城市等事物中,

或者如今流行的
白话是数字双胞胎。

因此,所有这些地理现实

现在都可以传送到组织中,

无论它们是应急
响应组织

、公用事业组织还是政府。

任何不同的部门,

无论是执法部门

还是你知道的,科学、
气候变化、生物多样性,我们今天面临的

所有这一系列问题

都可以通过
实时整合信息来丰富

  • 在地图上看到的时间测量,

但也集成
了使用空间分析

或位置分析来
查看关系和模式的那些。

你看,这不仅仅是看到它,

它还明确地理解

了乳腺癌和特定地区

可能存在的污染之间的关系

并说,“啊哈,

我们可以定量地了解
这些不同的因素

,并因此做出反应。”

SR:所以你可以这样做,

因为你将
所有这些不同的层放在上面

,然后你帮助可视化它。

JD:将其可视化,
但也要在空间上将它们

与数学和建模联系起来。

因此,这
不仅仅是视觉上叠加材料的问题,

而是将这些地图上的几何图形

或因素或特征
相互连接起来的问题,

就像你的大脑一样。

SR:我必须读这个,
因为我不想弄错。

你在去年的某个活动中说过
,地球设计峰会——

这对我来说听起来很吸引人
——你说,

“转型不仅仅是改变,

而是抛开过去
,专注于未来。”

那么你能谈谈这个吗?

JD:从历史上看,我们一直受到
环境的影响。

我的意思是,这就是世界的历史。

世界限制
了我们作为人类所能做的事情

,我们经常适应和
适应各种环境情况。

这个

地理设计领域是将地理
系统和知识

带入设计过程,

以便我们实际上
可以被自然引导

并对自然更加敏感,

以便我们能够
对更大的环境力量

做出反应并以这种方式进行
我们可以接受——

它把世界想象成一个花园。

这就像园艺,

你必须拔除杂草
,培育植物

,照顾某些

东西,确保浇水。

在这一点上,

由于我们的
组织方式,我们的思维方式

和信息
传递给我们的方式,

我们不会像花园

一样思考,我们不会整体思考,我们不会思考

我们生活中的关系

,正在影响我们的生活。

结果,我们粗心大意,

我们污染了环境,
我们把它搞砸了。

我的意思是,在类固醇上,

我的意思是,在这个特定的时刻,世界真的陷入了困境

我的意思是我们有 COVID 的危机,

但我的上帝,COVID 只是一个小浪潮。

我们身后的
是气候变化问题,

这不是那么容易解决的。

没有简单应用的疫苗。

然后在这背后
,是生物多样性的丧失,

在这之后,

它有点解开了花
了数十亿年

才能拼凑起来的东西。

因此,作为人类,

我的感觉是我们必须
更加积极地照顾我们的位置。

SR:这是
科学和设计的转变,

而不是快速的技术变革

带来或强加给我们
的转变。

听起来很刻意。

JD:这是非常刻意的。

再一次,当我还是学生的时候,

我就有这样的愿景或想法

,即通过整体思考,我们实际上可以更好地进行
环境规划

、设计和开发

将所有因素结合在一起。

当我推出 Esri 时,

我们开始将项目做得更好,

因为我们可以将
所有因素

集成到设计项目中。

然后,当我们开始构建系统时,

它们首先
是针对特定部门的小型集中系统,

例如城市的工程部门

或规划部门,

或者森林管理组织

或石油公司。 通过考虑所有因素,

他们可以更好地完成工作

然后

——这改变了
项目的完成方式

,改变
了这些不同部门的人类活动。

从那里开始,我们开始着手转变

整个组织的想法。

这意味着整个企业。

因此,从项目到系统
再到组织转型

,您实际上
可以通过意图让组织

看到所有因素。

我们有很多这样的例子。

现在,还有第四个阶段
,我们非常投入。

这三个阶段涉及
某些类型的技术创新,

但第四个阶段是基于 Web 服务的 Web

,其目的不是
简单地改变一个组织 一次

或一次一个项目,

它是改变社会,

以便我们可以
提高地理意识

和地理知识的标准

,看看我们的人类
足迹正在造成什么。

这是如此具有变革性,

因为人们不想搞砸,

他们想知道该怎么做

,他们想把脚
放在正确的位置,

他们不想故意搞砸
湿地,

他们想要 设计与自然。

SR:所以你说的是你所谓
的地理空间神经系统。

JD:是的,建立
一个地理空间神经系统

将使我们能够
以这种方式引导社会。

在某种程度上,这不是
某人在指导他人

,根本不是那样的。

这就像互联网本身。

它是一个
服务知识、

共享知识

和使用彼此知识的互联网络。

也就是多学科知识,

不同种类的科学知识

要能够在行动之前看到和理解

我们所做的只是构建

将不同组织的信息相互连接的工具

在世界各地
的独立组织中运行的独立参与者

正在构建我喜欢
称之为地理空间基础设施的东西。

他们将其分层在网络之上。

这就像一个机构提供
他们的信息,

而另一个机构能够将其
与自己的信息一起使用

,从而做出更好的决策,

做出更可持续的决策。

现在,他们仍然都是独立演员。

我的意思是,没有控制,
没有来自总部的命令。

这是
一种正在迅速出现的织物。

让我举一个实际的例子。

太平洋天然气和电力公司

是加利福尼亚州的一个非常大的组织

,是世界上最大的公用事业公司之一,它

正在
通过网络

与加利福尼亚州的消防人员

和应急管理人员分享他们的停电和公用事业信息,

以便他们能够 表现得更好
,反之亦然。

因此,他们正在

以全新的方式通过地理信息进行共享和协作。

大型联邦
应急管理组织 FEMA

正在与各州和城市共享他们的应急
管理信息

,这些州和城市


他们的数据叠加在 FEMA 数据上,

这些数据叠加
在 NOAA 关于天气

和卫星跟踪等的信息之上。

因此,这个基于网络、基于互联网的

系统允许融合
来自许多不同参与者的信息。

并且独立地,

这些参与者能够更
全面地解决他们的问题。

SR:你认为我们能克服
这些挑战吗?

JD:今天,
由于我们不断增长的消费模式

和地球上的人口过剩,

我们陷入了严重的困境。

所以我们可以做的是,我认为,

尽量减少人口的影响,

我们可以优化我们所做的工作,

我们可以节省能源,

我们可以做所有这些不同的事情。

我对未来有一种非常积极的
感觉。

这就是我日日夜夜的动力。

我的意思是,我 50 多年来一直有这样的愿景

即我们必须这样做。

这不是结果的问题,

这是我能想到
的创造可持续未来的唯一方法。

我们必须应用我们最好的科学,

我们必须应用我们最好的设计
和批判性思维,

我们必须应用我们最好的系统理论,

我们必须应用我们最好的技术,

共同应对我们都面临的巨大
挑战。

作为一个组织,Esri

一直并将一直致力于
将这些力量聚集在一起

,以便能够支持
组织

以这种更全面的方式独立开展工作。

这就是大愿景。

SR:

那么你会给今天的年轻

企业家什么建议或指导,他想利用
科技和科学

来拯救世界,

改变世界或改善世界,

因为显然,这就是
很多希望和潜力是。

所以作为一个已经这样做
了很长时间的人,

你对这样
的人有什么建议?

JD:嗯,世界上有很多
不同的

机会可以工作
和做出贡献。

我很幸运有
父母是仆人

,他们教会
我为他人服务。

这是一份物超所值的礼物。

当我去哈佛的时候,

还有一种哲学
是在公共服务中,

能够专注于你的生活,
能够回馈社会。

哈佛一直
是公共部门的巨大贡献者。

在英国,牛津和剑桥
也有同样的

培养
下一代公共服务的理念。

所以我认为服务是要素之一。

第二个是真正
关注你的愿景。

对我来说,我的愿景
是将系统理论

和科学技术结合在一起

,以便更好地解决问题。

首先是设计
,现在是整个组织

和整个社会。

这不仅仅是发生


,我和我的妻子

一起度过了深思熟虑的时间,思考
我们应该如何度过我们的生活。

我们真的很幸运。

我们
发现了我们热爱的这件伟大的事情。

我们思考并想象,

“是的,这确实是
我们可以做的事情。”

我们不知道它会去哪里,

但至少我们选择
了我们感兴趣的部分

来追随这种激情
,我们很幸运。

我们没有卖光,我们很幸运。 几十年来,

我们非常幸运地过着
非常谦虚的生活,

以建立这个组织

并专注于我们的目标。

所以我的建议是,
找到你真正热爱的东西

,你真正可以贡献的东西

,真正支持你的理想主义的东西

,不要为了钱
或风险投资

或借钱而出卖,

这些都没有
最终能够 保留你的理想主义。

SR:所以我认为现在

科技和生命科学的交叉点发生了很多

令人兴奋的事情,

而且在
你所说的这个交叉点上

,我认为,很多事情都

将成为其中的一部分
我们前进的解决方案。

JD:我
认为我们现在所涉足的 Web GIS 的这一重大步骤

将在未来几年内发生。

在某些方面,它是及时的。

就像联合国将他们的 SDGs、

这些全球可持续性问题组织

到这个 Web GIS 平台中一样。

我们正在建立一个自下而上
、逐个国家的系统,

使所有

可持续发展目标报告都能够像对待 COVID 一样告诉全世界

其他 290 项指标的情况。

你知道,无论是女性参政,

还是森林
或水质的丧失,

这都是一件大事。

因此,它不再只是组织。

我们开始看到
统一者,

将单个系统
整合到这个系统系统中

,我认为它可以与世界对话
并改变世界。

如果我们要发展
成为一个可持续发展的社会,这是必不可少的。

SR:太好了。

我认为这是一个完美的停下来的地方。

太感谢了。

这真是太棒了。

我真的,真的很
高兴我们必须这样做。