Sentinel Visualizer from the FMS Advanced Systems Group offers advanced big data analytics to find hidden relationships among people, places and events. Through the power of data visualization, link analysis, social network analysis (SNA), geospatial mapping with Google Earth integration, and timelines, data analysts can visually understand complex relationships in their data. Serving the needs of the intelligence, defense, law enforcement, NGOs, and commercial customers around the world, Sentinel Visualizer offers a powerful yet cost effective way to maximize the value of your data. For more information, including a free trial version, visit our website: www.fmsasg.com
Hello, I'm working on a theme, study of people movement based on mobile telephone data,. .. I wish to come out with the pattern of users, ie, to visualize the displacement of people in a city or zone... I come here for help, I'll really appreciate if you can help me in any way or the other, it's for my End of Year Project... I've thought of using CDR.. also can Sentinel do that? I wish also to export on Google earth
From a telephone switch "call detail report" you may obtain the subscriber number, date, time, and duration of calls. From a cellular telephone switch you may also obtain the location of the cellular sites. Analysing these data will link callers, determine frequency of calls, duration, and general areas of the calls. You will derive behavioural patterns. A system with large capacity and speed running an AI program with access to other databases such as Immigration, ship and air manifests, will be useful to intelligence organizations to predict acts of terror. I suspect the system already exists.
+FMSChannel Also good perhaps for organisations running an outbound sales campaign? I mean it would give a good indication of who is performing and who not yes?
Mick Wright Thanks, Mick, for your comments. Yes, I've heard that some of our clients use Sentinel Visualizer as a sales analysis tool. As long as you have data in a structured format (CSV, Excel, Access) then you can discover connections and patterns within that set(s) of data. Thanks for posting.