THE PROBLEM
Most experienced helmsmen agree that Mother Nature's temperamental
ways make navigating the high seas a difficult and sometimes dangerous
adventure. Thanks to the innovative combination of advanced Internet
technologies and sophisticated weather prediction software, however,
ship captains now have reliable tools for charting a safe course
around rough waters.
One such tool is the BonVoyage System (BVS)
from Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Applied Weather Technology, Inc. (AWT).
The need for this type of technology has intensified over the past
several years as commercial shipping companies; for example, send
their vessels farther into the world's oceans in search of scarce
natural resources. In the oil and gas industry, the growing demand
for new sources of energy is leading oil exploration ships into
more remote and hostile seas. Accurate knowledge of present and
future marine weather conditions not only enhances mission planning,
but may one day prove to be life-saving information.
"Environmental constraints have narrowed
the operational margins of many at-sea operations," says Dr.
Fun Pang Chau, an AWT founder who currently heads the company's
research and development efforts. "Thus, there is a need for
an accurate forecasting system that can quickly capture and disseminate
marine weather information to the user, whether that user is the
on-board captain or a shore-based navigation specialist."
BVS is AWT's flagship product. It is a suite
of software packages designed specifically to meet the weather information
needs of the shipping industry. The suite is composed of three separate
packages: BVS Ship Version; BVS Office Version; and BVS Web Version,
the newest edition to the BVS family.
BVS Ship Version is installed on board a
ship's personal computer running Windows 95, Windows 98 or Windows
NT. Chau describes the Ship Version as an icon-driven, graphical
marine weather briefing system.
The system works like this: A ship dials
into a public server bulletin board requesting weather forecasts
for a specific area. That information then is downloaded and imported
directly into the BVS Ship Version. By using this real-time weather
data to generate color-coded graphics, the software lets users see
into the heart of severe weather systems. This provides a much more
complete picture of the storm than traditional, text-based weather
routing systems, Chau says, because it fully captures the detailed
shape of each storm system and visually displays dangerous wave-generating
areas. Coupled with state-of-the-art communications technology,
a 10-day weather forecast can be transmitted directly to the ship
at minimal cost. With BVS Ship Version, the on-board crew now has
the ability to plot a course that not only offers the greatest safety
to cargo and crew, but also provides for the most economical management
of the vessel by reducing fuel consumption and lessening the risk
of structural damage.
Shipping company managers for shore-based
fleet management and monitoring use BVS Office Version. Like its
sister product, BVS Office Version is installed on Windows-based
PCs. The software provides shore-based managers with color-coded
weather maps overlaid with vessel positions. These maps not only
display up-to-the-minute status of each ship in the fleet, but they
also allow visual recognition of en route weather conditions. If
nasty weather is detected along a ship's original course, the shore-based
managers can work with the on-board crew to plot a new route.
"The open architecture of both BVS
Ship Version and BVS Office Version means that new algorithms and
features can be added as required by the user, resulting in a truly
customized solution," Chau says. "In addition, the BonVoyage
System can be integrated easily into other third-party software,
and vice versa."
Coinciding with the widespread use of the
Internet for distributed computing, Chau and his colleagues at AWT
realized they needed to add a Web-based component to the BVS product
family. This would give AWT customers with multiple offices a cost-effective
way of accessing the same weather and fleet-location information
quickly and easily. In addition, upgrades to the BVS software could
be made on the Web server and then distributed easily to desktop
clients at customers' offices around the world. The result was born
in early 1998 and is called the BVS Web Version.
To implement the Web Version, however, AWT
needed a way to bridge the gap and provide connectivity between
Web servers and back-end application servers, which provide similar
graphics capability as the BVS software, but in a cross-platform
environment.
THE SOLUTION
After a thorough review of several commercially available solutions,
Chau turned to the combination of PV-WAVE® and JWAVETM from
Visual Numerics, Inc.
PV-WAVE is an array-oriented, fourth-generation programming language
(4GL) used by engineers, scientists, business analysts and software
developers to build and deploy visual data analysis (VDA) applications
easily. These applications let users visualize and manipulate complex
or extremely large technical datasets to detect and display patterns,
trends, anomalies and other vital information.
The
software includes hundreds of mathematical and statistical routines
from the IMSL® Numerical Libraries, as well as image processing,
signal processing, mapping and general data manipulation features.
Because PV-WAVE's 4GL simplifies programming and does not require
the tedious edit-compile-link-debug cycle required by traditional
languages, users can develop fully portable applications much faster
than with C/C++ or FORTRAN.
First released in 1997, JWAVE integrates the data analysis and
visualization capabilities of PV-WAVE with Sun Microsystem's JavaTM
programming language. The result is a product that lets developers
build VDA applications written entirely in Java that are distributed
and accessible over the Internet or an intranet.
JWAVE lets organizations leverage investments already made in PV-WAVE.
Many organizations have written large applications for desktop visualization
using PV-WAVE. With JWAVE, those PV-WAVE applications can be Web-enabled
without costly rewrites. JWAVE allows PV-WAVE code to be placed
on a server and then facilitates the creation of Java-based desktop
clients for accessing those applications.
RETURN
ON INVESTMENT
Visual Numerics has provided technical software solutions for numerical
analysis and visualization for over 30 years. The company's software
products help users understand complex data from a variety of sources
and build business-critical applications. Visual Numerics offers
two product lines: the IMSL® Numerical Libraries for powerful
mathematical and statistical analysis and the PV-WAVE® visual
data analysis development environment. Visual Numerics also offers
customized consulting services for applications that involve mathematical,
statistical, or visual data analysis to meet today’s business analytical
needs.