IceWEB Signs Integrator Partner Agreement With Google
To deliver an Enterprise Visualization Appliance offered with pre-fused aerial and satellite imagery
This is a Press Release edited by StorageNewsletter.com on May 4, 2010 at 3:14 pmIceWEB, Inc. has partnered with Google, whose mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful, to deliver information sharing solutions to the public sector.
Google Earth Enterprise mapping solutions make Geographic Information Systems (GIS) data easily accessible to government officials from senior leaders to workers in the field, allowing them to make more informed decisions. The Enterprise Visualization Appliance now makes a simpler and timelier deployment for organizations and partners.
IceWEB will work closely with several Google Earth Enterprise partners to deliver a turnkey Enterprise Visualization Appliance that will be offered with pre-fused aerial and satellite imagery from the industry’s leading providers. It will be offering GSA Letters of Supply to current Google GSA Schedule holders to simplify the Government procurement process.
"Google is well known for bringing innovative concepts to market that meet the needs of both global enterprises as well as individual end users," said Timothy J. McNamee, Channel Sales Manager of IceWEB. "IceWEB looks forward to working with Google’s partners to bring ready to deploy geospatial solutions to the commercial, federal, state, and local government customers."
Mike Bradshaw, Director of Federal Sales at Google, adds: "This solution makes perfect sense for organizations wishing to quickly realize the benefits of Google Earth."
"This solution now allows us to focus more resources on the customer’s missions and less on server configuration and sizing," said Jim Helou, Vice President Geospatial Solutions at DLT Solutions. "This solution dramatically simplifies the procurement process for our customers, a single SKU that includes the server, operating system, Google Earth Enterprise Software and pre-fused imagery."