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The Gavurin data warehouse captures accurate and comprehensive data about the British economy. The G-View interface is intuitive and users require no prior understanding of terminology, jargon or complicated GIS software.
G-View technology enables the deployment of very large volumes of data combined with very fast response times.The result is that maps, charts, data and metadata are all generated, at the same time, 'on the fly'.
Data hosting and delivery technology combine with leading edge front end and back end solutions to enable you to IMPRESS, INFORM and INNOVATE in seconds.
Most data about the British economy is hidden behind obscure geographies which don't have meaning for most people. Even those that do will struggle to identify that 'E1004278' is the small area that houses Canary Wharf (in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets). (E1004278 is a "Lower Super Output Area" - a place that typically houses around 1500 people. There are 34,000 LSOAs in Great Britain).
With G-View (economics), users do not need to know what a "Lower Super Output Area" is....a click on the G-View map identifies the 'official' name of a place. Or search using the 'real' name of a place.
And there is no need to purchase extensive map layers – G-View uses Google Maps.
A simple scenario. You are interested in unemployment patterns (as revealed by the claimant count). This data is available for every month going back around a decade and for areas as small as LSOA. You want to compare one place with another place, but you aren't too sure which comparison you want to make. You need to create some good looking charts and maps because you want to incorporate them in a report you are doing. So that's 120 time series of data, multiplied by 34,000 places - and you aren't too sure how those LSOAs translate to real work places.
G-View enables you to do all of this in minutes. You can experiment with comparisons - see what the charts look like, accept those that interest you and reject the others. Use the map of Great Britain to get the data you need and display it instantly. You can output charts and maps easily. Speedily view and analyse comparisons and if not relevant, speedily remove them. And you can export the raw data to a spreadsheet with simple 'cut and paste'.
If the data is a very long time series - you can analyse and visualise them by years, or months (or days and hours - if the data permits). You can view and analyse hierarchical data sets without having to select them. And metadata are instantly available alongside the raw data.