![]() ![]() ![]() We employ about 3,800 associates covering eight distribution centers, three manufacturing facilities, and one equipment-dedicated facility, and our fleet, right now, we’re managing about 1,100 vehicles through the IntelliShift platform. A little bit about Liberty Coke, we are privately owned by the Coca-Cola System, where our footprint is all of New York City and Long Island, the seven counties north of New York City, a small piece of Fairfield County, Connecticut, all of New Jersey, Philadelphia and the five counties surrounding Philadelphia, and northern Delaware to down about Newark, is our footprint, so that’s the market we service. I’m Gary Williams, I’m a Logistics Services Manager for Liberty Coca-Cola Beverages, and my current responsibility is really focused around capabilities and solutions for our business, whether it be new capabilities to introduce to help drive success or be it current capabilities, how we leverage those more to drive, again, positive results in our business. So, we cover a lot of the compliance, safety, and obviously a lot of the DoT regulations as well. My name is David Latourell, I’m the Director of Safety and Transportation for Paraco Gas, which is a propane retailer in the Northeast, seven states and operate a fleet of about 250 different units 365 days a year. How about you, David?ĭavid Latourell: Thank you, John. We’re a large agency, we do inter-facility as well as 911 assignments, and I oversee everything that relates to the fleet, to supply and logistics, and to all of our special operations on a day-to-day basis. We’re a hospital-based EMS organization based out of New York, but we cover from Montauk to basically Manhattan and the five boroughs. Schwalbe, I’m the Operations Manager for Northwell Health Center for EMS. We’re going to do a little bit of an intro and an overview, I’d like to hear a little bit about yourself, your company, what type of offerings you provide, a little bit about your role and main set of responsibilities, and then sure, feel free to tell us a little bit more about the company. Schwalbe of Northwell Health, David Latourell from Paraco Gas, and Gary Williams from Liberty Coca-Cola. We’re excited to bring you a great ConnectedOps customer panel here today, three really great analysts, to discuss their IntelliShift deployments and how they’re driving value using data, and so I’d like to get right into it. John Carione: Welcome everybody again to ConnectedOps 2020. You can also watch the session and view all sessions from ConnectedOps 2020. This is especially true on snow/glacier climbs, as in the example below.During IntelliShift’s ConnectedOps 2020 virtual event, VP of marketing John Carione hosts a panel with three customers to discuss their IntelliShift deployment and how they’re driving value back to the organization using data.īelow is the transcript of this session. Adams trail, the popular through hike of the Alpine Lakes wilderness in central Washington, routes like that.ĭisclaimer: Before you use ANY track file you find on the Internet, always know that it provides a general guidance of where to go, and is not a step-by-step route which you need to follow. Think high routes like the Ptarmigan Traverse in the North Cascades, the round Mt. Note: Gaia can sometimes be a good source for those scramble/half trail routes that are not a common hiking trail but are also not necessarily mountaineering objectives either. They may have tried a different approach than what you intend. The person posting may have done it in a different season then you want to try your climb. Note: You need to know pretty much where your route goes, and also be aware that being publicly posted is no guarantee of the quality of the track. But if other avenues don’t work, this is an alternative. It's not the most reliable, and not guaranteed to give you what you’re looking for. This is a bit of a hack to find GPS tracks for a hike or climb. But, if those sites don't give you a track file, here's another trick to try - the publicly posted tracks at. Trying an initial search on websites such as (climbing) or (hiking)is a great place to start. As we like to say at AlpineSavvy, “A map is great, but a map with your route drawn on it is even better.” That usually means getting a GPS track of where you want to go.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |