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    Cav Trooper develops apps to improve lives

    Cav Trooper develops apps to improve lives

    Photo By Sgt. 1st Class Leah Kilpatrick | Sgt. 1st Class Ronnie Russell, platoon sergeant for the mortar platoon with...... read more read more

    FORT HOOD, TEXAS, UNITED STATES

    10.21.2015

    Story by Staff Sgt. Leah Kilpatrick 

    3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division

    FORT HOOD, Texas – Today, almost everything is on the Internet, and mobile devices place that immense collection of knowledge in the palm of our hands.
    But not everything is online – or at least isn’t that accessible – so one noncommissioned officer is using the power of the Internet to help Soldiers.

    Sgt. 1st Class Ronnie Russell, platoon sergeant, Mortar Platoon, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, 12th Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division develops mobile applications to provide troops and their Families with tools to help them navigate their duty stations and surrounding communities.

    About 15 years ago, Russell was stationed in Korea, and struggled to get from one place to another in the foreign country. It was an irritating reality that Russell said he just became accustomed to over time.

    Now assigned to 1-12 Cav., Russell recalled that experience when he returned to Korea last year with the Charger Battalion. Arriving on the peninsula for the battalion’s rotational deployment, he was shocked that there were still very few resources to help Soldiers navigate the local area.

    “There was nothing being done about it, except through each area’s publication, so I didn’t like that,” said Russell, a Fayetteville, North Carolina native. “So I said let me try making an app. The app was really for my Soldiers, because they were new; Korea was not new to me.”

    After getting the run-around from a couple of mobile application developers, Russell took matters into his own hands.

    “I was like, ‘well I’ll teach myself, so I went on Google,’” he said. “I tell people now, ‘I went to Google University, and my professor’s name was YouTube.’ That is who taught me.”

    The app, called Penn Around, serves as a mobile one-stop shop stocked with all the resources a Soldier assigned to the Republic of Korea might need. Penn Around is a consolidation of information under one umbrella, Russell said.

    “When the app first started, it started small,” said Sgt. Melvin Dizon, fire direction computer check assigned to HHC, 1-12 Cav. “It was basically the bus schedules of all the camps. That helped since, being 1-12, we weren’t from Korea. It was the best thing that was out at the time to help Soldiers who were transitioning figure out where to go.”

    Inside the roughly 13 MB file are resources ranging from the bus schedules and military lodging to MyPay, taxis and AAFES vendors.

    And the response has been positive.

    With more than 5,000 downloads and an average rating of 4.4 stars out of 5, one reviewer writes, “Very convenient app. It provides access to all the bus schedules as well as keeps me up to date with what’s going on.”

    Dizon said that Russell put care, thought and the concerns of his Soldiers into the development of this resource

    “Sergeant Russell approached each member of our platoon, because he said he was going to start an app to help Soldiers transition and get around Korea,” Dizon said. “He took ideas from every Soldier in our platoon, so whatever ideas we first pitched to him, he added that to the initial app when it first came out. Ever since then, it actually evolved. Now it has the SHARP program on it. It has the movie times. Whatever you needed as a Soldier out there, it eventually ended up on the app.”

    Russell spent a lot of his off-duty time ensuring he was going through all the right channels and getting permission from all the right people at every step of the way – a lot of work for a NCO who simply wanted to help his Soldiers learn how to traverse the peninsula.

    “I was tired of getting lost,” Russell said. “I didn’t know how to catch the train. I didn’t read Hangul. I had to keep asking people what’s the number to the taxi. And I shouldn’t have to ask these questions. I don’t want to have to rely on my memory, but why don’t I have something that is there not just for me, but to allow everyone to get around.”

    Russell’s concern for the welfare of others didn’t stop there.

    The single father sought information about safe neighborhoods in which to rear his son. This quest for knowledge grew into “Tx Corral,” another mobile app that serves as a tool to keep citizens informed of what’s going on in their neighborhood and in neighboring towns.

    It taps into the social media feeds of various law enforcement agencies as well as provides access to services that contact cab companies and tow trucks, using your phone’s GPS location.

    Again, Russell dedicated a lot of time to traveling throughout Central Texas to obtain permission from the various agencies involved to use their information.
    Having tackled Central Texas and the Land of the Morning Calm, Russell is currently working on prototype apps for U.S. Pacific Command and U.S. Army Japan.

    In all of the programs Russell is working on, he considers what is important and relevant to the Soldiers at that specific assignment. What is a priority for Soldiers in Hawaii isn’t necessarily what’s important to Soldiers in Korea, and vice versa.

    As the apps are all free to download, there is no monetary gain for Russell, only the satisfaction of knowing he may have helped a Soldier answer the same questions he once had.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.21.2015
    Date Posted: 10.21.2015 10:33
    Story ID: 179496
    Location: FORT HOOD, TEXAS, US
    Hometown: FAYETTEVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, US

    Web Views: 1,296
    Downloads: 2

    PUBLIC DOMAIN