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GIS Thoughts

GIS Developments from Asia

GIS Development

I have always had a great deal of time for Sanjay Kumar and his team behind the excellent Asian GIS magazine, GIS Development, and was very happy to contribute an article for their embedded GIS issue.

I don’t think GIS Development and the geospatial activities taking place in Asia, and in India and the Middle East in particular, get enough exposure in the West. Although there are many governmental restrictions in these regions, this is not always the case, and countries like the UAE are moving ahead very quickly.

But what we really need to wake up to is the quality of the technology and the GI professionals coming out of India, I would really suggest you take some time to look at the GIS Development website, its a great resource.

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GIS

Where 2.0 Conference 2006 Registration now open !!

The most talked about conference of last year, was Where 2.0 and organisers O’Reilly have now opened the 2006 Conference for registration, this year a few miles south in San Jose.

Well worth a visit for the non traditional GI industry view of the world.

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GIS

Pictometry a different direction for the OS

Over the next day or so you will see press releases announcing that Ordnance Survey has signed up to be the sole agent for Pictometry in Great Britain. Pictometry is the technology that fuses oblique aerial photography, with orthomodels and geospatial feature data to produce a roamable intelligent images from which you can interrogate spatial data and make accurate measurements.

Microsoft Live local has a basic version of pictometry data, which they call “Birds Eye Images” available for selected US cities. – As a Brit though this makes be think of Fish Fingers !!

This is clearly a bit of a departure for the OS as we will be distributing more than just information, Pictometry is one of the first geospatial fusion products, where to provide very rich information in an intuitive way, there needs to be a very tight binding between the source data, processing algorithms and the client application – in some ways this is similar to the route adopted by geo-exploration products like Google Earth.

Over time I have no doubt that there will be more standardised data models and methods to allow these types of applications to become more interoperable but we are today taking our first steps.. exciting times indeed and a great way to give users access to the rich geospatial data “behind the map”.