Posts Tagged ‘GIS’
Thursday, February 2nd, 2012
Trimble Navigation Limited (TRMB) reported that its fourth-quarter GAAP net income attributable to the company was $29.40, down from $36.56 million in the same quarter last year. Earnings per share in the fourth quarter of 2011 were $0.23 as compared to diluted earnings per share of $0.29 in the fourth quarter of 2010.
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Tags: earnings, geospatial, GIS, navigation, Q4, Trimble No Comments »
Tuesday, January 31st, 2012
Remote Sensing
The amount of data that is being collected by sensors (remote sensors), terrestrial sensors, and personal sensors is going to explode. Today, everyone with a smartphone is carrying around a very sophisticated sensor. We are going to see the data from these sensors being used more and more. With all the sensors that are coming on line, we are quickly approaching the point where we can see what is happening anywhere at anytime.
3D GIS
The level of interest in 3D GIS is definitely on the upswing. With new data sources like LiDAR and the ability of tools to combine these different sources to make immersive environments – it’s going to take a big leap forward. Augmented Reality is just one technology that is on the cusp of breaking out. 2012 could be the year when it moves from a curiosity to a real must-have application. 2012 could also see a large adoption of 3D GIS technologies, as Autodesk continues work with its Infrastructure Modeler and Esri rolls out the fruit from its acquisition of Procedural and its CityEngine technology.
Web Mapping
We are really seeing a lot of excitement on the mobile platform. In today’s world, a mobile workforce is still a connected workforce. No longer is it the case that field workers are disconnected from their office systems. As a result we are increasingly seeing the need for real-time data movement. With workers always being connected, the line will continue to blur between the office, the field, and the home. Smartphones are really “pocket” computers with more processing power than that of desktops only a few years ago. The challenge now is more about bandwidth than anything else, and this is only going to get better and cheaper in 2012. In 2012 more people are going to run “mobile” web apps from their smartphones/iPods/iPads than from their computers on the desktop.
Social Media and Authoritative Citizen Data
The importance of social media to business is only increasing. Now people use social media platforms such as LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook to follow topics and keep in touch with their customers and industry trends. Social media has really changed the way that organizations get the word out. At Safe now we see ourselves spending more and more time on “content” marketing so that we have the content that users need. Through social media we are also in constant communication with more of our users than ever before.
On the topic of authoritative citizen data we are going to see more applications where citizens can help their cities and countries run better. Whether it is helping cities identify potholes, or graffiti locations by simply sending in geo-tagged photos, or helping authorities prosecute “rioters” by taking video and pictures with their phones – the trend is clear. Citizens are going to be more engaged than ever before.
Cloud
The cloud is everywhere in 2012. At Safe for example, we do almost everything in the cloud. We run our demo machines in the cloud. We train in the cloud. Our website is in the cloud. Our customers can evaluate using the cloud. From a technology perspective cloud technology is ready to host everything.
We are also going to continue to see more and increasingly powerful cloud-based systems out there. Take Google Fusion Tables for example. This technology makes it trivial for anyone to publish and share any kind of data, including spatial data, and share it with the world instantly! It’s amazing, and the cloud makes it possible.
The cloud is also a great equalizer. It used to be that organizations that wanted to create world class web-based solutions had to spend huge amounts of capital to purchase their own server farms to host these applications. With cloud services now, such as Amazon’s AWS, anyone can now create web-based solutions and simply leverage the scalability it inherently provides and only pay for what they use when they use it. This moves CPU usage for these organizations from the “highway” model; (build and pay for infrastructure to handle peak loads), to the electricity model in which you only pay for what you use. The cloud and its impact are still in early days.
Integration
The integration challenge is bigger than ever. For us at Safe we are seeing demands for data to be moved between more different kinds of systems than ever before. For the first decade of Safe it was all about CAD<->GIS. Now we have Raster, LiDAR, XML, Big Data, and Web-based data sources such as Google Fusion Tables. Users don’t want to just move it either way; they want to combine it and then send it to new applications. Over this period the “data freshness” dates are getting shorter and shorter. In 2012 we believe we are going to see organizations want to leverage “real-time” data. We also are seeing an explosion of sensors and expect organizations to need to integrate this entirely new type of data into their workflows so that they can react quicker and more effectively to events. This belief was a driving force behind the “Event Driven” architecture which we have added to FME Server. With this we are ready to handle a whole new class of data integration challenge.
Safe Software responses by:
Don Murray,
President and Co-founder of Safe Software
Tags: 3D GIS, Amazon, authoritative citizen data, CAD, cloud, GIS, Google Fusion Tables, integration, LiDAR, remote sensing, Safe Software, sensors, social media, XML No Comments »
Monday, January 30th, 2012
GIS/Utilities
In 2012, utilities will begin to invest heavily in analytics in order to manage increasingly large volumes of data due to the rise of smart meters. Utilities and GIS companies are also exploring how this information can be used for real-time tracking and operations and to help drive business value.
Smart buildings will become important to utilities. Twenty-five states have energy-efficiency standards or targets and smart buildings can help meet these goals. The building energy analytics market will double between 2012 and 2015, jumping from $193 billion to $402 billion.
-Autodesk AEC Executive Team
Tags: 2012 predictions, Autodesk, data, energy analytics, geospatial, GIS, utilities No Comments »
Wednesday, January 18th, 2012
For about three years, I have been watching Autodesk do interesting things with their GIS division, finally rolling some great mapping products into their Infrastructure Division. The sense was that Autodesk was primarily a provider of software for the built environment, with its GIS products designed with the architect or engineer in mind.
Autodesk Map 3D
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Tags: Autodesk, Confirm, geospatial, GIS, Infrastructure Modeler, Map 3D, MapInfo, Pitney Bowes 1 Comment »
Monday, January 9th, 2012
Europe adopted the INSPIRE Directive in May, 2007 that established an infrastructure for spatial information in Europe to support Community environmental policies and policies or activities which may have an impact on the environment. INSPIRE is based on the infrastructures for spatial information established and operated by the 27 Member States of the European Union. The Directive addresses 34 spatial data themes needed for environmental applications, with key components specified through technical implementing rules. source: INSPIRE DIRECTIVE
In response to this directive, Autodesk announced a new technology preview on Autodesk Labs called Project Inspire, which allows AutoCAD Map 3D users to find, bind, and publish INSPIRE compliant metadata with their drawings. Please check it out on Autodesk Labs.
Project Inspire on Autodesk Labs
Tags: AutoCAD Map 3D, Autodesk Labs, geospatial, GIS, INSPIRE directive, metadata, Project Inspire 1 Comment »
Monday, January 9th, 2012
The North American Cartographic Information Society (NACIS) invites submissions for the Atlas of Design, a new publication “dedicated to furthering the art and craft of cartography through inspirational examples.” The Atlas features full-color maps showcasing the most beautiful, intriguing, innovative cartography and thoughtful commentary accompanying the entries. All mapmakers are encouraged to offer their work for consideration.
To submit your work, email atlas@nacis.org.
Tags: cartography, geospatial, GIS, mapping, NACIS, North American Cartographic Society No Comments »
Wednesday, January 4th, 2012
Good map depicted the Iowa Republican Caucuses and how each county voted in The New York Times. You can filter data by demographics, median income, other (such as college education), and who won in 2008.
Iowa
Republican Caucuses – Election 2012
Tags: 2012 Election, geospatial, GIS, Iowa Republican Caucuses, mapping, The New York Times No Comments »
Wednesday, December 14th, 2011
GISCafe’s Sanjay Gangal conducted an interview with Dale Lutz, co-founder of Safe Software, at Autodesk University 2011 in Las Vegas, Nevada recently.
Sanjay: Tell us about Safe Software.
Dale: We have been in existence since 1993. We make a product called FME that moves data from where it is to where we want it to be. It now supports around 275 different formats.
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Tags: Autodesk, Autodesk Infrastructure Modeler, Autodesk University 2011, CityGML, FME 2012, geospatial, GIS, LiDAR, Oracle Spatial, point clouds, Safe Software No Comments »
Tuesday, December 13th, 2011
At Autodesk University 2011, GISCafe’s Sanjay Gangal interviewed Kevin Reilly, president of Pictometry Business Solutions, Pictometry, about the company’s focus and what new products they were introducing at the event.
Sanjay: How long has Pictometry been around?
Kevin: Pictometry has been around for a little over ten years. It is a disruptive technology company. We have a dataset that’s unique, we fly aerial imagery, we collect oblique images as well as ortho images, which is a rich dataset, and then we have an analytics platform that allows you to mine information from the imagery. What’s unique is every pixel has three dimensional elements to it, so you can measure anything you see on the image from height, distance, measurement, area. Every pixel has a lat long, so you can also measure elevation, and we can also bring GIS layers onto the imagery so you can displayed things like hazard layers, parcels, any other GIS layers can be displayed on the Pictometry platform.
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Tags: Autodesk Map 3D, Autodesk University, dataset, disruptive technology, GIS, imagery, oblique imagery, Pictometry 1 Comment »
Thursday, December 8th, 2011
James Staten of Forrester Research spoke about the cloud at the recent Autodesk University in Las Vegas. He made a case for the cloud by saying that “clouds are more secure than you are.”
His recommendations:
- Focus – clouds can concentrate their whole security team on securing the one app.
- Exposure – when cloud outages happens every customer gets upset and they end up in New York Times. When your email system goes down it doesn’t show up in the papers. Because of that risk those creating the cloud invest heavily in the best security minds out there. Every one of those was given a job offer by Amazon, Microsoft, etc. at very high salaries. “If anyone breaks into my account I want to know about it. The cloud is concerned with extreme audits, a security expert, who they hire, who gets into the data center, whether they are making sure malware is up to date,” said Staten.
- Validation
- Multitenancy – there is far more encryption in the cloud model and it is far more difficult to see that another customer is there to alleviate concerns of privacy such as Pepsi and Coke using the same cloud service, for example.
Tags: Amazon, Autodesk University, cloud, Forrester Research, geospatial, GIS, Microsoft, security No Comments »
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