The Washington Post published an article about work completed at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County’s (UMBC) Imaging Research Center which shows a fantastic rendering of the landscape as the city would have appeared circa 1814. Central to the work is a depiction of the unfinished Capitol building as it stand in juxtaposition to other geographic features at that time. The work by UMBC is based on topographic maps and generalized paintings from the era to create a psuedo-realistic 3D model. Watch the video created by UMBC; it’s six minutes long but worth it.
by Joe Francica on 09/02 at 01:51 PM |
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I couldn’t resist this story that was sourced from ITNews. Hire a Hubby, an Australian franchiser of "handy-man" services, looking to expand its number of franchisees has employed a location intelligent approach. By looking at the number of households, Hire a Hubby targeted areas where their service would be most in need. However, to pay for adding this type of location intelligence, it was forced to increase its franchise fees but at the same time could justify the cost with increased revenue potential. "We added $3,000 in real expenses to the [standard franchisee] start-up package but $20,000 in gross profitability,” the company told iTNews." The company now segments the price of its franchises based on revenue potential with the higher franchise costs going to the areas with higher potential. I wonder if they employ just men?
by Joe Francica on 09/02 at 01:15 PM |
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I’m not making a direct correlation here, but note that Qatar has won many a GIS award (six at the ESRI conference this year alone). Today news of a newly funded startup: “Qatar Science & Technology Park has awarded a $400,000 to Qatar Navigator, a local start-up company, to develop an automated map of the country.” It’s to develop a navigation database with POIs to be licensed for use on GPSs, phones, etc. The local university students will be involved and the project is expected to take five months.
- Arabian Business
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/02 at 06:43 AM |
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I’ve set up feeds on Twitter for posts to APB (http://twitter.com/directionsapb) and new articles on Directions Magazine (http://twitter.com/directionsmag). We offer this as yet another way to keep up with our content. RSS feeds and newsletters will continue to be available for those who like those distribution mechanisms. At this time I have no plans to create a Twitter feed for press releases, but let me know if you think that’d be valuable.
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/02 at 06:00 AM |
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I don’t know Robert Gaskell but from what I read, he’d make a great keynote speaker at one of our conferences! He maps bodies in solar system to 40 centimeters (yes, higher res than our commercial satellites!) using tereo-photo-clinometry techniques which use light from various directions to develop 3D terrain models. From what I read there’s a bit of Photosynth-y stuff going on, too: “Gaskell has created sophisticated software that combines hundreds of spacecraft images of varying resolution to produce the maps.” I for one want to learn more about that!
- Astrobio.net
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/02 at 06:00 AM |
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