Author: Tracy Cozzens

  • Orion Partners with Sky-Shine

    Orion Technology Inc. has formed a partnership with Sky-Shine Corporation Sdn. Bhd., a firm specializing in GIS development and mapping services, surveying and mapping systems, and environmental and laboratory instrumentation in Malaysia.

    Sky-Shine offers a full range of geospatial information technology services, from data conversion to application development and implementation. It serves both public- and private-sector agencies, and provides services in GIS system development and implementation, digital mapping and data acquisition, data conversion, and remote sensing.

    Sky-Shine is the distributor of Digital Globe’s QuickBird high-resolution satellite imagery product and provides value-added services to the remote sensing industry in the region. In addition, Sky-Shine is also a distributor for GeoExpress from LizardTech, a geospatial software package for managing, distributing, and accessing complex geospatial imagery. As an ESRI business partner in Malaysia, Sky-Shine serves clients in various sectors including government, private, and educational institutions.

    “We are committed to exceeding customer expectations for quality and prompt delivery. Being a partner of Orion, our vision becomes more global, and more focused on system and data integration. Our ‘GeoWeb’ initiative, powered by OnPoint, will be the platform of geo services within Malaysia,” noted Zalizan Mohd Salleh, technical manager of Sky-Shine.

    By using Orion’s OnPoint Web-GIS solution, Sky-Shine will enhance its services pertaining to spatial data access and solution integration, for both their existing clients and new clients in the region. OnPoint comes with an administration tool, providing a simple user interface to create Configuration Files that define views. The user can easily change the appearance, functionality, data content, and security of OnPoint. OnPoint allows users to publish their GIS data quickly and securely over the Web and connect to any spatial and nonspatial data throughout their organization, turning their Web-GIS into a true enterprise solution.

    “OnPoint continues to gain further acceptance throughout the world as the standard for Web-GIS. Sky-Shine is a well-established firm that shares our commitment to delivering quality, leading edge solutions to clients. Sky-Shine has significant opportunities to leverage OnPoint in the Malaysian market, and we look forward to working with them in this regard,” commented Faizal Hasham, director of Sales and Marketing at Orion.

  • Brian Soliday Joins TerraGo Technologies

    TerraGo Technologies, provider of GeoPDF and the MAP2PDF family of products, announced that Brian Soliday has joined the company as vice-president of sales. Soliday will be responsible for expanding use of the company’s geospatial data distribution format known as GeoPDF.

    Prior to signing on with TerraGo, Soliday spent almost 20 years in various sales, consulting, and business development management roles with Space Imaging, Autodesk, LizardTech, and Trimble, as well as start-up geospatial technology vendors.

    “Brian has successfully grown and managed all kinds of sales organizations in other GIS solutions companies. We expect that his broad base of experience as well as his in-depth knowledge of the geospatial market will help us execute effectively while we’re experiencing rapid expansion of our customer base across multiple vertical markets,” said James Davis, TerraGo president and CEO.

    Adoption of TerraGo’s MAP2PDF products and GeoPDF technology has steadily increased in the last year. Unit sales of products are up almost 500 percent, while the TerraGo customer base has grown more than 300 percent. The company’s employee base has more than doubled.

    The MAP2PDF family of products allows customers to publish and collaborate on GeoPDF files that contain robust cartographic data and mapping capabilities, including layers and embedded feature attributes. GeoPDF files can be easily distributed and used in connected or disconnected modes. Because the product leverages Adobe Reader, most non-GIS pros already have viewing software installed and are familiar with how to use it.

    WithGeoPDF, users are able to view finished digital maps, turn layers on and off, query attributes, display coordinates, measure distances, and track locations via GPS without the need for specialized geospatial knowledge or training.

    “TerraGo has gained momentum quickly because the product set addresses problems that organizations have long struggled with,” said Soliday. “Being able to open up their GIS data to anyone in the enterprise anywhere in the world gives GIS professionals vast new capabilities and opportunities to create greater value while serving constituents more effectively. It’s a unique value proposition and the user community is already embracing the possibilities GeoPDF brings to this market space.”

    In addition to his professional experience in the GIS industry, Soliday is an active member of the American Society of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, serving as the Rocky Mountain Region President in 2004. Soliday also serves on the editorial advisory board of Geospatial Solutions magazine. A practicing conservationist, habitat partner and life member of the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation (RMEF), Soliday currently serves the RMEF as Colorado State Volunteer Chair. He graduated from the University of Nebraska at Omaha with Bachelors and Masters Degrees in Geography with specialties in GIS and Remote Sensing.

  • GITA 29 Models Future of Interoperability

    GITA (the Geospatial Information & Technology Association) held its Annual Conference 29 in Tampa, Florida, April 23-26. GITA President Susan Ancel called the conference, which included a poster session and a job fair for the first time, “the highlight of the year for the association.”

    This year’s theme — “No Barriers: Connected. Responsive. Prepared.” — was explored in an interoperability demonstration that captivated the Opening Session audience. Executive Director Bob Samborski told the attendees, “what you’re about to see this afternoon is what we envision GECCo would look like in many respects,” referring to GITA’s Geospatially Enabling Community Collaboration initiative.

    The premise for the demonstration — a scenario about Tampa’s bid to host the 2012 Olympic Games — may have been fictional, but the applications, data, and interoperability were real. To prepare a proposal that included analyses of emergency response, infrastructure, transportation, and other relevant capabilities, the would-be host city had to pull information from a host of dispersed datasets in a variety of formats. Tampa officials and geospatial vendors who collaborated in the live presentation succeeded at their task, proving that open standards-based software, data, and services can overcome data-sharing obstacles.

    During the opening session, GITA also honored winners of the 2006 Excellence, Innovator, and Distinguished Service awards, as well as what Samborski called “the highest award the association can bestow” — the Geospatial Industry Lifetime Achievement award, which went to C. Warren Ferguson. In regard to his long career in the industry, Ferguson said, “understanding the value of location, and being able to communicate it,
    is perhaps my greatest contribution to the geospatial community.”

    The theme of “No Barriers” carried through to the show floor, where improved data sharing, technology integration, and collaboration reigned. TerraGo Technologies has added a capability to its GeoPDF file format that enables full round-tripping of markups and redlines, transforming a viewing tool into a collaboration tool. Once GeoPDFs are created with TerraGo’s MAP2PDF for GIS, then geo-enabled for commenting with TerraGo’s MAP2PDF for Geo-Enabling software and Adobe Acrobat Professional, any user with Adobe Reader and TerraGo’s Geo-Enabled GeoPDF Toolbar can export shapefiles for round-tripping back to a GIS.

    CH2M HILL demonstrated several solutions that combine tracking technologies with Google Earth. The company’s GE Tracker plots the location of GPS-enabled devices (such as cell phones) in real time through the Google Earth interface. Example applications include recording the time a delivery driver spends at a particular location, routing the most conveniently located courier to a job, and keeping tabs on a child’s trip to a movie theater. As Vice-President of C&IS (Communications & Information Solutions) Nigel Nugent said, everyone wants to know “where’s my stuff, and what’s happening to it?”

    LizardTech announced its Spatial Express application, which enables users to store raster imagery in an Oracle database in its native MrSID and JPEG 2000 formats. Spatial Express uses Oracle’s GeoRaster application program interface and provides raster imagery compression of up to 95 percent, with no visible loss of quality. Selective decoding reduces the time needed to view imagery by decompressing only the relevant region of an image.

    FCSI unveiled IT3D for FME, a plug-in for Safe Software’s Feature Manipulation Engine (FME) that translates GIS data from more than 100 formats into high-resolution three-dimensional (3D) visualizations. IT3D includes 3D conversion software, a 3D viewer, a library of 3D models and textures, and communications interface software for GIS-to-viewer interaction. Visibility of individual features can be toggled on and off, meaning that a user can hide the surface of the ground to expose the locations of buried pipelines or cables.

    Outside the exhibit hall, the use of GIS in managing underground utilities data was the focus of educational sessions about locating buried lines and populating “call before you dig” services with up-to-date information. Rather than using outdated paper maps or relying on memory, utilities and other organizations are now turning to a combination of GPS, GIS, and facility location technologies to create accurate maps of underground lines. Other sessions explored the use of GIS in such areas as work and asset management, emergency response, system integration, and planning, design, and engineering.

    Throughout the event, the dynamic nature of the geospatial industry and its technology was apparent. Intergraph’s Vice-President and Chief Technology Officer Peter Batty discussed the changes brought about by rapidly evolving technology. Thanks to the increasing accuracy and availability of location-tracking technologies, he said, geospatial technologies once primarily limited to documentation and planning are now being used for dynamically scheduling and assigning work, and a host of other real-time applications.

    The 30th Annual Conference and Exhibition, titled “Mission Possible,” will be held in San Antonio, Texas, March 4-7, 2007. For more information, visit www.gita.org.