Geospatial engineering combines principles of engineering, geography, and surveying to collect, analyze, and manage spatial data. Geospatial engineering involves surveying. Over time, the field of ...
Geospatial data can be leveraged by businesses in multiple industries to refine processes ranging from marketing to logistics and can help leadership teams fine-tune research and decision-making.
Don Murray is cofounder of Safe Software and has spent his career helping organizations bring life to data to make better decisions. The world we live in is spatial. Think about how many times you use ...
What do environmental management, urban planning, public health and civil engineering all have in common? They use geospatial information science and technology to make important decisions. Geospatial ...
GeoComm, the nation's leader in public safety grade location intelligence, today announced a partnership with Gridbase, a ...
Geospatial intelligence, which helps planners tackle challenges ranging from EV charging infrastructure to urban heat, is ...
Walmart’s use of a geospatial platform aims to help the retailer better tap in its vast store footprint to fulfill orders from customers. “Think of it like pixels in a digital image — each hexagon is ...
Location data is critical to nearly all state and local government work — whether it’s responding to a public safety call, supporting community planning and development, or maintaining critical ...
Executive Order 14008 established the Justice40 initiative and directed the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ) to develop a whole-of-government approach to environmental justice. CEQ created a ...
My last newsletter highlighted the products on the National Geodetic Survey (NGS) Alpha Preliminary Products site. The alpha site provides products that individuals can use to better understand the ...
A professor of Environmental Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems, Ebenezer Yemi Ogunbadewa, has advised the adoption of geospatial technology to improve education system in the country.
Recent advances in commercial geospatial technology—including access to time-stamped satellite imagery, multispectral data and radar imaging—have created new evidentiary tools for IP litigators.