GeoConnexion
 
Home
 
Geo: International
 
This month's issue Online News Online Articles
 
GeoConnexionUK
 
This month's issue Online News Online Articles
 
GEOlympics
 
GeoResources
 
Recruitment Directory Events Education Subscription Contact Details Media Pack ISPRS - Information From Imagery FIG - International Federation of Serveyors
 
Login
Email: Password:

 

Forgotten your details?
Click here
 
 
Click here to download Adobe Acrobat Reader

Geo: International > News > News Item

Blue Marble Introduces New Administrative Tools

Gardiner, Maine – December 7, 2007 – With the release of Geographic Calculator 7.0, Blue Marble Geographics (www.bluemarblegeo.com) introduces a new suite of geodetic definition and conversion administrative tools to assist GIS managers with controlling geospatial data quality. Blue Marble’s coordinate conversion technology is used worldwide by thousands of GIS analysts at software companies, universities, oil and gas companies, civil engineering, surveying, technology, enterprise GIS groups, government and military organizations.

The new release of the Geographic Calculator introduces a number of tools aimed at the GIS Manager or Chief Geodesist to assist with developing geodetic and geospatial data quality controls in their organization. Geographic Calculator 7.0 offers password-protected administrative lockdown controls that allow the manager to limit access to the GeoCalc geodetic data source. Managers can use these tools to protect proprietary custom definitions or to guide users working in a particular part of the world by only exposing the appropriate projections, datums and other objects used in that area of the world. Signatures on the data source can also alert users and administrators alike that the data source may have been inappropriately edited or corrupted. New workspace settings allow the manager to construct conversion jobs, save them off and provide users with the appropriate template for a particular project. Additionally, new datum shift envelopes defined by administrators and users can be assigned to particular datums based on geographic envelopes. Users can still add custom definitions with these tools, but they will have to be approved by the administrator in order to be incorporated into the master geodetic datasource. Use of any administrative or datasource lockdown is optional and at the discretion of the customer.

“Data can be corrupted in many different ways, unbeknownst to the GIS manager that is responsible for data quality and accuracy,” stated Patrick Cunningham, President of Blue Marble Geographics “Our tools provide a place to start defining methodologies and programs to control data quality. These initiatives can really control risk, cost overruns and other unanticipated problems.”


For more information visit:

www.bluemarblegeo.com


Geo: International

 

Past Issues - Archive
ESRI Press Updates - ArcGIS 9.3 Software Release… More…
01 December 2008, 4:04pm
Topcon’s X-TRAC 7 technology advances robotics… More…
01 December 2008, 3:36pm
Landgate innovative tools for carbon accounting … More…
01 December 2008, 1:16pm
Privolzhsky Federal District is on kosmosnimki.ru … More…
27 November 2008, 4:33pm
EU and ESA Space Council Meets 26 September 2008… More…
26 November 2008, 4:19pm
Free and unrestricted access to full Landsat data… More…
24 November 2008, 12:56pm
Earth from Space: The Netherlands… More…
21 November 2008, 10:23am
NASA tests deep space internet… More…
18 November 2008, 10:52am
NEXTMap® Europe National Datasets in March 2009… More…
11 November 2008, 9:00pm
This Month's Burning Issue...
Each month we select a hot topic and a leading figure in the industry to write about it.
This month's burning issue:

What message are we sending to senior level decision makers about the importance and value of Spatial Data Infrastructure - SDI - if we keep misrepresenting what SDI is or is all about?

In previous editorials in this magazine I have touched on various SDI issues, especially now that the pan-European SDI has achieved a legally mandated status within the European Union's 27 Member States. Yet I fear that the Geographic Information community - or communities, for there are many - continue to… More…


Website content & images remain the intellectual property of GeoConnexion Ltd. All rights reserved