25 July 2008, 2:34pm
Norcross, GA – ERDAS announces Workflow Solved: High Fidelity Mosaics, a free webinar on Thursday, July 31, 2008 at 3 a.m. and 11 a.m. (EDT).
Successful photogrammetric projects are highly dependent upon an organization’s efficiency in creating and editing seamlines, photogrammetric dodging, tonal balancing and mosaicking. The ERDAS workflow integrates the editing/balancing/mosaicking process, reducing the time and effort required to create high quality orthomosaics. This webinar will feature images captured using a medium format camera. Beginning with a challenging data set, this webinar will illustrate how to produce radiometry improvements and deliver seamless mosaics.
Each month, ERDAS is offering at least two different webinar topics. To meet the needs of ERDAS’ global audience, most webinars will be hosted twice on a scheduled day. In addition to a live presentation and demonstration, each webinar also includes the opportunity for customers to interact directly with the presenter. Scheduled to last forty-five minutes, each webinar will include approximately thirty minutes of presented material and fifteen minutes for Q&A.
Below is a schedule outlining the next three ERDAS webinar topics and the solutions featured:
· July 31 – Workflow Solved: High Fidelity Mosaics
· August 6 – Huge Images? Too Many Users? No Problem (ERDAS IWS)
· August 14 – Simplify Your Image Processing and Compression with ERDAS ER Mapper
To register for Workflow Solved: High Fidelity Mosaics, or find out more about other upcoming webinars, please visit: www.erdas.com.
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Each month we select a hot topic and a leading figure in the industry to write about it.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…
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