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Archive for May, 2009

LizardTech GeoViewer 3.0 now available free

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

We’ve just released our new viewer, LizardTech GeoViewer 3.0, and so far it’s flying off the shelf, or rather across the Internet. It’s free to download here (http://www.lizardtech.com) and we’ve had thousands of takers already. We issued a press release yesterday, and I was going to follow up with an announcement here, but the way things are going it’ll be old news by the time I hit “publish”.

GeoViewer

Geospatial professionals have been asking us for a new viewer for a long time, and we were finally able to devote some time to making one. We didn’t want to short-change it, and I think you’ll love the results if you’re a person who uses imagery every day.

For input GeoViewer supports too many raster formats to list here, plus ESRI Shapefiles. It exports to GeoTIFF, JPEG, and PNG. What’s more, you can add layers (images and vector overlays) from local repositories, from a LizardTech Express Server catalog, or from WMS or JPIP servers.

Best of all, you can group your layers and hide or show them, so you can visually compare years, or regions — or any other organizational units you care to create — with a click.

We put a lot of care into making GeoViewer easy to install and get started with. If you haven’t already grabbed yours, why not try it out? And let us know what you think.  

A mighty wind a’ blowin’

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

I attended the American Wind Energy Association’s WINDPOWER 2009 in Chicago May 4-7. AWEA WINDPOWER is the premier wind energy conference and exhibition in North America. The North American wind market has been in a steady growth mode for well over five years with a tremendous boom for the past three years. Wind power generating capacity increased by 32% in 2007 and projections for 2009 are trending to be even greater.

The AWEA WINDPOWER Conference and Exhibition is the largest annual wind conference and exhibition in the world, this year featuring over 15,000 attendees and over 1,200 exhibitors. Each year, wind energy professionals gather at this event to learn about the latest industry developments and technologies, review new products and services in the expansive exhibit hall, and network with leading industry decision makers.

I Love Wind buttons

LizardTech did not have a booth at this show. As this was our first year at AWEA WINDPOWER we decided to save a little money by only attending rather than exhibiting and I was able to cruise the floor and scout out good leads. We did not spring for the sessions’ access – that would have been an additional $800.00. If you missed the sessions, too, they’re available on DVD for $500.00 at http://www.awea3.org/source/Orders/index.cfm?Section=Store .

I feel that it was better (and cheaper) to be an attendee at this show rather than exhibitor. It was too huge to be stuck in a booth all day. Walking the floor each day and talking with other exhibitors about their GIS needs (most didn’t know what GIS was) I was able to get better leads than I would have at a booth. There is something for everybody at this show and I hope to be back in 2010, when the conference will be held in Dallas. Details about next year’s show are at http://www.windpowerexpo.org/2010/coming_soon.cfm .

Photo courtesy of the American Wind Energy Association.

Reminiscences of Spring Break at the ESRI Dev Summit

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Glen Thompson and I were fortunate to attend the ESRI Developer’s Summit in Palm Springs last month. In addition to being a great excuse to get out of the rain here in Seattle, the Dev Summit provides a great opportunity to catch up with our friends from Redlands and see what’s new with ArcGIS.

Those who missed it can look over the presentations.

One way to think about an event like this is in terms of what’s cool and exciting and what’s getting the “business as usual” treatment. This year what’s cool and exciting is most definitely client-side web mapping. We’re talking Flex, Javascript and the newly released Silverlight API for ArcGIS Server. These were accompanied by cheering, contests, prizes and “Playful” (?) references to glitzy, “silverlighty” (get it?) applications.

Glen and Mike at ESRI

There were no contests or prizes for the backend stuff on which Glen and I spent most of our time. Of particular note, GDAL is definitely on the rise here. GDAL is the open source project that (among other things) provides the ability to convert between raster formats. Principal maintainer Frank Warmerdam presented a technical session on “Custom Raster Format Support in ArcGIS through GDAL”. Guys, start thinking about migrating those Erdas Imagine / RDO extensions to GDAL. The writing is on the wall.

And, speaking of items that will eventually need migrating, I gave a short talk on “Implementing a Custom Image Server Raster Format.” It describes the technical architecture of the project and includes some server benchmarking work that we did in Seattle highlighting the impact of using Express Server with ArcGIS Image Server Extension.

ESRI is even hosting a video of the presentation.

Thanks, guys!