Table
of Contents
December
1995
Volume
4, Number 12
GIS
For the Top of the World
An American expedition team attempts to conquer Mount
Everest and solve a 71-year old mystery using GIS, GPS and
orthophotography
By William Doak
CAD
Trends Foreshadow Future for GeoTechnologies
The warning for GeoTechnology vendors at all levels is
clear: reinvent yourself to keep pace with a changing
market or risk extinction
By J.D. Wilson
Conservation
Efforts Preserve U.K. Grasslands
Integration of raster and vector data provides accurate
and cost-effective means of detecting land change
conditions.
By Kevin P. Corbley
Satellite
Data Reveal New View of Ocean Floor
Integration of raster and vector data provides accurate
and cost-effective means of detecting land change
conditions.
By Janet Howard and Cindy Clark
CEOCAP
Project Targets Antrim Shale
With the help of satellite imagery, an exploration company
saves time and money detecting natural reservoir fractures
without drilling exploratory wells.
By Kevin P. Corbley
GIS
Goes Public
An innovative approach to data conversion saves Summit
County, Ohio more than $5 million.
By Robert N. McLaughlin
GPS
Consumer Series: You Get What You Pay For
The differences between GIS data capture tools and
consumer-oriented GPS receivers
By Chuck Gilbert
GPS
Q&A: Industry experts answer reader's GPS questions.
IFSAR
Melts Hurdles to Urban Mapping
By Richard Carande
Looking
Toward The Future From Space
As new business ventures begin commercializing
high-resolution satellite imaging technology, industry
observers watch for the response from the market place.
By Damon Judd
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