Friday, April 29, 2011

New GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Released of Tuscaloosa, Alabama (post-storm)

Welcome to the GeoEye Image Gallery.


A new image of the GeoEye-1 collection of Tuscaloosa, Alabama (post-storm) has just been released on the GeoEye website.


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Find GeoEye at EuroSeafood Exposition - GeoEye Information Services Featured

Find GeoEye at EuroSeafood Exposition, May 3 - 5: Booth 4-5828. See our latest marine satellite tracking & oceanographic chart products!


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Become of a Fan of GeoEye on Facebook!

Become a fan of GeoEye on Facebook! Please visit us at www.Facebook.com/GeoEyeInc to become a fan and see updates on our latest high resolution imagery.


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Japan Before and After Earthquake and Tsunami - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Featured on Blog Spot

Photos from the GeoEye satellite imaging company from before and after the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in Japan show sobering views from above of the disaster.


Fukushima II nuclear power plant, Minamisanriku...


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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Marine Services - GeoEye Information Services Featured

GeoEye Marine Services has provided fish-finding and oceanic data services and products, tailored to the unique needs of commercial and government maritime organizations, since 1997. Our SeaStar Fisheries Information Service combines ocean plankton data with oceanographic and meteorological data sets from server satellite imaging systems, processed daily by GeoEye's expert team and delivered directly to the vessel. Specific buoy, vessel tracking, and research products are available. To maximize the usefulness of this information, GeoEye offers OrbMap software, training and technical support to every customer. OrbMap enables captains and fleet managers to manipulate map layers, converting oceanic location intelligence into smart decision-making tools.


Our Marine Services include oceanographic maps, asset tracking hardware and information that is required by all maritime agencies to monitor ocean conditions, vessels and fishing gear. GeoEye's oceanographers produce "fish finding maps" (FFM) by collecting and processing data from several satellite systems to help captains identify the most productive fishing grounds...


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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Japan Reviewing Policy to Export Nuclear Technology - GeoEye Production Services Featured in Article

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- The Japanese government is considering whether to continue the joint effort of the public and private sectors to export nuclear power technology following the crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, government sources said Tuesday.


In this photo, the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex in Japan is shown on Nov. 15, 2009 in a satellite image provided by GeoEye. Radiation leaked from the crippled nuclear plant in tsunami-ravaged northeastern Japan after a third reactor was rocked by an explosion Tuesday, March 15, and a fourth caught fire in a dramatic escalation of the 4-day-old catastrophe.(AP Photo/GeoEye)


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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

New GeoEye High Resolution Imagery of St. Peter's Square (Easter Mass) available on Flickr!

Now available, High Resolution Satellite Earth Imagery of St. Peter's Square (Easter Mass) on Flickr presented by GeoEye.




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New GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Released of St. Peter's Square (Easter Mass)

Welcome to the GeoEye Image Gallery.


A new image of the GeoEye-1 collection of St. Peter's Square (Easter Mass) has just been released on the GeoEye website.


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Collecting and Delivering Superior Multi-Resolution Imagery Products - GeoEye Imagery Collection Featured

Current and historical geospatial imagery from GeoEye provides timely and vital insight for commercial, research and government applications. As your trusted imagery experts, we offer a wide range of imagery products collected by our constellation of high-resolution satellites and aerial systems and intended to match your specific resolution requirements and geospatial interests – anywhere in the world. Our most advanced satellite imagery, collected by GeoEye-1, has a resolution of .41 meters (.50 meters for commercial customers), able to discern a 16-inch object on the ground...


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South Korea Releases Details of North Korea Coastal Submarine - GeoEye Imagery Collection Featured in Blog Post

Last month, South Korea released details about a new class of North Korean (NK) coastal submarine which has been reported in operation for the last several years. Joseph S Bermuduz Jr in April's Jane's Defense Weekly speculates the designation of this submarine as the SANG-O II (or K-300) class as it resembles the original SANG-O but with an additional 5 meters in length. It has been suggested the extra length may add to the capacity of the SANG-O by providing torpedo tubes, an increased patrol range as well as a larger crew complement...


...For those creating imagery signature databases, the only imagery available for the SANG-O II in Google Earth was captured by GeoEye on 6 Oct 2010 at Ch'aho-rodongjagu naval base. The following shows a breakout of that image along with surrounding submarines.


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Monday, April 25, 2011

One Month On, Japan Continues to Mourn Disaster Victims - GeoEye is Elevating Insight in BBC Video

A month after the catastrophic earthquake and tsunami in Japan, there is little sign of life moving on. The death toll is expected to reach twenty eight thousand. But a further hundred and fifty thousand are still camping in shelters, struggling to cope with so much loss. Our correspondent Damian Grammaticas went to Rikuzentakata, one of the worst hit towns on Japan's eastern coast, to speak those mourning loved ones. Satellite imagery courtesy of GeoEye...


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Friday, April 22, 2011

GeoEye Featured Imagery in Google Earth - April 2011 Imagery Update

Since the launch of the GeoEye-1 satellite in 2008, Google has added gigabytes of high-resolution GeoEye-1 and IKONOS imagery to Google Earth and Google Maps, such as a historic scene from the 2009 Presidential Inauguration, views of the pyramids in Egypt, and images showing urban expansion in China. To highlight other broadly-interesting GeoEye-1 images, Google has a 'GeoEye Featured Imagery' layer in Google Earth. Included within this layer are Featured Imagery placemarks, including a thumbnail of the image, a link to view the image in full-resolution, and a wealth of information about the scene, including resolution, collection date, and a narrative about the location...


This month's featured images are:


Boulder, Colorado
Chattanooga, Tennessee
Copenhagen, Denmark
London, England
Miami International Airport, Miami, Florida


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Celebrate EarthDay with GeoEye! - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Featured

Celebrate EarthDay with GeoEye! Check out this great earth image of The Alps - Dolomiti, Italy.


Enjoy this half-meter resolution satellite image of The Alps - Dolomiti, Italy. The GeoEye-1 satellite is owned and operated by Va.-based GeoEye, Inc. and is the world's highest resolution commercial Earth imaging satellite.


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Take an EarthDay Minute to Appreciate the Majestic Beauty of Bora Bora, Tahiti - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Featured

Take an EarthDay minute to appreciate the majestic beauty of Bora Bora, Tahiti.


Enjoy this half-meter resolution satellite image of Bora Bora, Tahiti. The GeoEye-1 satellite is owned and operated by Va.-based GeoEye, Inc. and is the world's highest resolution commercial Earth imaging satellite.


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How Will You Celebrate EarthDay? - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Featured

How will you celebrate EarthDay? We'll celebrate with a stunning view of Mt. Kilimanjaro.


This half-meter resolution satellite image of Mount Kilimanjaro in northeastern Tanzania was taken from 423 miles in space by the GeoEye-1 satellite on July 17, 2009. Rising from the African plateau with an elevation of 5,895 meters, Kilimanjaro is the largest free-standing mountain in the world and one of the most popular mountaineering sites. It is also an active volcano with three volcanic cones: Shira, Kibo and Mawenzi. The GeoEye-1 satellite is owned and operated by Va.-based GeoEye, Inc. and is the world's highest resolution commercial Earth imaging satellite.


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Thursday, April 21, 2011

GeoEye First Quarter 2011 Earnings Conference Call Announcement

HERNDON, Va., April 21, 2011 - GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY), a leading source of geospatial information and insight, announced today it will host its first quarter conference call and webcast for investors and analysts on Tuesday, May 10, 2011, beginning at 8:30 a.m. EDT. The call will include a review of the first quarter 2011 financial results, a discussion of the Company's operations and an update on the outlook for Fiscal 2011...


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EyeQ Services FAQ - GeoEye Information Services Featured

What is EyeQ? GeoEye's EyeQ is a software-as-a-service platform that provides managed services for searching and acquiring imagery, managing your spatial information and enabling collaborative access across the enterprise. EyeQ combines imagery products with on-demand tools for managing your geospatial information and project-based collaboration...


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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Japan Recovery - GeoEye Production Services Featured in Article

FILE - This March 12, 2011 file photo provided by GeoEye shows the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture, a day after an earthquake and tsunami hit Japan's east coast. Tokyo Electric Power Co., which runs the hobbled Fukushima plant, did not factor geologic evidence of the giant Jogan tsunami of 869 A.D. into its preparedness. When a tsunami hit in March 2011, it unleashed waves up to 42 feet (14 meters) high, swamping the backup generators needed for cooling. The same region was also walloped twice before, once around 140 B.C. and again sometime between 600 B.C. and 900 B.C., scientific studies revealed. (AP Photo/GeoEye, File)


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Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Space Technology Hall of Fame Award - GeoEye is Elevating Insight

On April 14, 2011, GeoEye was inducted into the Space Technology Hall of Fame ® for commercial Earth-imaging satellites. The Space Technology Hall of Fame ® honors innovations by organizations and individuals who transform space technology into commercial products that improve life on Earth.


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Plant Starts Pumping Radioactive Water - GeoEye Imagery Collection Featured in Article

TOKYO (AP) - The operator of Japan's crippled nuclear plant began pumping highly radioactive water from the basement of one of its buildings to a makeshift storage area Tuesday in a crucial step toward easing the nuclear crisis...


This March 12, 2011 file photo provided by GeoEye shows the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture, a day after an earthquake and tsunami hit Japan's east coast. (AP Photo/GeoEye, File)


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AP IMPACT: Asia Nuclear Reactors Face Tsunami Risk - GeoEye is Elevating Insight

JAKARTA, Indonesia—The skeleton of what will soon be one of the world's biggest nuclear plants is slowly taking shape along China's southeastern coast—right on the doorstep of Hong Kong's bustling metropolis. Three other facilities nearby are up and running or under construction.


Like Japan's Fukushima Dai-ichi plant they lie within a few hundred miles of the type of fault known to unleash the largest tsunami-spawning earthquakes.


FILE - This March 12, 2011 file photo provided by GeoEye shows the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex in Okuma, Fukushima Prefecture, a day after an earthquake and tsunami hit Japan's east coast. Tokyo Electric Power Co., which runs the hobbled Fukushima plant, did not factor geologic evidence of the giant Jogan tsunami of 869 A.D. into its preparedness. When a tsunami hit in March 2011, it unleashed waves up to 42 feet (14 meters) high, swamping the backup generators needed for cooling. The same region was also walloped twice before, once around 140 B.C. and again sometime between 600 B.C. and 900 B.C., scientific studies revealed. ((AP Photo/GeoEye, File))


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Friday, April 15, 2011

GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Showcased

Visit GeoEye's High Resolution Imagery Gallery to view the latest imagery of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, Okuma, Japan; Indian Gulch Fire (false-color) near Golden, Colorado; Ishinomaki, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan (post-earthquake); Pearl Square Manama, Bahrain; as well as much more newsworthy earth imagery from GeoEye.


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GeoEye and Esri to Create a Base Layer of Multi-source, Multi-resolution Global Imagery - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Featured

GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY), a leading source of geospatial information and insight, announced today that Esri has signed a strategic contract to license a large amount of GeoEye's high-resolution IKONOS archive imagery. Esri, based in Redlands, Calif., will blend this highly accurate imagery with its current imagery data from multiple sensors to produce a global, static cache map layer. This imagery base layer will be displayed and served to Esri users via ArcGIS.com, an online system for working with geographic information through a range of GIS desktops, Web browsers and mobile devices. Esri will begin building this imagery base layer within the next few weeks and expects to complete it in early 2012...


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Thursday, April 14, 2011

Esri Signs Strategic Contract with GeoEye - GeoEye Featured on The American Surveyor

GeoEye and Esri to Create a Base Layer of Multi-source, Multi-resolution Global Imagery to Serve Desktop Users via ArcGIS.com


Esri and GeoEye are working together to make GeoEye's imagery archive more accessible to Esri ArcGIS users. In addition, improved search and discovery of GeoEye's content will provide Esri users with a fuller, richer user experience. This foundation marks the beginning of a new direction in the partnership, as it will bring new solutions to both ArcGIS and GeoEye imagery users. The two companies plan to announce joint offerings and other initiatives later in the year...


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Esri Signs Strategic Contract with GeoEye

GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY), a leading source of geospatial information and insight, announced today that Esri has signed a strategic contract to license a large amount of GeoEye's high-resolution IKONOS archive imagery. Esri, based in Redlands, Calif., will blend this highly accurate imagery with its current imagery data from multiple sensors to produce a global, static cache map layer. This imagery base layer will be displayed and served to Esri users via ArcGIS.com, an online system for working with geographic information through a range of GIS desktops, Web browsers and mobile devices. Esri will begin building this imagery base layer within the next few weeks and expects to complete it in early 2012...


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Company of the Week: GeoEye Marine Services To Enhance Your Success At Sea - GeoEye Information Services Showcased

GeoEye, Inc. (Public, NASDAQ:GEOY) is a premier provider of superior satellite and aerial imagery, location information products and image processing services. Using GeoEye products and services, professionals across the world are able to spend less time searching for information—and more time applying the right insight—no matter what industry they're in.


GeoEye Marine Services has specially been tailored to provide fish-finding and oceanic data services and products, tailored to the unique needs of commercial and government maritime organizations. GeoEye's SeaStar Fisheries Information Service combines ocean plankton data with oceanographic and meteorological data sets from server satellite imaging systems, processed daily by GeoEye's expert team and delivered directly to the vessel. Specific buoy, vessel tracking, and research products are available. To maximize the usefulness of this information, GeoEye offers OrbMap software, training and technical support to every customer. OrbMap enables captains and fleet managers to manipulate map layers, converting oceanic location intelligence into smart decision-making tools...


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Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Become of a Fan of GeoEye on Facebook!

Become a fan of GeoEye on Facebook! Please visit us at www.Facebook.com/GeoEyeInc to become a fan and see updates on our latest high resolution imagery.


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New GeoEye High Resolution Imagery of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (post-earthquake) Okuma, Japan available on Flickr

Now available, High Resolution Satellite Earth Imagery of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (post-earthquake) Okuma, Japan on Flickr presented by GeoEye.




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New GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Released of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (post-earthquake) Okuma, Japan

Welcome to the GeoEye Image Gallery.


A new image of the GeoEye-1 collection of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (post-earthquake) Okuma, Japan has just been released on the GeoEye website.


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The Search for the Hidden Tomb of Genghis Khan - Albert Lin Video Added to GeoEye Website

In the spring of 2008, University of California San Diego (UCSD) research associate Albert Yu-Min Lin initiated a research project using a newly formulated, non-invasive scientific approach to search for the tomb of the legendary Mongolian leader Genghis Khan. Dr. Lin's extensive training in non-invasive materials imaging, along with his expertise in Mongolian customs and history, and his political position, qualify him as the ideal principal investigator of this monumental three-year project which is currently underway in the "Forbidden Zone" of Northeastern Mongolia. The GeoEye Foundation awarded Dr. Lin's team a grant of archival, high-resolution IKONOS satellite data which Dr. Lin's team will use for defining the landscape and creating a baseline of information...


To view Dr. Lin's address at TEDx MidAtlantic 2010 on You Tube.


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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Internet Mapping - GeoEye Imagery Collection Showcased

Access to geospatial data over the Internet has grown rapidly over the last five years. This has spawned a cottage industry of geospatial mash-ups targeted at niche markets. Geospatial mashup developers create applications from scratch that display various sources of geospatial data accessible over the internet. The developers aggregate the data and perform analysis and present the information in an easy-to-digest format targeted at specific end users. Typically these mashups leverage API's and are viewed in Google Earth, Microsoft Virtual Earth and Yahoo! Maps. These applications allow the end user to publish their data to various destinations, including local networks or web servers.


GeoEye imagery products provide highly accurate base maps that geospatial mashup developers can use to aggregate with other data and perform analysis on.


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Monday, April 11, 2011

Serving And Protecting (Geospatial Revolution Project) Video - GeoEye is Elevating Insight

New "Serving And Protecting (Geospatial Revolution Project)" video available on GeoEye 101 site. Credit: Penn State University...


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Why We Need It (Geospatial Revolution Project) Video - GeoEye is Elevating Insight

New "Why We Need It (Geospatial Revolution Project)" video available on GeoEye 101 site. Credit: Penn State University...


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Mapping The Road To Peace (Geospatial Revolution Project) Video - GeoEye is Elevating Insight

New "Mapping The Road To Peace (Geospatial Revolution Project)" video available on GeoEye 101 site. Credit: Penn State University...


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How We Got Here (Geospatial Revolution Project) Video - GeoEye is Elevating Insight

New "How We Got Here (Geospatial Revolution Project)" video available on GeoEye 101 site. Credit: Penn State University...


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GeoEye is Elevating Insight 3 Powerful Ways

See the world with new insight and intelligence – anywhere, anytime. GeoEye provides superior, accurate location information and insight to our customers with end-to-end solutions from three business offerings: Imagery Collection, Production Services and Information Services. From sensor to the field, our products and services are managed by some of the most experienced, world-class geospatial imagery experts in our industry, and supported by GeoEye's outstanding customer service.


GeoEye integrates both current and historical imagery, multi-resolution and multi-source, with expert systems for data aggregation, analysis and viewing. Learn more about the three ways we elevate location information and insight – beyond imagery, and beyond expectation – for the critical business of knowing "where" and "when."


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Friday, April 8, 2011

What Can You Really See From Space? - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Featured in Smithsonian Air and Space Museum Blog Post

Most people know that satellites in orbit do useful things such as collect images of the Earth's surface. At the National Air and Space Museum I use satellite images in my job to understand changes in the Earth's land surface. Today millions of people are acquainted with satellite imagery on internet map services. People sometimes ask me if it's possible to see even more detail from space. In this post I'll explore what is really visible in different types of satellite data.


The images on internet map servers are provided by a recent generation of satellites that collect detailed images, including GeoEye's satellites. Objects smaller than automobiles are visible in some of these images. In the past, only military and reconnaissance satellite were capable of this kind of detail...


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Thursday, April 7, 2011

Researchers Help Map Tsunami and Earthquake Damage in Japan - GeoEye Information Services Featured in Blog Post

ScienceDaily (Mar. 24, 2011) — Japan needs maps. Not just any kind -- detailed informational maps georegistered with latitude and longitude and annotated with simple, self-evident details: this bridge is out, this port is damaged, this farm field is scoured; this one is verdant.


Researchers at Rochester Institute of Technology are processing satellite imagery of regions in Japan affected by the 9.0 magnitude earthquake and tsunami that devastated sections of the country's east coast on March 11. The U.S. Geological Survey, a member of the International Charter "Space and Major Disasters," organized the volunteer effort involving about 10 organizations, including Harvard University, George Mason University, Penn State and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.


The RIT team, led by McKeown and Messinger, includes graduate students Sanjit Maitra and Weihua "Wayne" Sun in the Center for Imaging Science and staff members Steve Cavilia, Chris DiAngelis, Jason Faulring and Nina Raqueno. They created the maps using imagery from... GeoEye-1, a high-resolution commercial satellite operated by GeoEye Inc...


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Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Response To Japan's Disaster Relief Efforts - GeoEye Production Services Featured in Article

GeoEye has been supporting the relief efforts by providing its satellite imagery of the devastation in northern Japan to relief agencies, governments and the media. On March 11, 2011, GeoEye's order management team began directing the high-resolution satellites to collect color imagery over the Oshika Peninsula. IKONOS captured the first post-earthquake image at 10:36 a.m. local time. As of March 21, GeoEye had provided 29,000 square kilometers of imagery to Google.


Emergency first responders and the geospatial community are using their imagery as a base map to produce multiple-layer relief maps to assist with damage assessment, route planning and other crucial aspects of this relief effort. Elite search-and-rescue teams that have flown to Japan from around the world to assist in this enormous relief effort are using their imagery to help locate the missing.


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Tuesday, April 5, 2011

GeoEye...Delving Into The Disaster (Japan) - GeoEye Imagery Collection Featured in Article

GeoEye has been supporting the relief efforts by providing its satellite imagery of the devastation in northern Japan to relief agencies, governments and the media. GeoEye's top priority has been to deliver, precise satellite imagery to relief agencies, governments and the media. As soon as the news broke that a major earthquake hit the northern coast of Japan, the GeoEye team quickly began collecting post-earthquake imagery of Japan and provisioning the Company's online web services platform, EyeQ, so GeoEye partners in Japan could use it to aid their country. By sheer coincidence, the first international license for EyeQ was in Japan, and the partner there, Japan Space Imaging, is using EyeQ to help with the massive disaster relief effort...


...Elite search-and-rescue teams that have flown to Japan from around the world to assist in this enormous relief effort are using this imagery to help locate the missing. Plus, GeoEye's "before-and-after" imagery has given people around the world an instant understanding of the extent of the destruction. We have posted Several new before-and-after "slider" images have been posted on the Company's web site, which reveal the extent of the devastation in Japan.


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Monday, April 4, 2011

Response To Japan's Disaster Relief Efforts - GeoEye is Elevating Insight

When a crisis occurs on the scale of the earthquake and tsunami that devastated Japan, we all want to help. We thought you might like to know that GeoEye has been supporting the relief efforts by providing its satellite imagery of the devastation in northern Japan to relief agencies, governments and the media.


GeoEye's top priority: Delivering precise satellite imagery to relief agencies, governments and the media.


As soon as the news broke that a major earthquake hit the northern coast of Japan, the GeoEye team quickly began collecting post-earthquake imagery of Japan and provisioning our online Web services platform, EyeQ, so our partners in Japan could use it to aid their country...


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