Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Geospatial Production Services - GeoEye Showcased

GeoEye takes clients to the next level by using the world's most advanced digital processing techniques, a passion for leading the industry in technology development, and nearly three decades of experience.


Using high-resolution satellite and aerial imagery sources such as IKONOS, GeoEye-1, the DMC (Digital Mapping Camera) System, and LiDAR, we're able to provide cost-effective solutions...


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Monday, February 27, 2012

GeoEye is Elevating Insight - Corporate Overview PDF

GeoEye is a leading source of geospatial information and insight for decision makers and analysts who need a clear understanding of our changing world to protect lives, manage risk, and optimize resources. Each day, organizations in defense and intelligence, public safety, critical infrastructure, energy, and online media rely on GeoEye's imagery, tools, and expertise to support important missions around the globe. Widely recognized as a pioneer in high-resolution satellite imagery, GeoEye has evolved into a complete provider of geospatial intelligence solutions. GeoEye's ability to collect, process, and analyze massive amounts of geospatial data allows our customers to quickly see precise changes on the ground and anticipate where events may occur in the future.


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Friday, February 24, 2012

GeoEye...Disaster Response With Satellite Tasking (Imagery)

[SatNews] GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY) will jointly develop a new crisis response imagery service with Esri, the leading global geographic information software provider. This service, expected to be released this spring, will augment Esri's current disaster response capability with GeoEye's ability to task its satellite to collect high-resolution satellite imagery after a crisis. Currently, Esri supports disaster and crisis response globally with best practices, technology and field response teams. GeoEye content plays a critical role in all aspects of disaster response. The new service will provide Esri and their user community access to timely and quality imagery during disasters.


This new bundled solution is critical as current world events escalate and first responders, government, and commercial risk organizations have the need to see, understand and respond to crisis events when lives and property are at risk. ArcGIS users will be able to leverage GeoEye's map-accurate imagery and Esri tools to gain clear and timely insight before, during and after a crisis, emergency or global event.


Chris Tully, GeoEye's senior vice president of sales, said, "We're extremely pleased that Esri chose GeoEye as their imagery partner for this important work. Geospatial technology plays a critical role in determining where resources should be deployed most effectively after a crisis. We feel confident that Esri users will see immediate benefits when they leverage timely GeoEye event imagery and Esri support through this service."


"Imagery plays a vital role during events," says Russ Johnson, Esri's director of Public Safety and Homeland Security. "It allows us to rapidly visualize impacts, analyze change and empower field teams conducting mobile operations. GeoEye and Esri share the same vision for supporting global incidents, and we are excited about what this means for users worldwide."


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Rapid Satellite Imagery Service on the Way - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Featured in UPI Article

A rapid-response satellite imagery service for crisis situations could be available as early as this spring from two U.S. companies.


The service from Virginia's Esri, a geographic information software company, and GeoEye, another Virginia company, will enable more timely crisis response to disaster response.


"We're extremely pleased that Esri chose GeoEye as their imagery partner for this important work," said Chris Tully, GeoEye's senior vice president of sales. "Geospatial technology plays a critical role in determining where resources should be deployed most effectively after a crisis.


"We feel confident that Esri users will see immediate benefits when they leverage timely GeoEye event imagery and Esri support through this service."


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Thursday, February 23, 2012

Esri and GeoEye Developing Global Crisis Response Service

GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY), a leading source of geospatial information and insight, announced that it will jointly develop a new crisis response imagery service with Esri, the leading global geographic information software provider. This service, expected to be released this spring, will augment Esri's current disaster response capability with GeoEye's ability to task its satellite to collect high-resolution satellite imagery after a crisis. Currently, Esri supports disaster and crisis response globally with best practices, technology and field response teams. GeoEye content plays a critical role in all aspects of disaster response. The new service will provide Esri and their user community access to timely and quality imagery during disasters...


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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Here's the Site Iran Doesn't Want Inspectors to See

Iran can banish U.N. inspectors from its military sites but it can't obstruct the prying eyes of commercial satellites.


On Tuesday, officials from the International Atomic Energy Agency left Iran in a huff after the country refused to grant permission to inspect a military site in Parchin where a facility suspected of testing explosives exists. In light of Iran's coyness about its facilities, we asked Mark Bender, executive director of the commercial satellite imagery company GeoEye, for a closer look.


The image above, provided to The Atlantic Wire, shows the sprawling Parchin military complex, which is 18 miles southeast of Tehran, taken from a GeoEye satellite 423 miles in space. We showed the image to Paul Brannan, who specializes in deciphering high-resolution satellite imagery for the Institute for Science and International Security, and he pointed to the areas marked in red as of interest to IAEA inspectors...


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MJ Harden Overview - GeoEye Production Services Showcased

MJ Harden Associates, Inc., a GeoEye company, offers a range of geospatial products and services to help you efficiently develop and manage your Geographic Information Systems (GIS), and to support engineering and development, documentation, and resource inventory applications.


Our services are based on more than 50 years of experience in aerial photography, photogrammetric mapping, GIS implementation, and geospatial Information Technology (IT) development. This experience, along with our wealth of technological expertise, is the value behind the services we offer—from consulting and planning to implementation, maintenance, and support.


Whether you are engineering for growth and progress, or updating existing GIS data, MJ Harden gives you the many advantages of the best geospatial technologies available...


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Tuesday, February 21, 2012

More Than a Bird's-Eye View - GeoEye's Matt O'Connell Featured in New York Times Article

In 1976, I enrolled in law school at the University of Virginia. After graduating, I joined a Wall Street law firm and focused on mergers and acquisitions for entrepreneurs and media companies. That led to working for Cablevision as assistant general counsel, which was like graduate school for innovators. Then I worked as a lawyer in radio and TV operations.


Business and finance seemed more fun than law, so I left for a job as managing director at Crest Communications Holdings, a private equity company that invested in and advised communications companies. Crest had invested in Orbimage, a subsidiary of Orbital Sciences and the precursor of GeoEye.


In 2001, Orbimage lost a satellite when a rocket failed at launch, and the rocket and satellite crashed into the Indian Ocean. The company stood to lose millions in potential business.


I had helped troubled companies for Crest before, so it decided I should travel to Orbimage headquarters in Virginia and hire a new C.E.O. It was to be a two-month assignment, but I couldn't find anyone who wanted the job. Though I had a home in New York, I ended up living at a Holiday Inn near Dulles International Airport for four years while I stepped into the position.


We filed for bankruptcy the next year, cut costs, listened closely to customers' needs and emerged from bankruptcy in January 2004. Nine months later, we won a huge contract from the federal government; we were selected over three larger companies that had formed a syndicate to try to win the contract. Two years later, we acquired their joint venture and changed our name to GeoEye.


GeoEye images were used to help evacuate people from Haiti after the earthquake two years ago. Last spring, when Libyan officials made the press leave during the uprising there, we were able to continue visual coverage from the air.


We also assisted in military intelligence-gathering in Iraq and Afghanistan and provided analytics to United States ground operations for other, classified military and intelligence efforts. In 2010, we bought a company that adds demographics and information from a Web search to satellite images, which means we can predict where events may occur...


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Friday, February 17, 2012

Paradise Island - Nassau, Bahamas - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Showcased

GeoEye - This half-meter resolution satellite image shows the Atlantis Paradise Island resort and waterpark on Paradise Island in the Bahamas, located southeast of the United States in the Atlantic Ocean. The image was collected by the GeoEye-1 satellite on July 11, 2009 while flying 423 miles above the Earth at an average speed of 17,000 mph.


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Thursday, February 16, 2012

Most Inmates in Deadly Honduras Prison Fire Were Not Convicted: Government Report

Comayagua, Honduras - The prisoners whose scorched bodies were carried out piece by piece Thursday morning from a charred Honduran prison had been locked inside an overcrowded penitentiary where most inmates had never been charged, let alone convicted, according to an internal Honduran government report obtained by The Associated Press.


More than half of the 856 inmates of the Comayagua farm prison north of the Central American country's capital were either awaiting trial or being held as suspected gang members, according to a report sent by the Honduran government this month to the United Nations....


In this Sept. 2009 satellite image provided by GeoEye, Granja prison, center, is surrounded by residences in Comayahua, Honduras. A fire broke out at the prison late Tuesday Feb. 14, 2012, burning and suffocating inmates in their locked cells and killing as many as 356 people in one of the world's deadliest prison fires in a century, according to authorities. (AP Photo/GeoEye/EyeQ)


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GeoEye and TerraGo Webcast : Maximizing Satellite Imagery

According to Frost & Sullivan, the commercial satellite imagery market generated $1,243 million in revenue in 2011. The firm projects that the market will grow to $2,602 million by 2016. With the growth of the market and the increased reliance on geospatial intelligence across a variety of public and private sector verticals, what tools are available to empower users, regardless of their level of geospatial training, to maximize the value of these assets?


Frost & Sullivan Research Analyst Daniel Longfield, along with representatives from GeoEye and TerraGo Technologies presented a Webinar on Tuesday, Feb. 14 at 2:00 PM Eastern which explored the global commercial satellite imagery market and available technology such as GeoEye's cloud-based EyeQ platform and TerraGo GeoPDF imagery production.


Watch a replay of the webcast now for an informative look at the commercial satellite imagery market and the tools available to help you make the most of your organization's geospatial maps and imagery.


Attending the Esri Federal GIS Conference?


Visit GeoEye in booth #624 and TerraGo in booth #501 Feb. 22-24 in Washington, D.C. to see innovative tools for extending, exchanging and exploiting geospatial maps and imagery, as well as the latest software from TerraGo for enhanced geospatial collaboration.


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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Take this NOAA Survey and Explain Why Increasing the Resolution of Commercial Satellite Imagery is Important

The study is a Congressionally Directed Action and conducted by NOAA to determine what the commercial market place wants/needs in terms of geospatial imagery resolution in order to be able to maintain its leadership position in geospatial technologies and solutions globally.


Global Marketing Insights, Inc. (GMI) is collecting information for NOAA focused on restrictions on the resolution of electro-optical (EO) imagery collected from US satellites that commercial companies may sell and the ways in which this will impact the Aerial, Commercial, Fed Civil Government and Academic sectors.


Proposed changes under consideration include changing the resolution restriction on commercial sales of satellite imagery from 0.5 meters ground sample distance (GSD) to .25meters GSD.


We invite you to take the survey and make your resolution requirements heard. NOAA's deliverable will go to congress April 15th, 2012 but the end user feedback on this survey ends this Friday.


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Imagery Collection - GeoEye Showcased

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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GeoEye Satellite Clears Design Phase

GeoEye Inc. completed the last stage of design reviews for a National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency satellite program, GeoEye announced Thursday.


NGA approved the review for the agency's EnhancedView program Jan. 26.


GeoEye said the GeoEye-2 satellite will be fully operational by 2013.


Carl Alleyne, GeoEye's vice president of engineering, said NGA's approval means the company's system meets federal requirements and moves the firm-fixed-price program closer to completion.


The satellite will include an ITT Exelis-produced camera with 34-centimeter resolution imagery, used for tasking and image collecting.


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Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Maps, Meth and the Lord's Resistance Army - GeoEye Featured in Google Policy by the Numbers Article

Maps have evolved in some pretty amazing ways, from the night sky maps carved onto cave walls in Lascaux, to modern day collaborative maps built by millions of citizen cartographers around the world. Using maps, we can look at how the world around us has changed. We can also use maps to govern more effectively, save lives or just find the cheapest beer.


But what makes maps really exciting isn't what they can tell us about our past or present, but what they could potentially tell us about our future, both good and bad.


A recent Fast Company piece entitled, "Google Maps Help Predict Meth Labs Before They Open" touches on this idea. In his 2009 book, Geography and the Drug Addiction, Dr. Max Lu took three years of data around meth lab seizures and used it to show the likely spread of those meth labs in the future.


Thousands of miles away, predictive analysis was being used by GeoEye to map political conflict and refugees in central Africa. Using the AnthroMapper and Signature Analyst tools, GeoEye's analysts were able to identify the pattern of both the Lord's Resistance Army and related refugee populations.


They then used statistical models to represent the geospatial "signature" of this activity and identified regions where new conflict was more likely to occur in the future. Combining this model with population density statistics helped NGOs, local governments and the military focus their resources...


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Monday, February 13, 2012

Satellites for Climate Checks Get Boost After Durban Talks

Feb. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Brazilian deforestation and melting polar ice caps are feeding a boom in demand in the $2.1 billion market for satellite data, images and services used to monitor the planet...


Illegal Logging - Satellites also serve to step up surveillance of illegal logging, said Mark Brender, executive director of the GeoEye Foundation, a non-profit organization set up by GeoEye Inc.


"Satellites are like a silent watchman in space looking down on Earth," Brender said, citing a project to unveil rosewood trafficking and illegally sourced timber in Madagascar.


One developing country that's tapping satellite intelligence is the African republic of Gabon. President Ali-Ben Bongo Ondimba in 2010 set up AGEOS, a national space observation agency that will also monitor the environment in 20 neighboring nations, including Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of Congo.


"The knowledge of our environment is thanks mainly to satellites," the project's chief, Aboubakar Mambimba, said in a phone interview from Gabon's capital, Libreville. "It gives us knowledge on the state of our forests, our water resources and helps us implement effective policies to preserve the environment."


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Friday, February 10, 2012

Sahara Desert, East Algeria - GeoEye High Resolution Imagery Showcased

GeoEye - The Eastern Algerian portion of the Sahara is an otherworldly place, a region of great diversity with endless stretches of sand dunes and rocky platforms that can reach more than 2,000 meters. The Tassili n'Ajjer "Plateau of the Rivers" National Park is a vast plateau in southeast Algeria at the borders of Libya, Niger, and Mali, covering 72,000 square kilometers. (GeoEye-1 Satellite Earth Imagery)


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Thursday, February 9, 2012

Mark Udall Questions Intelligence Leaders on U.S. National Security - You Tube Video

As a member of both the Senate Armed Services Committee and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Udall was eager to hear from leaders of the intelligence community about the current and projected threats to the national security of the United States. The witnesses included Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, Director of the CIA David Petraeus, FBI Director Robert Mueller, Defense Intelligence Agency Director Lt. General Ronald Burgess, Director Philip Goldberg of the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research, Department of Homeland Security's Undersecretary for Intelligence and Analysis Caryn Wagner, and Director Matt Olsen of the National Counterterrorism Center. (GeoEye)


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GeoEye Successfully Completes Final Critical Design Review for the EnhancedView Program

GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY), a leading source of geospatial information and insight, announced that it has successfully completed the System Critical Design Review, the last of four critical design reviews in its EnhancedView Program. This program includes the development of the GeoEye-2 satellite and an upgraded ground system architecture.


On January 26, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) approved the System Critical Design Review. This review was the final step to verify that GeoEye's space, ground and overall system level designs meet the stringent operational and security requirements of the NGA. Completion of these four critical design reviews also confirms the system will support all mission requirements and federal space standards for the EnhancedView Program.


Carl Alleyne, GeoEye's vice president of engineering, said, "This on-time achievement clears the way for bringing this important firm, fixed-price program to timely completion while meeting all of the U.S. government requirements."


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Frost & Sullivan, GeoEye and TerraGo Technologies to Demonstrate Cloud-based Global Commercial Satellite Imagery Distribution and Collaboration in Feb

Representatives from Frost & Sullivan, GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY) and TerraGo® Technologies will present a webinar on Feb. 14 about the global commercial satellite imagery market and available cloud-based and geospatial collaboration technologies to help users more quickly and easily access, distribute and interact with complex maps and digital imagery.


The webinar, to be held at 2:00 p.m. Eastern Tuesday, Feb. 14, will feature Frost and Sullivan Research Analyst Daniel Longfield presenting the latest data for the global satellite imagery market and industry executives demonstrating how cloud-based technologies such as GeoEye's EyeQ platform and TerraGo GeoPDF® imagery production capability can facilitate situational awareness for faster response, increased productivity and improved decision making....


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Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Self-Inflicted Blindness: The Austerity Threat To Innovation - Forbes Article

In this age of ballooning U.S. debt, it's hardly surprising that many Democrats and Republicans are pushing to reduce American military spending. But a closer examination of what's at stake reveals just how troubling the embrace of defense austerity will prove to be—for our nation's security, for the future of U.S. military innovation, and (of particular interest to this column) for American technological leadership...


...The commercial satellite industry provides critical geospatial information, imagery, and analysis to the Department of Defense and the national security community. They rely on the images and data to monitor hot spots around the globe.


It is likely you have benefitted from the collaboration between the military and the commercial satellite sector without even realizing it. Many of the dramatic, high-resolution, wide-scale satellite photos found today on Google or Bing are captured by DigitalGlobe and GeoEye, two American satellite imaging firms. Indeed, geospatial satellite imaging is starting to yield a surprisingly wide range of beneficial spillover effects.


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Satellite-Imagery Firms in Colorado Hope to Avoid Steep Federal Cuts - GeoEye Featured in Denver Post Article

Satellite images so sharp that a baseball home plate is recognizable from more than 400 miles hang in the federal budget balance — and with them the fortunes of two companies with Colorado operations.


High-resolution Earth images snapped by a squadron of high-flying commercial satellites find uses in oil and gas exploration, mining, agriculture, environmental monitoring, disaster response, national security and defense.


But the images and accompanying maps, analyses and other products are particularly critical to the military and intelligence communities.


Proposed steep cuts in the U.S. Department of Defense budget could affect satellite-imagery providers DigitalGlobe, headquartered in Longmont, and GeoEye, based in Virginia with a processing and operations center in Thornton. Combined, the companies have about 1,200 employees...


A GeoEye satellite caught the old Mile High Stadium and new Mile High on May 9, 2004, during the stages of destruction of one and the construction stage.


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Tuesday, February 7, 2012

GeoEye Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2011 Earnings Conference Call Announcement

GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY), a leading source of geospatial information and insight, announced it will host its fourth quarter conference call and webcast for investors and analysts on Tuesday, March 13, 2012, beginning at 8:30 a.m. EDT. The call will include a review of the fourth quarter and fiscal year 2011 financial results, a discussion of the Company's operations and an update on the outlook for Fiscal 2012.


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SeaStarSport Name That Place Sweepstakes - GeoEye

The SeaStarSport service is brought to you by GeoEye, the world's largest earth imaging company and provider of the highest resolution commercial satellite imagery available today. We are please to share some images from our GeoEye-1 satellite and to offer you a chance at winning a free one year subscription to our advanced package! Each month we will post a new image of somewhere in the world. Maybe it will be one of our favorite fishing locations, maybe it will be something totally different. You'll just have to log on and see. Good luck!


To enter fill out the entry form below and choose the correct answer. Prize awarded each month includes a SeaStarSport Advanced Package subscription (a $399 value)...


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Podcast: Panel of Geospatial Experts Discuss Viability of Commercial Imagery and EnhancedView

Recently a number of geospatial experts have authored articles that highlight the viability of commercial imagery – in the face of the proposed U.S. defense budget cuts, which could potentially have a significant impact on the commercial remote sensing industry. We were fortunate enough to have gathered three of these experts on one podcast today. Today, we are speaking with Kevin Pomfret, Executive Director of the Centre for Spatial Law and Policy; Josh Hartman, Principal at the Center for Strategic Space Studies and the CEO of the Horizon Strategies Group; and Dennis Jones, President of the Jones Consulting Group. (GeoEye)


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Thursday, February 2, 2012

EyeQ Overview - GeoEye Information Services Showcased

EyeQ managed services by GeoEye integrate secure, timely and accurate location information into your current business environment with global, 24/7 access. Combining GeoEye's multi-source imagery products with on-demand tools for managing information and project-based collaboration, we empower our enterprise clients to search, organize and share geospatial data while reducing the total cost of ownership with a supported annual subscription for hosting and content. EyeQ's easy-to-use, standards-based interface and GeoEye-hosted resources allow both advanced and non-technical users to interact with business-critical location intelligence...


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