forestry

Supergeo Unveils SuperVeyor 2013 for Flexible Field Data Collection

Supergeo Technologies, the leading global provider of complete GIS software and solutions, launches SuperVeyor 2013, the mobile GIS application, for flexible field data collection.

 

Designed to be the bundled solution for various Windows Mobile devices, SuperVeyor 2013 allows surveyors to easily collect, edit, measure, and query spatial data for greater field productivity.

 

Not only offering a friendly user interface, SuperVeyor 2013 can work with GPS to locate current position and record GPS track. Moreover, the mobile GIS app supports multi-language interfaces, local coordinate system settings, specific program splash, etc. to meet various requirements of filed tasks.

 

Taking the advantage of custom flexibility, SuperVeyor 2013 is ideal for developing your own-branded solutions to achieve business objectives in the surveying and mobile GIS applications such as facility management, agriculture, census, mining, forestry etc.

 

More information about SuperVeyor 2013, please visit http://www.supergeotek.com/SuperVeyor.aspx

 

#  #  #

 

About Supergeo

 

Supergeo Technologies Inc. is a leading global provider of GIS software and solutions. Since the establishment, Supergeo has been dedicated to providing state-of-the-art geospatial technologies and comprehensive services for customers around the world. It is our vision to help users utilize geospatial technologies to create a better world.

 

Supergeo software and applications have been spread over the world to be the backbone of the world’s mapping and spatial analysis. Supergeo is the professional GIS vendor, providing GIS-related users with complete GIS solutions for desktop, mobile, server, and Internet platforms.

Batch Geonews: Voxel.js Minecraft-like, QGIS for Android, Side-by-Side Router, and much more

Here's the recent geonews in batch mode.

On the open source front:

On the Esri front:

On the Google front:

In the miscellaneous category:

In the maps category:

Google Geonews: Google Dev Glasses Available, Google Earth for Android 7 Released with 3D Cities, and more

Here's recent Google-related geonews, with some pretty interesting.

  • While there's a new uninformative official entry on Project Glass, their augmented reality glasses we mentioned in April, Slashdot provides more information in this entry named More Details On Google Glass, including: "As we mentioned earlier, the developers at I/O have the option to buy the 'Explorer Edition' of Google Glass for $1,500. In addition to the (functional, but unfinished) device itself, they also get access to Google's engineers and to keep up with the devices development. Worry not: when the consumer version of the device is finalized, it will be cheaper, but of course they aren't ready to talk about actual prices yet. As for availability: "Less than a year after we get these Explorer Editions out.""

From official sources:

  • A new Google Earth for Android version is out, with new 3D cities imagery, yes, that's the new great city imagery similar to what Apple Maps will provide with iOS 6, and Google will soon provide a new  iOS version of Google Earth too. The other major feature is the 'Tour guide': "We’ve put together short tours of thousands of famous places and historical sites across the globe so it’s easier than ever to discover amazing places." Here's which cities have the new 3D imagery: "Boulder, Boston, Charlotte, Lawrence, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Portland, San Antonio, San Diego, San Francisco, Santa Cruz and Tampa in the United States, along with Rome, Italy."
  • The Dev blog announced that Public transit routing and layer now are now available in the Google Maps API

Batch Geonews: GeoExplorer, Google vs Apple Maps, Unmanned Aerial Systems, London Olympics, Tornadoes, and more

Here's the recent geonews in batch mode.

From the open source front:

From the major companies front:

  • I liked the Google vs Apple mapping discussion from Peter Batty: "Google announces that it is scared of Apple Maps
    [...] Now don't get me wrong, Google is the market leader and Apple has everything to prove."
    See also his entry named Apple Maps: Predictions and Questions, which are also of course innovations Google could implement. Viva competition! (well ok, I admit I prefer cooperation ;-)
  • James has an interesting entry named One Man's Disruptor is Another Man's Incumbent, the incumbents are Google Maps, MapQuest, Esri and Microsoft, and the disruptors are MapBox, Esri and Apple

Discussed over Slashdot:

In the everything-else category:

In the maps category:

As a bonus for reading till the end, here's a interesting quote: "If a picture is worth a thousand words, a map can be worth a thousand spreadsheets."

Batch Geonews: China Leading the Geospatial Industry, Geospatial World Forum 2012, NoSQL, ESRI at the Government, and much more

Here's the recent geonews in batch mode.

From the open source / open data front:

From the Google front:

In the everything-else category:

In the maps category:

Monday Geonews: GDAL Compression Algorithms Compared, GeoCommons 2.0 Launched, Pentax GPS Unit, U.S. Pedestrian Deaths Map, and more

Here's the recent geonews in batch mode, covering the last 10 days.

From the open source front:

From the Esri front:

From the Google front:

In the miscellaneous category:

In the maps category:

Monday Geonews: GeoExt Licensing, MapQuest Down 22%, ESRI Forestry Templates, Wikileaks Iraq War logs Mapped, and much more

I wasn't available to share the recent geonews in batch mode last Friday, so there you go!

On the Google front:

On the Microsoft front:

On the open source / data front:

On the ESRI front:

In the miscellaneous category:

In the maps category:

Syndicate content