We are updating our site but please enjoy some of our great articles!
Apogeo Spatial has entered into a Strategic Partnership with Geospatial World, with relevant articles appearing in both publications.
Apogeo Spatial has been sharing vital Earth Science data and information for 35 years, originally as a newsletter called EO Sat Notes (Earth Observation Notes), then in the 2000’s as Imaging Notes magazine, when Blueline Publishing acquired it from then-Space Imaging. In 2013, the brand of Apogeo Spatial was created from this powerful legacy of sharing why governments, academia and enterprises would use remotely sensed data. For almost 20 years, we curated and created amazing content with stunning graphics, online and in print, until 2020.
The Apogeo Spatial mission is to communicate the power of geospatial tools and technologies in managing the world’s scarce resources and environment, so that humanity has the security of water, food, energy, safety and sovereignty.
In data use as Several other area of the federal government, citizens are unaware of the significant investment, financial and otherwise, needed and executed for their benefit and that of the private sector. This is especially true for freely…
The Mexico City Declaration adopted at the Group on Earth Observations (GEO) Ministerial Summit in November 2015 promises a dynamic Earth observation (EO) agenda for the next four years.
Approved by consensus, this brief, two-page document highlights a number of…
Dear Remote Sensing and Location Professional,
In this issue, we are excited to announce that the OGC has a new important standard for “Digital Earth” – all the various representations of our world that exist online with geospatial accuracy. It’s…
By Scott Simmons / Executive Director / Standards Programs Open Geospatial Consortium / www.opengeospatial.org The problem with standards is that a standards document is difficult to read and convert into a product. A standards document must be clear, internally-consistent,...
Some disasters disappear from headlines before they ever have a chance to be noticed. Others can survive at least one 24-hour news cycle. It is easy to recall the coverage of the Haiti earthquake or Typhoon Haiyan, but Cyclone…