DigitalGlobe Satellite Imagery Helps Relief Workers in Indonesia Establish Refugee Camps and Medical Reachback
18 Avril 2005 - 6:15PM
PR Newswire (US)
DigitalGlobe Satellite Imagery Helps Relief Workers in Indonesia
Establish Refugee Camps and Medical Reachback Silicon Graphics
Demonstrates Imagery at National Association of Broadcasters
Conference LONGMONT, Colo., April 18 /PRNewswire/ --
DigitalGlobe(R) announced that San Diego State University (SDSU) is
using high-resolution QuickBird satellite imagery to aid relief
efforts in Indonesia, following the devastating tsunami that
affected hundreds of thousands of people in the Indian Ocean region
on Dec. 26, 2004. SDSU's Immersive Visualization Center (Viz Center
-- http://citi.sdsu.edu/) used the imagery initially to help
establish refugee camps and provide medical reachback.
DigitalGlobe's imagery of Indonesia is being showcased by Silicon
Graphics Inc. (NYSE:SGI) at the National Association of
Broadcasters conference in Las Vegas, April 18-21, 2005 in Booth
SL1943. SDSU was one of the first to acquire before-and-after
QuickBird satellite images of Banda Aceh, Indonesia, the area most
affected by the tsunami. The "after" images were collected on Dec.
28, just two days following the disaster, and show striking damage
to the coastline, buildings, vegetation and roads. In early
January, two medical doctors from the Viz Center flew to Indonesia
to work with the U.S. military, NGOs and the United Nations to
assess damage and determine where to safely build refugee camps,
medical facilities, communications networks and transportation
routes. "Right after the tsunami, communications in Indonesia were
shattered, and people around the world knew very little about what
happened. The immediate availability of DigitalGlobe's dramatic
imagery helped the world truly understand the damage and the death
tolls. The images motivated people to take immediate action and
send relief to Southeast Asia," said John Graham, a senior research
scientist at the Viz Center. Graham processed the QuickBird imagery
and worked with GeoFusion to load the imagery into the new
Geomatrix streaming tile server, wrote software to compare the
before-and-after images, created 3D fly-throughs, and made the
images available on a secure server hosted at the San Diego
Supercomputer Center (SDSC) for access by relief workers and
decision makers. The digital images were also provided as
poster-size prints flown to Indonesia and hand- carried to Banda
Aceh. According to Eric Frost, co-director of the Viz Center, the
relief team focused its efforts on Indonesia primarily because it
was the hardest hit area, has the least infrastructure and needed
the most reparation. "The imagery has been invaluable for working
with city and village leaders to make rapid decisions. The
ultra-fast urban planning these images enable will have long-term
impacts on the Acehnese people and their way of life," Frost said.
"We are also working with Indonesian partners like the University
of Gadjah Mada, which take our imagery and link to the Indonesian
disaster officials and local NGOs who can most effectively use the
data." The SDSU Viz Center is now processing the tsunami images
into GeoFusion's Geomatrix format by Silicon Graphics Prism(TM), a
new high-performance, IT visualization system from SGI. This
provides an ultra powerful way to distribute terabytes of satellite
imagery. The combination of high-resolution QuickBird data, fast
processing by Silicon Graphics Prism, and the power of GeoFusion
software to deliver the data have allowed SDSU and others to make
significant contributions to the tsunami relief. At the National
Association of Broadcasters conference, SGI will demonstrate the
use of the Banda Aceh imagery and the impact of the tsunami using a
Silicon Graphics Prism system driving a Sony(R) SXRD 4K projector
projecting the images to a large screen. About DigitalGlobe
Longmont, Colo.-based DigitalGlobe (http://www.digitalglobe.com/)
is the clear leader in the global commercial Earth imagery and
geospatial information market. The company's technical superiority
and innovation, unparalleled commitment to customer service,
extensive business partner network and open systems philosophy make
DigitalGlobe the preferred supplier of imagery products.
DigitalGlobe's QuickBird satellite is the world's highest
resolution commercial imaging satellite, and the company will
launch its next- generation WorldView no later than 2006. The
company's updated and growing ImageLibrary contains over one
hundred million square kilometers of global imagery for countless
mapping and planning needs. DigitalGlobe is a registered trademark
of DigitalGlobe, Inc. Silicon Graphics and SGI are registered
trademarks and Silicon Graphics Prism is a trademark of Silicon
Graphics, Inc. in the U.S. and/or other countries worldwide. All
other trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their
respective owners. DATASOURCE: DigitalGlobe CONTACT: Chuck Herring
of DigitalGlobe, +1-303-684-4020, ; or Linda Lidov of Accent Public
Relations, +1-303-417-6303, , for DigitalGlobe Web site:
http://www.digitalglobe.com/ http://citi.sdsu.edu/
Copyright
Somnigroup (NYSE:SGI)
Graphique Historique de l'Action
De Jan 2025 à Fév 2025
Somnigroup (NYSE:SGI)
Graphique Historique de l'Action
De Fév 2024 à Fév 2025