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    Adding heights to dem file arcmap

    Maya007
    By Maya007,
    Hello all,   I want to add wind mill tower heights to the existing dem file at some places. How could this be done?   Thanks for the help, Maya

    Calcite Maps - Styler from ESRI

    rahmansunbeam
    By rahmansunbeam,
    Styler is a new ArcGIS configurable application that can be used to easily create, style and share modern 2D and 3D map apps. Using simple styler parameters you can customize everything from the title, menus and text, to the overall color, theme and layout. The app is hosted on ArcGIS Online and GitHub so you can 1) style maps on-the-fly just by adding URL parameters or 2) if you have an existing web map or web scene, you can style (more advanced) apps step-by-step by configuring them with the n

    Civil Engineering Journal (ISI: Thomson Reuters Master Journal List- Web of Science)

    civilejournal
    By civilejournal,
    Call for Papers We would like to invite you to submit your original work for consideration and possible publication in our research based scientific journal. Civil Engineering Journal (C.E.J) is a multidisciplinary , an open-access, internationally double-blind peer-reviewed journal that is publishing 12 issues per volume (monthly) . Civil Engineering Journal providing a platform for the researchers, academicians, professionals and students to impart and share knowledge in the fo

    Bentley improve their geotechnics portofolio with Plaxis, SoilVision aquisition

    Lurker
    By Lurker,
    For much of the last 25 years, Boston was a construction site. The Big Dig project put an elevated highway under ground, to improve traffic flow and create green space where the roadway had once divided the city. What many people didn’t recognize was how much soil conditions affected the project: Boston is built on landfill, some of it centuries old, and is subject to coastal weather and ocean tides. Digging a tunnel under a working city is never easy; add in our fleet of small to large skyscrap

    Department of the Interior is Considering Charging for Landsat Data

    Lurker
    By Lurker,
    Last year, the Farm Service Agency (FSA) starting floating the idea of charging a licensing fee for its high resolution imagery of the United States starting in 2019. Now, an article in Nature is reporting that the Department of the Interior (DOI), which oversees the USGS, has tasked a federal advisory committee with exploring how instituting a fee for Landsat data might impact scientists and other users.  If implemented, a fee structure for Landsat data would be a departure from the Department

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    • Are you ready to level up your geospatial skills?  Join our comprehensive training course covering ArcMap, ArcGIS Pro, and ArcOnline—the essential tools for modern spatial analysis and programming!   What You’ll Learn: Core functionalities of ArcMap & ArcGIS Pro Cloud-based mapping with ArcGIS Online Automating workflows with Python & ModelBuilder Creating interactive web maps & apps   Who Should Enroll? GIS beginners & professionals Urban planners, environmental scientists, & data analysts Developers looking to integrate spatial programming   Why Choose This Course? Hands-on projects & real-world applications Expert-led sessions & flexible learning  Limited slots available! Click here to register. Let’s shape the future of spatial data together!
    • GPS is an incredible piece of modern technology. Not only does it allow for locating objects precisely anywhere on the planet, but it also enables the turn-by-turn directions we take for granted these days — all without needing anything more than a radio receiver and some software to decode the signals constantly being sent down from space. [Chris] took that last bit bit as somewhat of a challenge and set off to write a software-defined GPS receiver from the ground up. As GPS started as a military technology, the level of precision needed for things like turn-by-turn navigation wasn’t always available to civilians. The “coarse” positioning is only capable of accuracy within a few hundred meters, so this legacy capability is the first thing that [Chris] tackles here. It is pretty fast, though, with the system able to resolve a location in 24 seconds from cold start and then displaying its information in a browser window. Everything in this build is done in Python as well, meaning that it’s a great starting point for investigating how GPS works and for building other projects from there. The other thing that makes this project accessible is that the only other hardware needed besides a computer that runs Python is an RTL-SDR dongle. These inexpensive TV dongles ushered in a software-defined radio revolution about a decade ago when it was found that they could receive a wide array of radio signals beyond just TV. source: Hackaday and  GitHub - chrisdoble/gps-receiver
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