Articles in the News Archives Category

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Mar 2015 | No Comment

IFEN GmbH has announced that the German Galileo test and development infrastructure GATE has recently been re- certificated by TÜV SÜD stating the conformance to ISO 17025 as Galileo…

Feb 2015 | No Comment

DAT/EM Systems International® released the 7.1 edition of DAT/EM software products including Summit Evolution™, Landscape™, Capture™, MapEditor™, Ortho+Mosaic™, Airfield3D™ and Contour Creator™. The advancements in the 7.1 DAT/EM Photogrammetric Suite represent the latest evolution in technology and are based on customer input and growth within the geospatial industry. datem.com/release7-1

Feb 2015 | No Comment

The United States Army is soliciting information for eLoran receivers for the warfighter, either stand-alone or integrated with GPS…

Feb 2015 | No Comment

Robotic flight controllers have successfully installed NASA’s Cloud Aerosol Transport System (CATS) aboard the International Space Station…

Feb 2015 | No Comment

Ordnance Survey is teaming up with the Satellite Applications Catapult, an independent technology and innovation company, on the GEMNet project to understand the nature and extent of interference on GNSS…

Feb 2015 | No Comment

Galileo’s navigation messages will shortly stop being updated to enable the migration of a new release for Galileo’s ground mission segment, announced the European Space Agency.

Jan 2015 | No Comment

Facebook is getting even more up close and personal. The main policy change that seems to have grabbed the most intrigue is that It will be using GPS, Bluetooth…

Jan 2015 | No Comment

FARO Technologies, Inc has released FARO CAM2 SmartInspect 1.2, the industry’s first full-featured portable software for basic geometric measurements without

Jan 2015 | No Comment

According to Michael Huerta, head of the Federal Aviation Administration, regulations are in place to prevent drones from interfering with large aircraft — but education about drone safety and regulation enforcement needs to be improved in order to actually keep airways safe.

Jan 2015 | No Comment

A European Space Agency (ESA) Galileo satellite that had slipped into an erroneous orbit soon after deployment last August is reportedly back on its feet, so to speak. The unmanned craft sent its first navigation signal in space on Saturday 29 November 2014 after reaching a new target orbit.