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Satellite tracking technology has revealed in detail for the very first time the annual movements of thousands of loggerhead turtles that live off the east coast of the US.

The ten-year study shows that they go back to the same spots year after year.

This means researchers can now say where, to within a few tens of kilometres, the turtles will turn up at any point during the year.

Support vs Training

Written by Wednesday, 29 June 2011 03:02

At Loggerhead Navigation we provide great support for customers, based in our own experience. We have years of experience of GIS projecs, across many industries, that allows us to know the best way to make use of  each piece of hardware and software that we offer, to obtain the best results, in terms of quality of the deliverable, cost and overall effort. We are experts.

Purchasing a product from Loggerhead Navigation will ensure you that either it works correctly, or we will be available help you to get it working properly, or otherwise we will replace your purchase. This is what we call support.

However, if what you really need is not only an equipment that works, but also find out the best way of using it, applying best practices and adapting your workflows to maximize your productivity, we could train you for that. This is what we call training.

When you include training, we explicitly say it at the time of purchase. Typical training includes a full day in our offices and a certain additional time for you to ask questions over the first period of use. We could also provide training remotely via Skype and similar technologies, which happens to be a great way to balance time availability with experts’ access at an affordable cost.

As training is expensive, inexpensive receivers don’t include training as part of the package.

If you are a knowledgeable user, you pay no training and get the best price.

Purchase Pricing and Training

This is an example of how pricing might work:

Sales
Price
Discount % Discount $
MSRP: $2,750 0% $-   0 Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price
STREET: $2,585 -6% $-165 Probable street price from dealer
WEB: $2,475 -10% $-275 Lowest price from web discounter

This table shows how pricing works according to the system you chose to purchase. Obviously, choosing the web low price and considering that training runs around $800 per day, you must expect the best support we can give but no training. If you purchase a receiver at MSRP price, for instance, you can expect $275 worth (2½ hours) of training.

There is one thing you have to be sure of: we’ll give you a great service and the best products on the market.

Please consider that Web base pricing is a great alternative for all users.

The right place, the right purchase

When you choose us and you purchase an instrument, you must be sure that we’ve checked each and every part of it, so we’re selling you exactly what we offer and exactly what the package says it is.

For instance, we inspect every USB and it serial ports, the touch screen, batteries and charging system, the receiver, the battery backup of system settings, the SD card slot, software,  retention of settings, etc. This is part of our responsibility as sellers. Yours include returning an instrument which does not work, for technicians to repair it.

If you purchased your receiver on the web from another dealer, we invite you to ask your local dealer  (or us) to quote a price for individual training. As we are experts, we can train you on your equipment purchased from any dealer.

Accuracy versus Precision

Written by Wednesday, 29 June 2011 02:55

A surveyor struggles for both accuracy and precision. “Accuracy” and “precision” are terms often used by many people interchangeably. However, for those in the surveying profession and other technical and in scientific fields, these words have different implications. To surveyors, “accuracy” refers to how closely a measurement or observation comes to measuring a "true value," since measurements and observations are always subject to error.  “Precision” refers to how closely repeated measurements or observations come to duplicating measured or observed values.

To help differentiate the meaning of these two terms, four cases of rifle shots fired at a bull’s eye target, each with different results was used.

Case 1

Not accurate, not precise: A shooter stands, aims through the rifle’s telescopic sight, and fires four shots at a target.  Upon studying the target, the shooter noticed that all four shots are high and are scattered all around that part of the target. These shots were neither accurate (not close to the center) nor precise (not close to each other).

Case 2:

Precise, not accurate: The shooter assumes a level position, rests the barrel of the rifle on a support, takes careful aim, holds his breath, and gently squeezes the trigger. The four shots are very close together but all are high and to the left of the bull’s eye. These shots are precise (close together), but not accurate (not close to the center of the target).

Case 3: Accurate, not precise: The shooter adjusts the rifle’s telescopic sight and, full of confidence that the problem of inaccuracy has been solved, stands and quickly fires four shots.  Upon studying the target, the four holes are scattered across the target, but the location of each of the four is very close to the bull’s eye.  These shots are accurate, but not precise.

Case 4:

Accurate, precise: The shooter again assumes a level position, rests the barrel of the rifle on a support, takes careful aim, holds his breath, and gently squeezes the trigger four times. The four holes are very close to the center of the target and are very close together. These shots are accurate and precise.

To show the distinction between terms through a surveying example, imagine surveyors very carefully measuring the distance between two survey points about 30 meters (approximately 100 feet) apart 10 times with a measuring tape. These would be very precise measurements if all 10 of the results agree with each other to within two millimeters (less than one-tenth of an inch). However, suppose the tape they used was too long by 10 millimeters. Even though the measurements are very precise, it would not be accurate. Other factors that might affect the accuracy or precision of tape measurements include:  wrong spacing of the marks on the tape, use of the tape without the correct tension to control the amount of sag in the tape, and use of the tape at a temperature different from the temperature at which it was calibrated.

Source: NOAA

ESRI renames GIS product family

Written by Tuesday, 21 June 2011 02:42

Esri is making several name changes within ArcGIS. These changes will take effect with the release of ArcGIS 10.1. The reason for these modifications is to reinforce the fact that, regardless of where and how ArcGIS is used, it is the same system. Here are the main changes being made:

Mobile GIS Technology Trends

Written by Friday, 03 June 2011 10:57
Geospatial Insights Webinar Series

Mobile GIS Technology Trends

Register Now

Date: Thursday, June 16, 2011
Time: 10:00 a.m. Pacific / 1:00 p.m. Eastern / 5:00 p.m. GMT
Speaker: Eric Gakstatter, Geospatial Solutions Editor
Duration: 60 minutes

Sponsored by: Magellan

Esri Releases ArcPad 10.0.2

Written by Wednesday, 27 April 2011 07:01
Esri releases ArcPad 10.0.2, the latest version of Esri's mobile geographic information system (GIS) software application., making field mapping and data collection easier. The new version extends customization options and annotation capabilities, simplifying tasks and increasing access to key geographic data.

According to the announcement, ArcPad includes advanced GIS and GPS capabilities for capturing, editing, and displaying geographic information quickly and efficiently. Critical data can be checked in and out of a multiuser or personal geodatabase and shared throughout an organization. The improved customization capabilities in version 10.0.2 let people more easily add, delete, or modify standard ArcPad tools.

Trimble announced it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire privately-held Ashtech S.A.S., headquartered in Carquefou, France, and its affiliates. The acquisition is expected to expand Trimble's Spectra Precision portfolio of survey solutions and allow the company to better address emerging markets worldwide. Closing of the transaction, anticipated in the second quarter, is subject to certain closing conditions. Financial terms were not disclosed.

"With the acquisition of Ashtech, survey and construction professionals using Spectra Precision's range of surveying solutions should be able to enjoy an even more comprehensive set of GNSS instruments to meet their daily job requirements," said Joe Denniston, vice president of Trimble's Spectra Precision Business. "Combining Ashtech's wide portfolio of GNSS products with Spectra Precision's global distribution network can provide surveyors exciting new choices for optimal efficiency."

"Trimble's acquisition of Ashtech is an ideal fit for both organizations. Our innovative GNSS portfolio and expertise complements Spectra Precision's powerful brand and global reach," said Francois Erceau, vice president and general manager of Ashtech. "The acquisition should benefit Ashtech's existing customers in the markets we serve and enhance our ability to support them with an even broader portfolio moving forward."

The operating results of the acquired business will be reported within Trimble's Engineering and Construction segment.

Source: GPS World

Magellan announced it's re-entering the GIS market with the eXplorist Pro 10, a rugged, lightweight and waterproof GPS handheld device specifically designed for GPS/GIS data collection.

According to the announcement, featuring a vibrant 3-inch, WQVGA transflective color touchscreen, 533MHz processor and 128MB RAM, the eXplorist Pro 10 packs the power needed to work with maps and large data sets into a compact-handheld form factor. It comes with 4GB of onboard storage and is expandable with up to 32GB via MicroSDHC card slot, enabling large data sets such as aerial photos to be loaded easily.

WAAS PRN 135 Resumes Normal Operation

Written by Wednesday, 23 March 2011 20:18

The FAA announced on March 18, 2011 that as of 3:24pm US Eastern Time, WAAS PRN 135 resumed to normal operations. After analyzing its performance for over 60 days, the FAA stated that all requirements have been met.

GNSS Program Manager Leo Eldredge reported that the WAAS Team recently received the final report from Lockheed Martin on the failure of Galaxy 15.  "After a review of that report, the WAAS Team determined that the satellite was ready to be returned to operations" he added.

We are working with these other products to provide legitimate and proven "solutions" to our clients that are looking to solve problems, get the right tool for the job, save time and money, and are open minded and not "married" to only a brand name.

Loggerhead Navigation is launching new additions to the "Try it before you buy it" program. 

New end-to-end solutions are available for on-the-field GIS projects, that constitute the ideal solution for temporary assignments or point projects. These packages provide all the hardware and software required, alterady installed and integrated for seamless operation.  Plus we also provide enablement sessions to allow your staff to be ready for the field immediately.

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