Time changes and technology does as well. Over time the reasons we purchased a product also change. We learn, we grow and we development new thoughts about spatial data, maps and how new designs and applications can be created. Growth leads to new ideas and perceptions, suddenly what was acceptable appears blurs and becomes re-established at another level and in a different form. New expectations for our geographic information systems (GIS) arise and we expect our CAD systems to deliver something more.
Time changes and technology does as well. Over time the reasons we purchased a product also change. We learn, we grow and we development new thoughts about spatial data, maps and how new designs and applications can be created. Growth leads to new ideas and perceptions, suddenly what was acceptable appears blurs and becomes re-established at another level and in a different form. New expectations for our geographic information systems (GIS) arise and we expect our CAD systems to deliver something more. Suddenly print changes to different types of representation and visualization in 2-D seems passe. What’s going on? “What Do We Expect from GIS, CAD, Surveying and Visualization Today?
Our expectations about GIS, CAD, print and visualization have changed greatly — they have increased. The rate and amount of change taking place in terms of hardware and software areas is fast paced. These changes are supplemented by rapidly changing vast amounts of spatial data generated worldwide, often in automated fashion.
The cycle for new data to arrive is shortened to daily periods and sometimes up to the minute for particular kinds of geodata. Both governance and legislative issues are also involved.
Value
In thinking about these changes from a strategic perspective, it appears few key drivers:
But there are other issues to be considered. A number of trends are emerging that we can see on the horizon. And it is not unreasonable to think that many people are picking up on the reverberations.
Technology reach
LIDAR is a hot topic today. It is seen as a technology that is finally reaching it’s full stride and moving into workflows more deeply and fully. In part, this shift is supported through the rise in 3D developments. ESRI is about to announce a true 3D topology and ORACLE has had a 3D database for a little while now. What triggers the shift in this case, seemingly, is the fact that individual LIDAR points are inherently 3D — they can be stored and used more fully that way, again adding value. Where?
It makes great sense at the present time that a product like LizardTech’s LIDAR technology will grow in need. Consider the idea of analysing 3D LIDAR in a GIS with spatial analysis tools. This is coming very soon and will probably be the most powerful change in GIS we have seen in some years. GIS will be able to analyze every one of those LIDAR points collected.
Survey technology companies have been talking about digital survey data for some time now, this is not new. But it takes on new meaning when we have 3D displays. James Cameron, AVATAR movie director thinks so, but geospatial data users can expect to see all those visualisations they have been trying to defend budget wise over the years, now become reality and their supervisors eyes widen in delight as they sign off on new graphic cards — previously a hard fought budget item.
Survey technology has a long reach through work flows. From basic measurements through to design and build, digital data may be reused over and over many times. Where the surveyor ends, the architect and structural specialist begins. The energy analyst follows, all building upon the inital survey data.
The CAD vendors today have embraced design through efficiency. Energy is driving the change as CAD design technologies are increasingly incorporating efficiency analysis, weather and material variables. In addition the energy grid itself is being redesigned to support renewable energies and to enable services to the home and business in a two-way manner.
Visualisation expands
Visualisation is not what it used to be. Graphics cards have been updated to support high-end graphics that are emerging from better design software. While CAD designs have become near near photo-realistic, GIS visualisations are now supporting large data files that circulate through time and space, modeled by health, environment, military, transport and other applications.
There are higher demands to move visualisations to mobile devices, and the emergence of augmented reality in new forms means greater convergence of graphics.
Of all the technologies it seems to me that print is the one under most change. HP, for example, no longer considers itself as printing, but communicating. It’s mission is to enable design workflows at the sharing-collaboration edge. To do that paper is part of the solution, but recognising that design itself involves many professionals, HP has been aiming toward the best way to integrate these individuals together. Part of that solution involves moving CAD across networks and will likely include mobile devices.
Our demands for more photo-realistic experiences partially emanate from the constant increases in new imagery available from Bing and Google. Another part of the demand is driven by CAD software design. Yet another aspect involves immersive environments, like CAVEs. These environments have been around a long time. Fifteen years ago we were creating files suitable for CAVE-like experiences, but getting them into the environments was difficult and demanded facilities available only at universities — super computing. That;s changed. The Cloud itself leveraged against high quality 3D GIS output and GeoDesign could harness complex visualisations at local levels.
I think people expect manufacturers to have some wisdom today. They not only want technology, but they want someone with enlightenment to help them realise some of their creative ideas. They expect to try things out, to engage things they wish to work with and purchase, before they decide.
We expect a lot because we have a lot. So much research has produced a sea of new geospatial products and services that are far superior to those before. Many of these have been aimed at consumers, raising the expectations of regular folks. Competition between company’s has caused this to happen also.
Keep your eye on 3D spatial analysis, my sense is that is going to the hot spot.