TS Eliot's header quote indicates that I'm back home again: to bridge geoscience and GIS in petroleum I've done for a while now - see on my LinkedIn how long - it isn't hard to believe then, that I dusted off a master data management diagram from over a decade ago:
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Showing posts with label OpenSpirit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OpenSpirit. Show all posts
Monday, 22 November 2010
Wednesday, 24 March 2010
A tale of two approaches, part II
Things have moved since my previous post: even though ESRI doesn't want to be geodesign, that is high on their agenda in their business partner conference this week. And since where 2.0 among many others hail location services as the next big thing, it's no surprise Wired quotes Jack Dangermond as pushing handhelds for onsite design as I imagine it:
Saturday, 20 March 2010
2D or not 2D, part deux
There's a comprehesive move toward fairly generic realtime 3D, beyond the many, many traditional implementations. Satish Pai said at a Schlumberger Forum over five years ago that video gaming consoles would drive 3D visualisation in petroleum. Steve Ballmer recently asked at Microsoft's Global Energy Forum if X-Box might be the next console (below)? Google Earth uses movie industry techniques to speed up visualisation. And military techniques used in seismic visualisation were presented at FindingPetroleum's seminar Advances in Geophysics & Sub-surface Description this week.
Labels:
3D,
4D,
ESRI,
FindingPetroleum,
GEOINT,
GIS,
OpenSpirit,
SafeSoft,
webGIS,
webmap
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