Search results for "qut"

Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS)

ITS Australia expands National Awards

Intelligent Transport Systems Australia is calling for nominations for its National ITS Awards.

Read full story Comments { 0 }
Fugro has purchased ROAMES

Fugro purchases ROAMES

Fugro has purchased the ROAMES Asset Services unit from Ergon Energy.

Read full story Comments { 0 }

SIBA breakfast with Dr Tim Foresman

Former NASA and UN Chief Env. Scientist Dr Tim Foresman to speak at the Canberra SIBA breakfast.

Read full story Comments { 0 }

GPS‐Glonass‐Beidou satellite navigation workshop

An IEEE Workshop on Asia-Pacific satellite navigation and positioning is to be held in Brisbane.

Read full story Comments { 0 }

SIBA welcomes Tim Foresman

SIBA and QUT will be hosting a breakfast meeting with Dr Tim Foresman from the US.

Read full story Comments { 0 }

GITA 2013 next week

GITA 2013 is happening next week from 5-7 August at the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre.

Read full story Comments { 2 }

Ozri wraps up for another year

  Esri Australia’s annual user conference, Ozri 2012, ran in Sydney last week, providing more than 60 different sessions and presentations, and attracting over 500 attendees from across Australia, New Zealand, Asia, and the United States.   Some of the highlights included Queensland University of Technology’s (QUT) Associate Professor Robyn Clark, who led a seven-year, […]

Read full story Comments { 0 }
Spatial Source Default

GIS uncovers heart disease hot spots

Some of Australia’s leading cardiologists have enlisted cutting-edge mapping technology in the war against Australia’s biggest killer – heart disease. Using Geographic Information System (GIS) technology from location intelligence experts Esri Australia, a national team of researchers have just concluded a comprehensive seven-year study into access to cardiac services before and after cardiac events.   […]

Read full story Comments { 0 }

SeqSLAM: a visual-based algorithm for navigation

  Ditching satellites and complex, powerful computers and opting for camera technology inspired by small mammals may be the future of navigation systems.   Dr Michael Milford from Queensland University of Technology's (QUT) Science and Engineering Faculty said his research into making more reliable Global Positioning Systems (GPS) using camera technology and mathematical algorithms would […]

Read full story Comments { 0 }

Newsletter

Sign up now to stay up to date about all the news from Spatial Source. You will get a newsletter every week with the latest news.

City of Sydney: Growing green with GIS
The City of Sydney has set targets to grow a cooler, more di...
Victorian Surveyor-General makes historic apology
The apology acknowledges the role that SGs played in the dis...
One year to go: Countdown to FIG 2025!
Thousands of surveyors from around the world will converge o...
LiDAR shows Pacific cities are older than once thought
LiDAR has helped to show that city structures were being bui...
PlanTech partners aim to transform urban planning
The new effort highlights technology’s role in improving p...
Dual-band GNSS platform
The u-blox F10 GNSS platform combines L1 and L5 to offer enh...