Learn how to ‘geo-enlighten your organisation’ at Directions LIVE 2016.
This year’s roadshow will highlight how you can extend the benefits of geospatial technology throughout your entire business – to streamline workflows and maximise your return on investment.
Discover how to further leverage the ArcGIS platform’s spatial analysis capabilities and see how this technology gives your organisation the competitive edge.
At Directions LIVE 2016, you will learn the benefits of working with 3D and 4D data, how to select the perfect app to tackle any challenge, and how ArcGIS Pro complements ArcMap functionality.
We will also be showcasing the innovative ways local organisations are improving operational efficiency with GIS technology.
Directions LIVE is free for Esri users – with light lunch provided.
Register today to join our team of ArcGIS experts and your local GIS user community, and learn how to unlock the full potential of the platform – the market’s only complete GIS solution.
![In The Zone 2018 @ Optus Stadium | Burswood | Western Australia | Australia](https://www.spatialsource.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/In-the-zone.jpg?w=280)
As the investment centre of gravity related to space shifts towards leading economies in the Indo-Pacific, we must think together about shared opportunities, challenges and risks around the ‘Zone Above’.
In collaboration with The University of Western Australia (UWA), the Perth USAsia Centre is convening the 2018 In The Zone Conference, the latest in a series founded to provide a strategic forum for Indo-Pacific policymakers, advocates, business and academic leaders to grapple with issues of shared regional concern. This year’s In the Zone will focus on capability, security and expansion into space and is titled The Zone Above: The Indo-Pacific Era in Space.
Please note a tax invoice will be emailed to attendees in the month prior.
Visit the conference website for a full list of speakers and more information.
![2022 SSSI Tasmania Surveying & Spatial Conference @ Wrest Point, Sandy Bay, Tasmania](https://www.spatialsource.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/AdobeStock_283717668_625x442.jpg?w=280)
The 2022 Tasmania Surveying & Spatial Conference will be held on Friday, 2 September at Wrest Point in Hobart, and promises to be a fantastic opportunity to learn and network with SSSI members and the broader surveying and spatial community.
This year’s event will include a gala dinner, held in partnership with the University of Tasmania, to celebrate that institution’s 50 years in the field of surveying and spatial teaching.
In addition, the event will include the presentation of the 2022 Tasmanian Asia-Pacific Spatial Excellence Awards.
Image credit: ©stock.adobe.com/au/Norman
![LINZ Lands & Survey Surveying Projects In Antarctica: 1970s – Present Day @ Webinar](https://www.spatialsource.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/AdobeStock_380904809_625x442.jpg?w=280)
Since the establishment of Scott Base on Ross Island by the late Sir Edmund Hillary in 1957, surveyors have been appointed to assist scientists with survey related tasks on the ice.
This presentation by a panel of Antarctic surveyors promises to be educational, entertaining and informative, as they talk about their experiences on projects on the frozen continent over the last 35-plus years.
Image credit: ©stock.adobe.com/au/hrathke
![2023 Tasmanian Geospatial Conference & Awards Reception @ Crowne Plaza, Hobart](https://www.spatialsource.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/AdobeStock_283717668_625x442.jpg?w=280)
The 2023 Tasmanian Geospatial Conference & Awards Reception will be held at the Crowne Plaza in Hobart on 1 September 2023, where delegates will hear the latest news from across the local geospatial industry, including presentations on cadastral surveying, GIS, education and more.
Immediately following the conference will be the Geospatial Excellence Awards Reception, where all attendees will have the chance to enjoy drinks and canapes whilst networking and celebrating the local winners.
The full conference program is now available.
Image credit: ©stock.adobe.com/au/Norman