Asian Surveying & Mapping
Breaking News
Ecolab and ITE partners to harness water management knowledge for Singapore data center engineers
SINGAPORE, 29 APRIL 2024 – Nalco Water, an Ecolab...
NASA releases satellite photos of Dubai and Abu Dhabi before and after record flooding
NASA released photos of parts of Dubai and Abu...
Singapore releases 10-year Geospatial Master Plan
Singapore has launched its new Geospatial Master Plan (2024–33),...
Japan announces plans to launch upgraded observation satellites on new flagship rocket’s 3rd flight
TOKYO (AP) — Japan’s space agency announced Friday a...
Tesla China partners with Baidu for maps to clear FSD hurdle
Amidst Elon Musk’s unannounced trip to Beijing, China this...
ESA opens ideas factory to boost space innovation in Austria
A centre to innovate the design and manufacture of...
Japan’s space agency sets June 30 as third launch date for H3 rocket
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) announced Friday that...
S. Korea launches nanosatellite for Earth observation
SEOUL- A South Korean nanosatellite was launched into orbit...
Australian Space Agency funds development of aerospace-grade GNSS receiver
The Australian Space Agency has funded the development of...
Continuity risks for Australian EO data access
A new report details the widespread use of Earth...

February 22nd, 2012
Lizardtech Reflects on 20 Years in Business


Founded in 1992, LizardTech pioneered the MrSID® file format, which became the de facto standard among the geospatial community. Before MrSID came along, dealing with geospatial imagery required specialized workstations, since datasets that were hundreds of megabytes in size were completely unwieldy, and imagery resolution was in the tens of meters. Imagery was practically unusable. The introduction of the MrSID format in 1992, which compressed georeferenced image data at high ratios without sacrificing the visual quality of the image, opened up the field of geospatial image use.

“I think the key to our success is that we listen to our customers and provide quality software that’s in demand,” said Jon Skiffington, director of product management. “At the end of the day it’s all about what our customers want and need, and developing a file format that’s been accepted by the majority of the geospatial community is the greatest achievement of all.”

At the Esri Federal GIS Conference Skiffington will be on hand to answer any questions pertaining to the history of the company. He will also be conducting demonstrations of GeoExpress® software, which enables geospatial professionals to compress and manipulate satellite and aerial imagery, Express Server® software for high-performance delivery and publication, and LiDAR Compressor software, which turns giant point cloud datasets into efficient MrSID files.

For more information about LizardTech’s geospatial software products, visit www.lizardtech.com