Asian Surveying & Mapping
Breaking News
Safran, SatSure partner to develop geospatial intelligence solutions for India
French aerospace giant Safran Electronics & Defense and Indian...
Singapore unveils road map to help develop international business standards and conformance
Singapore has unveiled plans to help develop international standards...
Adelaide University to run space and defence venture launchpad ahead of Australian Space Forum
Adelaide University’s Innovation & Collaboration Centre (ICC) will deliver...
Japan’s H3 rocket returns to space with successful launch after December setback
Japan’s flagship H3 rocket has returned to flight six...
KONGSBERG accelerates seabed mapping developments with Ocean Exploration Trust expedition aboard Exploration Vessel Nautilus
KONGSBERG and the Ocean Exploration Trust (OET) are set...
Russian satellites linked to mysterious GPS disruptions across several countries
Since 2019, GPS signals across Europe, Greenland and Canada...
Isro’s Bahubali LVM3 that launched Chandrayaan-3 to be handed to private sector
IN-SPACe has invited Indian companies to take over the...
India to host 13th UN Global Geospatial Information Management Asia-Pacific Conference
India is hosting the 13th United Nations Global Geospatial...
Unseenlabs’ BRO-22 to Become the First Foreign Private Satellite Launched Aboard Japan’s H3 Launch Vehicle
Scheduled for June 10, between 09:53 and 11:52 a.m....
PLD Space increases investment in its Launch Complex at the Guiana Space Centre (CSG) to €35M, strengthening Europe’s sovereign space infrastructure
The investment is expected to generate approximately €21 million...

January 18th, 2011
Safe Software Launches FME 2011

“In today’s environment of an ever-expanding diversity of data formats and data models, as well as increasing data volumes, organizations are facing more and more pressure to maximize the use of their spatial data for planning and decision making,” says Dale Lutz, Vice-President of Development at Safe Software. “GIS, CAD, IT, and other technical professionals have no choice but to become the friendly neighborhood spatial data superheroes in their organizations – and our role is to equip them. That’s why in FME 2011, we’ve made innovations and enhancements that empower people to harness their data assets, do more with less, and ensure their organizations are ready for whatever tomorrow brings.”

Harness the power of point clouds
As LiDAR increasingly enters the mainstream, many organizations are looking for a way to harness the power and potential of point clouds. To address this growing need, FME 2011 introduces support for point cloud data, enabling organizations to efficiently:

* Integrate point clouds with conventional GIS data
* Restructure point cloud datasets by clipping, thinning, reprojecting, combining, splitting, and creating surface models
* Read and write point cloud data in a range of industry standard formats, including LAS (multiple versions), Pointools POD (www.pointools.com), and XYZ ASCII

By tapping into these powerful spatial data transformation capabilities, organizations can now fully maximize their investment in 3D point data, while creating new ways for end users to visualize and analyze information.

Perform superhuman data transformation feats with even less resources
Recognizing the ever-growing pressure organizations face to “do more with less”, FME 2011 introduces many usability improvements and innovative features that not only make creating and maintaining spatial data transformation workflows (“workspaces”) faster and easier than ever before, but also help new users quickly learn how to use FME to solve a wide range of data interoperability challenges. Highlights include:

* Inline inspection: A key innovation in FME 2011, Inline Inspection lets users pause the transformation process to instantly examine the current state (geometry and attributes) of their data. Users can now benefit from this “X-ray vision” to quickly create workspaces with this new superfine feature-level debugging power.
* Templates: Designed as a starting point for common spatial data transformation tasks, quickstart templates enables users to author new workspaces at lightning speeds. Users can also publish their own workspaces as templates for efficient re-use and sharing with others.
* Scheduling: With the new time-saving scheduling tool in FME Server 2011, organizations can centralize and completely automate their recurring data transformation workflows – no human intervention required.
* XML Innovations: Thanks to the XMLTemplater, validation, styling, metadata, and cataloguing capabilities, FME 2011 decimates the time it takes to work with XML data. Superhuman XML expertise is no longer required!
* Performance Improvements: FME 2011 delivers on Safe Software’s commitment to ensure that every release of FME is faster than the last. Performing data transformations in FME 2011 is now an average of 11% faster than the previous version.

A complete list of the new features and enhancements in FME 2011 is available for download at:www.safe.com/FME2011.

Be ready for whatever the future holds
Whether it’s keeping up with new formats and platforms or being ready for the next big innovation in GIS, organizations can continue to count on Safe Software to keep up with the latest industry requirements. This year FME 2011 introduces support for cloud data, expanding its industry-leading format support to 265. Now organizations can use the power of FME’s spatial data transformation capabilities to read and write Windows Azure, SQL Azure, OGDI and Google Spreadsheet data. FME 2011 has also been updated to let users with work the latest applications and environments; support for Esri ArcGIS 10 and Autodesk FDO 2011 already included. With FME 2011 as a trusted sidekick, organizations can ensure they will be ready for whatever tomorrow brings.

Discover the power of FME 2011
No matter what data interoperability villains are lurking, the extraordinary new powers available in FME 2011 will help organizations triumph over them all. To discover the new features and capabilities in FME 2011, please visit www.safe.com/fme2011 for access to brochures, demos, and free trial software. FME users are also invited to learn more about FME 2011 by participating in two upcoming events:
* Live “What’s Great in FME 2011” webinar hosted by Safe co-founders, Don Murray and Dale Lutz on February 8, 2011
* FME 2011 World Tour, coming to 25+ cities worldwide this spring
To register or for more information, please visit www.safe.com/fme2011.