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NV5 Geospatial Blog

Each month, NV5 Geospatial posts new blog content across a variety of categories. Browse our latest posts below to learn about important geospatial information or use the search bar to find a specific topic or author. Stay informed of the latest blog posts, events, and technologies by joining our email list!



Monitoring Illegal Mining in the Amazon: Turning Persistent Data Into Actionable Insight

Monitoring Illegal Mining in the Amazon: Turning Persistent Data Into Actionable Insight

5/28/2026

Illegal mining over decades has constituted one of the most persistent and complex socio-environmental problems in the Brazilian Amazon. In recent years, with the increasingly intensive use of mechanized extraction, the associated environmental impacts—such as deforestation, intense soil disturbance, river siltation, and mercury... Read More >

From Answers to Action: Why ENVI and IDL Agents Go Beyond General AI

From Answers to Action: Why ENVI and IDL Agents Go Beyond General AI

4/20/2026

As generative AI tools like Claude and Gemini continue to gain traction, many organizations are asking the same question: Can general purpose AI actually support real geospatial workflows, or does it stop at surface-level answers? That question was front and center in our recent webinar, Meet Your New Partners in Science: ENVI... Read More >

Mapping Earthquake Deformation in Taiwan With ENVI

Mapping Earthquake Deformation in Taiwan With ENVI

12/15/2025

Unlocking Critical Insights With ENVI® Tools Taiwan sits at the junction of major tectonic plates and regularly experiences powerful earthquakes. Understanding how the ground moves during these events is essential for disaster preparedness, public safety, and building community resilience. But traditional approaches like field... Read More >

Comparing Amplitude and Coherence Time Series With ICEYE US GTR Data and ENVI SARscape

Comparing Amplitude and Coherence Time Series With ICEYE US GTR Data and ENVI SARscape

12/3/2025

Large commercial SAR satellite constellations have opened a new era for persistent Earth monitoring, giving analysts the ability to move beyond simple two-image comparisons into robust time series analysis. By acquiring SAR data with near-identical geometry every 24 hours, Ground Track Repeat (GTR) missions minimize geometric decorrelation,... Read More >

Empowering D&I Analysts to Maximize the Value of SAR

Empowering D&I Analysts to Maximize the Value of SAR

12/1/2025

Defense and intelligence (D&I) analysts rely on high-resolution imagery with frequent revisit times to effectively monitor operational areas. While optical imagery is valuable, it faces limitations from cloud cover, smoke, and in some cases, infrequent revisit times. These challenges can hinder timely and accurate data collection and... Read More >

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Is there an App for that?

Anonym

What does it really mean to “Exploit” imagery – or how about the definitions of “Data analytics”, “Server-side processing”, “Cloud computing”, “Web-enabled OGC services”, please – somebody stop me!  These terms are uttered with such frequency that I often find myself wondering – what is the ultimate goal we are trying to achieve?  Are we trying to coerce hidden objects to be visually obvious; apply fancy algorithms to eliminate haze; identify linear features in remote areas?

Of course all of these things (and many more) are true. And recently I’ve had an epiphany in terms of the meanings to these phrases, the same way those newer, faster, smarter algorithms are developed,  is the same way that our analytics are modernized, and so are our ways to implement these modernizations.  What this means is that geospatial information access is available via hundreds of thousands of handheld devices to foresters in the field, soldiers on the ground, and sailors at sea.

The first step in this modernization has already occurred in bringing the analytics to the data. This way, big data and data analytics are literally coexisting in powerful processing environments. The next step is to define the discrete tools – or apps – to exploit this information and bring solutions to real-world problems and answers to real-world questions.

In reference to the NGA app store, more than 150 different apps – or discrete processing tools – are already available for their users to consume. Many of these apps are created internally – although access to large geodatabase repositories via open standards enables external developers to create consumable analytics.  The vision to grow these capabilities is to “create apps for the cloud, put them up there, verify that the apps work as intended, and then let the analysts and people choose the apps that they want.”

From what I have seen to date, applications like line of sight analysis, vegetation delineation, object identification, atmospheric correction, and many others have barely scratched the surface of what is possible. I think about the every-day desktop applications and some of the challenges related to desktop processing power and limited data access. I truly believe the possibilities are endless when it comes to the next generation of web-enabled image analytics. What apps are you working on or working with?

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