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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!



Easily Share Workflows With the Analytics Repository

Easily Share Workflows With the Analytics Repository

10/27/2025

With the recent release of ENVI® 6.2 and the Analytics Repository, it’s now easier than ever to create and share image processing workflows across your organization. With that in mind, we wrote this blog to: Introduce the Analytics Repository Describe how you can use ENVI’s interactive workflows to... Read More >

Deploy, Share, Repeat: AI Meets the Analytics Repository

Deploy, Share, Repeat: AI Meets the Analytics Repository

10/13/2025

The upcoming release of ENVI® Deep Learning 4.0 makes it easier than ever to import, deploy, and share AI models, including industry-standard ONNX models, using the integrated Analytics Repository. Whether you're building deep learning models in PyTorch, TensorFlow, or using ENVI’s native model creation tools, ENVI... Read More >

Blazing a trail: SaraniaSat-led Team Shapes the Future of Space-Based Analytics

Blazing a trail: SaraniaSat-led Team Shapes the Future of Space-Based Analytics

10/13/2025

On July 24, 2025, a unique international partnership of SaraniaSat, NV5 Geospatial Software, BruhnBruhn Innovation (BBI), Netnod, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) achieved something unprecedented: a true demonstration of cloud-native computing onboard the International Space Station (ISS) (Fig. 1). Figure 1. Hewlett... Read More >

NV5 at ESA’s Living Planet Symposium 2025

NV5 at ESA’s Living Planet Symposium 2025

9/16/2025

We recently presented three cutting-edge research posters at the ESA Living Planet Symposium 2025 in Vienna, showcasing how NV5 technology and the ENVI® Ecosystem support innovation across ocean monitoring, mineral exploration, and disaster management. Explore each topic below and access the full posters to learn... Read More >

Monitor, Measure & Mitigate: Integrated Solutions for Geohazard Risk

Monitor, Measure & Mitigate: Integrated Solutions for Geohazard Risk

9/8/2025

Geohazards such as slope instability, erosion, settlement, or seepage pose ongoing risks to critical infrastructure. Roads, railways, pipelines, and utility corridors are especially vulnerable to these natural and human-influenced processes, which can evolve silently until sudden failure occurs. Traditional ground surveys provide only periodic... Read More >

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NOVA: The Earth From Space

Anonym

No matter what your job is, it’s usually very difficult to explain what you do to someone who doesn’t work in your field. And oddly enough, the more you like what you do, the harder it gets to explain your job and your enthusiasm to outsiders.

As an undergraduate in Geology, I lost track of the number of times someone asked some skeptical variation of “You study rocks, huh?”  Through repetition I got pretty good at answering the question, usually something along the lines of, “I study the earth and how it works, and rocks are one way we do that.”

In grad school, at the Center for the Study of Earth from Space (now known as ESOC), it didn’t get any easier. “Why would you go all the way to space just to look at where you live every day?” I could usually get some traction explaining that understanding one system meant knowing how it connected to everything else. The view rapidly grows to a continental or global scale, which you just can’t get from the ground or even from planes. You can launch a satellite once and collect data for years without getting mired in scheduling pilots, instruments, and flights every time you need new information. There are amazing things to study like volcanoes and glaciers which are difficult to get to or dangerous to be near.

It has become a little easier to convince people using Google Earth and GIS applications that are making geospatial knowledge ubiquitous in the cloud. But I still feel like there are too many half-hearted reactions like “Well, I guess so… how ‘bout that local sports team?”, and the shortcoming is at equally lies in my explaining as in anyone else’s understanding.

If you really want something done right, it can be very hard to beat a professional. For explaining science and why it’s important, NOVA on PBS are absolute pros. They aired a new, 2 hour episode last Wednesday, Earth from Space. I wish I could have referred people to this program in the past. It’s got the right blend of jaw-dropping stats to get people’s attention: 40 lightning strikes on earth every second, over 3 million per day, each one could power a city like Denver for 10 hours. It plainly states the significance of the system to people: global ocean temperature, which drives our weather and agriculture, has been stable within one degree and critically depends on the ice and atmosphere of Antarctica for its circulation. And of course it’s got beautiful, eye-popping imagery straight from geospatial data. The sources and researchers that support and present the information in the program read like a who’s who of the earth sciences. The important instruments in this web of data get named and their importance is made quite clear.

If you can spare the time at all, go and watch it, preferably on a good display. If you work in the earth sciences, it’s great encouragement to keep up the good work! If you don’t, it’s a clear, beautiful snapshot of why some of us nerds study rocks, or ice, or water. I’m going to watch it again. I always try to keep getting better at doing science, but I think I have more to learn on how to explain it, and that’s often just as important. It could be worse. I could have been an accountant. “You study how to count money?” I don’t think NOVA’s done a program on finance yet.

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