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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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Record Temperatures & Wildfire Risk

Anonym

Thanks to recent rain along the Front Range, mountains, and plains of Colorado, the image below represents what we hope is behind us as a very early and robust fire season in CO and the Western US. The image below (captured by the Pleiades 1A satellite) is an unfortunate indication of the very early forest fire season we have experienced so far.

Image source: https://www10.giscafe.com/blogs/gissanjay/2012/06/29/colorado-forest-fires-photo-interpretation/

As of July 10, 2012 there are currently just two active fires in the state of Colorado, 11 new large fires have been reported across the country, and 17 states are experiencing active large fires. So far this year 2,723,393 acres have burned compared with the 10-year average of 2,888,097 acres lost annually. Also in the news, the first half of 2012 was just reported as the hottest year on record since record-keeping began in 1895! The image below compares this year’s temperatures to the two hottest years on record. It’s safe to say we are not off to a good start!

Are the fires and the warming pattern related? It’s perplexing that the second-hottest year on record to date was 2010 – the year in which the least amount of acreage burned in the past 10 years with a loss of only 1,558,974 acres. Several states have set all-time high temperature records this year more than 170 of those records set in the second half of June! Let’s just hope that information paired with new technology will enable us to have positive effects on environmental shifts in years to come.

For more statistics see:
https://www.nifc.gov/fire-information/nfn
https://www.columbia.edu/~mhs119/Temperature/T_moreFigs/

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