DigitalGlobe To Sell 61cm Resolution Satellite Photos 244
An Anonymous Coward writes: "Sample images from DigitalGlobe's QuickBird satellite are now available. This is the highest resolution commercial satellite with the ability to take panchromatic images at a resolution of 61cm." Space Imaging's best offering is a 1m panchromatic resolution image, so they have some competition it seems.
Sweet! (Score:2)
Seriously, though, that's pretty darn cool. Pretty soon, we won't even need that stupid blimp over our favorite sporting events.
Re:Sweet! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Sweet! (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously though, I should start selling advertising space on my roof now. "Get your business seen from space!"
Re:Sweet! (Score:3, Informative)
Ugh! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ugh! (Score:1)
Has the movie Enemy of the State [cinemax.com] taught you nothing??
"Don't look up."
Re:Ugh! (Score:2)
See that antenna on that building? They can tell you're close to it. Now they only have to wait a couple of hours till they can get one of their satellites to fly over you to get one image.
Re:Ugh! (Score:5, Informative)
This orbit strikes a good balance between maximum sun exposure (useful for taking pictures), global coverage, and revist time. Half the time it's in dark, the other half it's taking photos at noontime.
Being in the light all the time would require a much higher orbit (near geostationary) that would make the optics work much harder. Since the satellite would be moving much slower with respect to the earth, the revisit time would also greatly suffer.
NICE (Score:1)
Seems the technology is there, high quality optics, incredible zooming and fine digitation of the photos...how close IS close...??
Re:NICE (Score:1)
Privacy implications (Score:4, Funny)
</humour> (in case the absurdity of this post and all the exclamation marks didn't make it entirely clear)
Re:Privacy implications (Score:1)
Re:Privacy implications (Score:2, Interesting)
Except for the fact that the satellite orbits the earth every 9 minutes, so you only get 1 picture every 9 minutes. Also don't forget that the earth is revolving below it (these satellites are in polar orbit, so the earth rotates below them). Which means it takes half a day for it to get to the proper latitude, and depending on the camera's angle, it may only be able to make 2 passes (that's 2 pictures, taken 9 minutes apart) before it has to wait 12 hours.
So no, they won't be watching you with these.. and they never will until they can zoom in from geosyncronous orbit (30k miles). Physics is against them.
Re:Privacy implications (Score:2, Interesting)
Aparently, this satellite is higher up than some of the other ones... so instead of a 9 minute orbit, it's a 93 minute orbit! It can only take 1 swab of an area per orbit.. so that's 1 picture every 93 minutes. (And it's FOV is 15km, you rotate further than 15km in 93 minutes, so they have to wait 3 days to get back to the same exact spot)
Re:Privacy implications (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Privacy implications (Score:1)
Re:Privacy implications (Score:1)
To which I say, no problem, and proceed to fuck him in the ass with a railgun. Bye-bye, johnny.
Reminds me of a Reagan-era Doonesbury strip... (Score:3, Interesting)
On a decidedly on-topic note, though, imaging all 9,629,091 sq km (according to the CIA World Factbook 2001 [cia.gov]) of the USA at 61-cm resolution in 24-bit color would result in 77.6 terabytes of data. That's for one frame; at a rate 1 frame per second, that would be 6.7 exabytes per day. Ask the Almighty to provide you with a 10,000-to-one compression algorithm, and you could get a day's worth of data down under a petabyte.
Let's see Jon Voight find Will Smith [imdb.com] in that.
Data rates . . . (Score:2, Informative)
Thus it would take three days to cover ALL the US, & so you'd only need 77.6 TB per 3/days NOT per second.
Furthermore, there is probably a lo-res FOV of the order of about 1 pixel per 1 SqKm which is the FOV that covers the whole earth every 3 days.
The hi-res 1 pixel per (61cm)squred FOV instrument more than likely has a keyhole FOV that can be targeted from the ground.
The downlink data rate is prob about 4GB/hr and prob will continue for about 12 years (based on other similar sat's)
Still, it's nice to the numbers. Western Australia is about 1TB uncompressed in R,G,B & Height.
Re:Reminds me of a Reagan-era Doonesbury strip... (Score:2)
Re:Reminds me of a Reagan-era Doonesbury strip... (Score:2)
Not a problem!
Most of the interior of the North American land mass, that which is commonly called the "midwest", can satisfactorily be compressed at ratios of 100,000 to 1 with absolutely zero loss of significant data!
Uniformity in the midwest compensates for coastal areas, where, um, "variability", exists that would otherwise inhibit a high, no-loss compression ratio.
Crap! (Score:2, Funny)
/. already?? (Score:1)
/.'ed (Score:1)
Re:/.'ed (Score:2, Funny)
Whammo! (Score:1)
Anyone able to mirror these before the box went up in
Why should I worry? (Score:1)
This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:1, Interesting)
Incidentally, that happened to one of my cousins; he farmed several acres of land that were passed down from our great grandfather, and devoted a small patch to growing marijuana. One of the local troublemakers got into an argument with him once, and started watching him with a satellite imaging service (cf Enemy of the State). Sure enough, he mysteriously got turned in for growing pot by an anonymous caller and lost the entire farm. When he got out of prison, he went on welfare and has been living off the government dole for quite a while now because he has few skills and a nasty criminal record that he doesn't deserve.
I really feel bad for him, and I think we should all oppose this horrible tool of surveillance before it is used against one of us.
Bill
Re:This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:1)
Re:This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:3, Insightful)
Jesus, how much pot did he need? To be viewable from 450 miles away, the put feild must of been a *bit* more than just for his own consumption. When you know that each meter is one pixel, and it takes more that a few pixels to determine that it's indeed marijuana, then there must of been at least 10 square meteres of the stuff - and thats only ten pixels. Sounds like he was trying to pay off the bank loan for the new tractor with the proceeds.
Moral (Score:1)
Re:This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:1, Funny)
Re:This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:1)
Re:This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:1)
My condolences to your cousin though. He is perfect evidence of someone that could be a productive citizen, but instead is actually a drain on society through no fault of his own. The government keeps pulling this kind of crap, then they wonder why so many people are on welfare.
Re:That argument holds no water (Score:2)
If you're going to make assertions like that then back them up with cites.
dave
Re:That argument holds no water (Score:1)
Re:That argument holds no water (Score:2)
That statement is only slightly less absurd than saying that drug use is only slightly worse than murder.
Drugs destroy families, friendships, and lives
So does alcohol. At one point, it was prohibited as well.
why should our government encourage their use?
What, if it's not forbidden it is by definition encouraged? Everything not prohibited is compulsory?
Disclaimer: I don't use alcohol or drugs.
Re:This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:1, Offtopic)
Is privacy really what we're looking for? (Score:2, Insightful)
of invasion by blocking the line of site between
the satelite and whatever it's trying to look at.
But think of this. As more and more companies allow private citizans to access this information, it will be harder and harder to police what they are looking at and who they are selling the images too.
In the US the major media networks have agreed not to show any images of dead Afghanis, and the government bought all the Afghanistan images from Space Imaging. Do you think it would make a difference if American citizens could see what was happening at groud level there?
Re:This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:2)
<p>
I always thought that <b>undeserved</b> nasty criminal records were for people who didn't commit crimes. How about "nasty criminal record that he didn't expect" or just "nasty criminal record".
HUGE privacy threat? less than from light aircraft (Score:2, Informative)
a) can get *much* better photo from plane
b) can pick out crop types (eg: yr mates pot) with right kind of filters. & can do this with higher res from light aircraft.
To this day, most airbourne photographic surveys are carried out with large format traditional wet photography. The negatives are then scanned at desired resolution. A high res negative taken from 1000m altitude can be magnified to remarkable degree, even more so if a zoom lens was used.
Many urban surveys are flown at about 4000m.
Re:This is a HUGE privacy threat (Score:1)
and what are you going to do to him? kill him? hmmm... that does make you a better person
distributed Osama hunt (Score:5, Informative)
no, i'm serious.
resolution of 61cm is more than enough to detect the movement of a cluster of people/troops. images could be sent to a central server, for distributed analysis and any unexplained masses moving to Pakistan could be pinpointed. why couldn't the US dedicate the spare CPU cycles to finding this terrorist?
Re:distributed Osama hunt (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:distributed Osama hunt (Score:3, Funny)
Re:distributed Osama hunt (Score:2)
All of the information that I have about him passed through the government before I ever saw it. So how reliable should I rate it?
That said, I believe that the preponderence of the evidence indicates that he, or anyway someone similar, is implicated. I've talked to eye-witnesses, and the Twin Towers event did happen. Beyond that
.
Re:distributed Osama hunt (Score:1)
It doesn't make the problem impossible but it's does make it harder.
Re:distributed Osama hunt (Score:1)
no, i'm serious.
resolution of 61cm is more than enough to detect the movement of a cluster of people/troops.
Is 61cm resolution also "more than enough" to detect movement of people BELOW THE EARTH, WITHIN CAVES?
Just checking.
Re:distributed Osama hunt (Score:2)
Also, 61cm is no big deal to the government; the government has long had access to much better equipment than civilians have access to. The US govmnt has been doing this sort of thing since the 60's, it's only recently that it's become available to the public. This is partially because of government restrictions and treaties [biu.ac.il] (sorry for the old link, I haven't kept up on this sort of stuff), but also because of the costs involved.
Re:distributed Osama hunt (Score:1)
Maybe, just maybe, they could tell you where Osama was, last time the sattelite went overhead.
Provided he has a big sign saying 'Osama' in 61cm pixels on his hat.
You don't think the gov. can do better than 61cm? (Score:4, Interesting)
I visited a military site in Israel where they print satellite photos... and mistakenly saw a low res screen preview (i.e. 72dpi) of a 500MB satellite photo... and I could already make out cars and trucks quite easily. The full-res data was easily 30-50x the resolution I saw on the monitor.
Think about it...
A/C... cause I'm 'fraid!
Re:You don't think the gov. can do better than 61c (Score:5, Informative)
My educated guess is that Israel would be purchasing their imaging commercially and from the French and US governments as they have no real remote sensing platforms dedicated to spying that I am aware of, so it is highly unlikely that you saw classified data given that it is relatively tightly controlled.
As to mistakenly seeing classified imagry, the places I have been to would never allow mistakes like that to occur. Anybody visiting the facillity with less than collateral clearance would see red strobe lights on the ceilings everywhere reminding everyone that there are "visitors" present, computer screens would be blank or showing unclassified information, and accessible filing cabinets would be cleared. Even ones with locks on them. Visitors to the classified areas in these facillities (even congressional ones) are a major pain in the ass and a time consumer for those that work there and these visits are not well liked. Violations of protocol here will cost you your career, so most folks take things seriously.
Re:You don't think the gov. can do better than 61c (Score:2)
Re:distributed Osama hunt (Score:2)
umm.. (Score:1)
And the "Lost" bin Laden! (Score:3, Funny)
These guys see him, know what side his hair is parted on, and how many rounds are in the clip of his Kalashnikov.
Not to be pedantic, but (Score:1)
a) You mean 'magazine', not 'clip'
b) Satellites don't have superman-style x-ray vision; and bin Ladin wears a turban; and steel doesn't transmit light.
HTH.
What the hell are they running? (Score:1)
Always a bad sign when the website flakes out. Usually means no one loadtested it, and some programmer took a bunch of shortcuts and has some incredibly inefficiant design (it looks like everything goes through one script with all the question marks).
Can you say yuch? Can you say no scalability? Can you say silly?
Probably trying to be cool...
Not that exciting (Score:1)
For those of you who are really having a lot of trouble getting anywhere with the link, I can tell you from the 2 or three I downloaded before all hell broke loose they aren't that much more impressive than the 1m resolution ones.
Re:Not that exciting (Score:1)
Nice -- but why pay for this? (Score:1)
Maybe composite aerial photos aren't quite as cool as satellite photos, but who cares? It's free.
Re:Nice -- but why pay for this? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Nice -- but why pay for this? (Score:1)
Here are some of the images (Score:5, Informative)
These images are probably copyrighted by digitalglobe.com so um, yeah.
A link with info...... (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.eurimage.com/Products/qb.shtml [eurimage.com]
uh oh (Score:1)
Is this really the best? (Score:3, Interesting)
In Afghanistan we are using poratble satellite phones and video (even CNN is using it),and (even if it is webcam quality), voice printing to identify commanders and Osama bin Laden. If you think this 61 cm is something, I wouldn't be surprised if the military resolution is at least half of 61 cm or even less. Probably be able to get the Expiration date from his drivers license, or what brand of cigarettes he smokes.
Re:Is this really the best? (Score:2)
Your 10-year theory may hold for satellite imaging technology, but it seems to me that one of the most important measures of progress or technology doesn't really lag at all for the private sector: CPU power.
Is the military able to get their hands on supercomputing or number-crunching power that the private sector will need to wait 10 years for? I doubt it. SETI@home may be one interesting example, but private entities with enough cash (and some can give even military budgets a run for their money) can buy as many supercomputers from Cray, IBM, NEC, Fujitsu, etc. as they need.
This probably didn't bother the military 10 or 20 years ago. But today, having the ability to encrypt, decrypt, process photographs, extract signals from noise, etc. can create or win wars.
Re:Is this really the best? (Score:2)
Open your eyes...
Re:Is this really the best? (Score:2)
Um, 30 cm resolution *might* be good enough to tell that he was holding something about the size of a driver's license, but is not going to be good enough to make out what it is he's holding, much less what's written on it.
Fer f@ck's sake, anybody who blathers on about satellites being able to read a newspaper and that kind of crap needs to actually look at one of these images. At 1 meter resolution you can make out a car. Not what kind it is, just the fact that there is an object which, given that it's basically rectangular and located on a road or parking lot, is most likely a car.
It's going to need at least 100-1000x more detail than that to be able to read things. I'm sure the militar has got much better than the private sector, but are they *that* far ahead? Maybe. And maybe they really are test flying alien UFOs.
KH-11 achieved 30 cm in 1977 (Score:3, Informative)
If you remember, someone leaked a photo of a KH-11 digital photoscan of a Soviet shipyard on the Black Sea back in 1977 with an amazing resolution of 30 cm or so. You can tell it's about that resolution because on that picture of the then-uncompleted Soviet aircraft carrier you could very clearly make out details of construction cranes next to the ship; the Ikonos and Global Imaging satellites would not resolve the construction cranes so clearly.
I'm sure with the latest sensor technology the latest recon satellites from the USA are capable of resolving down to 10 cm or less in real time.
Re:atmospherics (Score:2)
Direct Links & Google Image Cache (Score:1)
http://www.digitalglobe.com/imgs/basic/pan/thumb_
http://www.digitalglobe.com/imgs/Standard/ms/thum
Or if they go down too; Google:
http://images.google.com/images?hl=en&q=+site:www
Wierd angle? (Score:1)
Re:Wierd angle? (Score:1)
Wheeeeee! (Score:2)
Hm, look at that, I'm getting a little bit thin up top...
Got Linux?!?!? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Anybody want to flame these people?
-Ben
slashdotted into oblivion... (Score:2)
This has to be some sort of record.
Importance of Resolution? (Score:1)
The link is to their SECURE SERVER, doh! (Score:1, Informative)
It works much better if you use just a standard http access.
Try this: http://www.digitalglobe.com/?goto=gallery [slashdot.org] instead and stop torturing tose poor servers.
Maybe this article will get updated URLs soon?
Is this all such a good thing? (Score:2, Interesting)
What it comes down to is; if we can buy pictures of 64 cm= 1 pixel, so can terrorists and enemy countries. The US military made this type of device in the Cold War so they could SPY on other countries for intelligence (however mainly USSR at the time). Now, they're used in large intelligence missions over enemy territory so that OUR soldiers don't get killed due to lack of mapping.
There is a good basis for the US military to have this technology, but what are the pluses for non-military to have this? Other than the sake of knowing, not any. They aren't valid survey techniques, you pay surveyors that. Home camera's make good security systems, sat cams don't.
The negative's come at a distinct disadvantage. Say a US civillian is interested in a Chinese nuclear power reactor and pays for sat scans. Then they post it online, which I believe this has been done (can't remember site). If the Chinese gov't find about this, don't you think that they would be slightly miffed off at the US? Or how about taking pictures of US military installations? Those are dangerous to the saftey of US citizens, Military and non-military.
Josh Crawley
ps: I'll probably be modded down, since mod's here dislike anything but the typical knee-jerk , no matter how well a disagreeing is written.
Re:Is this all such a good thing? (Score:2, Informative)
Other than many military installations which are surrounded with razor wire fencing, this is true. I'm mainly worried about those installations.
=="I've heard other people raise this argument before; "doesn't this help terrorists/rogue states"? Think about it, genius."
First of all, I am 'thinking about it'. How does commercial sat pictures _help_ us? I cannot come up with at least one convincing answer.
=="Do you need an aerial photo to aim an ICBM at NYC? Did the terrorists need to research the area around Manhattan to figure out that the WTC is located there, and they should fly the plane in that general direction? Honestly, what the hell can you do with this?"
First you have to see terrorism in the terrorist eyes. If I remember correctly, our local television news programs have 'exposes' that detail the lack of military awareness of chemical factories. In our area, there is a military surplus of many types of nerve agents. The news mentioned what the facility was called. Now if some rich terrorists were to look at a map and determine where this was, they could buy a sat map and know the outer schematics of this plant.
Also, be aware that some military installations are NOT on maps. the only way to see it is to get past the guards with nice SMG's (yes, the last time we passed through, they were carrying that type).
=="Also, I'd have trouble believing that the Chinese gov't is not aware that the US has the ability to peep at them with about 50 different satellites. I don't think they are suddenly going to become aware because Joe User posts pics online."
Maybe I didn't explain what I considered that bas scenario. The US knows about China's (fill in the blank), however the US hides that knowledge from us for certain reasons. There is NO need to know about a nuclear reactor at coords x,y or other such stuff. This type of data should be seen as need to know only. All we should care about is if the military is doing thier job.
=="As for pictures of US military installations, what is there to see?"
Like I said above, there are some installations that positions are itself marked as a rating _under_ classified but still not released to the public. Pictures of these places are nothing but deterimental
=="Anything that they don't want you to see is hidden underground, and the government restricts private remote-imaging firms from releasing data less than 24 hours old. So if you're Osama Bin Laden, you might be able to get a pic of the B2 that just bombed your ass taking off, although about a day late."
So you told me something I didn't know. I wasn't aware that such a law exists.
=="Use your head."
I am, are you?
Josh Crawley
Quickbird/earlybird (Score:2)
Fun fact: giant shipping companies lose one or two trailers a year each because they don't know where they left them.
p.s. patent pending. Ok, not really, but if anyone tries this, please let this post serve as evidence of prior art.
What's the pricing? (Score:2)
I'm involved in trail planning, and could use this. GlobExplorer's imagery is several years old.
A little perspective here on privacy issues... (Score:3, Insightful)
1. 0.61-meter data is simply not of sufficent spatial resolution to identify people. The best you can do is to say that there's a human-sized object in the image.
2. The average revisit time of Quickbird 2 is 3.5 days (due to its 93 minute sun-synchronous orbit). So there's a window every 3.5 days where there's even the *possibility* of getting data from a particular location.
3. Many parts of the world are cloud or haze (or smog) covered much of the time. Optical sensors are confounded by this. Now, if you use radar sensors you can see through the clouds, but the resolution of commercially available radar isn't as high as that offered by Quickbird 2 (~8m for Canada's RADARSAT).
4. These data sets are IMMENSE. The area of interest has to be really important for someone to invest the money and time to develop the infrastructure (hardware and software) to process the huge quantities of data that can come from repeated collects.
5. It's very expensive. Decent quality Ikonos 1m data costs $55 per sq. km. with a minimum purchase of 100 sq. km. Clearly, your average guy isn't going to be buying the stuff. Prices will fall as more sensors come online, but the data will be prohibitively expensive for quite a while.
Now, all of that is obviated by the capabilities of the U.S. government; they likely have much higher resolution sensors (maybe even 5cm or so). But, there are much simpler ways of keeping track of people than using satellite imagery (phone taps, carnivore, video cameras, etc. come to mind).
So, let's relax and celebrate the fact that scientists finally have high resolution tools with which to do some really cool research!
the quick and dirty of how these satellites work (Score:2, Informative)
Here's a quick intro to the technology for those who aren't familiar.
Basically, these companies (or the air force) send a 1-ton spacecraft up on a large rocket (made by Lockheed Martin generally) and put in in geosynchronous orbit around the earth. These orbits are something like 500 miles above the earth, which means that they orbit the earth once every 1.5 hours or so. (you can try the math if you like, F=ma, a=v^2/r, a=GM/r^2)
They specifically put it into what's called a "sun-synchronous" orbit -- which means that its orbit takes it alternately over the light and dark side of the earth each half of the trip. And wherever the satellite passes over the earth (on the light side), it will be approximately 10:30 am. (if you have trouble visualizing this, draw a line in your mind from sun to earth, then align the plane created by the satellite's orbit vertically with this line.)
So every orbit, the satellite traces out a wide swath of territory it can take pictures of (like peeling strips off a potato). These swaths are perhaps 10km wide, and can extend for 100s or 1000s of kilometers in length. Note that it can take pictures straight down if it wants, or it can aim to the side slightly. This is why satellite pictures may not look like they were taken from directly above, but rather from the side a little bit. Black and white images are standard, color will take longer of course.
So it turns out that with these satellites, every place on the earth will eventually pass beneath the path during daylight, and will be able to be imaged. They will give you statistics such as "Revisit frequency is 50% of the earth within 24 hours, or 100% within 3 days, more if you don't require the satellite to be directly overhead". (This is used to plan observations, or to tell imaging clients how soon a target can be seen, which might be important for the military, for example).
Pricing of the images is of course based on recovering the development and launch costs, so individual images will be pretty expensive. Custom tasks are even more expensive. But remember, the satellite is continuously taking images (it's not waiting for clients), and they store the data for future use.
So far, the only kids of satellite imagery have been still-images, but many speculate that live video has been possible for several years now (like in "enemy of the state"). I'm quite sure the us military has this capability, but I myself have never heard a definitive response on this question... Hope you find this useful!
Re:the quick and dirty of how these satellites wor (Score:2)
A bit of a reality check (Score:2)
2) (civilian) imaging sats are in LEO for a couple of reasons, first, the closer you are to the earth, the better resolution you can get with the same imaging equiptment, just like the closer you are to your object with your camera, the bigger it appears, and you don't need a zoom lens. Since the amount you can get for a sat pict varies in relation to the amount of detail you can offer, commercial sat providers have a vested interest in LEO, secondly, a LEO sat allows the company to sell pictures of everywhere (eventually), and thus a better customer base then if it's constantly pointing at Washington DC.
3) Retasking (altering a sat's orbit in order to aquire your image sooner is _expensive_. Due to atmospheric drag, meteor showers, etc, Sats shot up are equiped with manuvering thrusters to allow them to stay in orbit longer. Obviously the fuel has to be shot up there with the sat, and therefore each sat has a finite lifespan in direct relation to the amount of fuel the sat has. I would speculate that a commercial oranization (and indeed the govt too) organization would be loath to retask a sat and thus lower its lifespan.
4) 65cm is a lot of space. Realize that each 65 cm space is a pixel. So your face would be less then a pixel. Pretty hard to ID you based on that.
5) Looking through a sat is like looking through a drinking straw. Say you were looking for Bin Laden. Even assuming you were looking through a sat with arbitary resolution, you're only going to get a small swath of image. Say 10km across. If UBL is sitting at km 11, you'll never find him.
So calm down a bit folks, it's not the End Of The World As We Know It. This product is useful for people like weather forcasters, famers, builders, desaster recovery folks, etc. People whose target is big, and not going anywhere in a hurry. Noone's gonna be reading your paper over your shoulder witht his sat. If they do, they'll see 2 white pixels for the newspaper, and one black one for your hair maybe, assuming you have black hair. I think they'll have to buy their own copy of the New York Times.
Re: (Score:2)
How Much Longer... (Score:2)
...before some enterprising company ditches the satellites and offers drone shots with much higher resolution. The drone technology is nothing new. If the area is hostile, you can use tiny disposable drones [aerovironment.com]
From a technical standpoint, none of this is very exciting. The only real limitation is what your government will allow you to sell to the general public. In some cases, the government will do it for you [noaa.gov] with a camera on a regular old plane.
Of course, the other issue is privacy...
Cool satellite images (Score:2, Informative)
Formerly Known As... (Score:2)
QuickBird and IKONOS resolution (Score:2, Informative)
Why 61 cm? (Score:2)
Metric units suck. Especially when they're inappropriate.
GAAHHHH!!!! (Score:2)
What a crock. Why do companies do this?
Re:random number posts are back! (Score:1)
Re:borken link (Score:1, Funny)
Re:WIll these images be banned? (Score:2)
Re:WIll these images be banned? (Score:2)
Homeless people sell maps that are just as accurate at the exit to the Smithsonian Metro stop.
Re:Stupid Industry (Score:3, Interesting)