New Google Earth Satellite to launch next Week
Posted on Fri, 14 Sep 2007 13:18:32 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
More News Ticker News
CBy Andrea Shalal-Esa
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - DigitalGlobe, provider of imagery for Google Inc.'s
interactive mapping program Google Earth, said a new high-resolution satellite
will boost the accuracy of its satellite images and flesh out its archive.
The new spacecraft, dubbed WorldView I, is to be launched on Tuesday.
Together with the company's existing Quickbird satellite, it will offer
half-meter resolution and will be able to collect over 600,000 square kilometers
of imagery each day, up from the current collection of that amount each week,
Chief Executive Jill Smith told Reuters in a telephone interview.
Smith said the launch, to be broadcast live on the Internet at http://www.boeing.com/defense-space/space/bls/missions/worldview
-1/, and the planned launch of a second Worldview II satellite in late 2008,
were critical milestones for the company.
Privately held DigitalGlobe is still working toward an initial public offering
in the next few years, Smith said. She declined to say this could come before
the launch of the second WorldView satellite.
"The business is as strong as we had hoped," Smith said, adding, "The key is to
continue to hit the milestones that we've set."
Once its third satellite is launched, DigitalGlobe said it will be collecting
more than 1 million square kilometers per day of high-resolution imagery.
Smith said WorldView I would allow far faster collection of imagery, and add
more quickly to the company's archive, already the world's largest commercial
archive of satellite images. The library contains more than 300 million square
kilometers of satellite and aerial imagery.
MORE ACCURATE DATA
The new satellite will also provide far more accurate data, including the
ability to pinpoint objects on the Earth at three to 7.5 meters, or 10 to 25
feet. Using known reference points on the ground, the accuracy would rise to
about two meters, Smith said.
DigitalGlobe built the satellite in part with $500 million in funding from the
Pentagon's National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA), but it can sell the
images commercially as long as their resolution is no sharper than a half-meter.
Its publicly traded rival, GeoEye , is also due to launch a new high-resolution
satellite this fall.
DigitalGlobe continues to expand sales and partnerships rapidly, Smith said,
noting that one of her goals was to expand the ability to deliver images online
to an increasingly broad customer base.
Smith said the U.S. military increasingly viewed commercial satellite imagery as
a "core part of the military infrastructure," although there would always be a
critical role for purely military satellite systems.
Smith said DigitalGlobe invested heavily in testing to make sure that Tuesday's
launch of WorldView is successful.
A failure would be a setback, she said, but would not have a material effect on
the company, given that its current satellite, QuickBird, was expected to last
for at least two to three years, and it already had begun work on WorldView II.
"The fortunate fact, which distinguishes us from other players, is that we have
a very healthy high-growth core business," and WorldView II is already under
way, Smith said.
© Copyright 2007 Reuters.
Photo:
DigitalGlobe's WorldView I satellite is seen in an undated artists rendering. DigitalGlobe, provider of imagery for Google Inc.'s interactive mapping program Google Earth, said a new high-resolution satellite will boost the accuracy of its satellite images and flesh out its archive. REUTERS/DigitalGlobe/Handout
Posted on Fri, 14 Sep 2007 13:18:32 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
I4U Gadget Models
I4U News Product Reviews
All I4U News Categories
Hot Gadgets
- Nikon D700 available for Pre-Order
2008-07-04 07:54:20
- God of War Sony PSP is red hot
2008-07-04 00:36:40
- Redecorate with the cool Nintendo Wall Graphics
2008-07-02 03:40:12
- JVC NX-PN7 docks iPod and iPhone at the same Time
2008-06-26 00:49:02
- Sony HDR-CX12 unveiled
2008-06-19 00:03:44
- KumoTek KT-X Humanoid Robot Kit
2008-05-28 05:00:00
More Gadgets
Subscribe to I4U Gadget Flyer
Stay in touch with our weekly round-up of the Top 10 Technology stories with our free newsletter.

More stories