From the HASP website:
September 17, 2007: HASP CALL FOR PAYLOADS 2007-2008 RELEASED: The HASP Call for Payloads 2007-2008 (CFP) has been released and application materials are now available on the HASP website “Participant Info” page. Student groups interested in applying for a seat on the September 2008 flight of HASP should download these materials and prepare an application. New for this year is an increase in the allowed weight of the student payloads. Small class payloads can now mass up to 3 kilograms and large class payloads can weigh as heavy as 20 kilograms. Applications are due December 18, 2007 and selections will be announced by mid-January 2008.
The photos below and sideways are a 10 percent composite of several photos taken at 30,000 feet, with a 3x optical zoom at 500 mph. The speed makes it very unlikely to get any good details without some type of processing. And so, for the time being, imaging the ground with some type of precision with some type of point and shoot camera seems to be only feasible to payloads on balloons.
Compared to satellite imagery, one of the interesting capability is to remove the effect of clouds when possible. In satellite imagery, cameras work with pushbroom technology where the imager is a line of pixels (not a square dye). One consequence is the inability of photographing twice the same object with one sweep. Using off the shelf cameras on much slower balloons allow one to obtain multiple images of the same object at different angle. This is important when one wants to evaluate whether the object is noise or not.
Chris Anderson of the Long Tail book mentioned a different approach by Pict'Earth to using images from the sky using UAVs and patching them into Google Earth. This is interesting, but as I have mentioned before, when you take enough images, you don't need Google Earth, you don't need the headache of re-projecting these images onto some maps (even though it looks easier with Yahoo Map Mixer for small images), because you are the map. No need for IMUs or GPS instrumentation. This is clearly an instance of advances in stitching algorithms removing hardware requirements on the sensors. As for the current results Chris is getting from PTGui, I am pretty sure the autopano folks will enable the orthographic projection soon in order to cater to that market. With balloons, the view is from very far, so the patching algorithm has no problem stitching images together. In the case of UAVs, you need the orthographic projections.
Eventually, two other issues become tremendously important (especially in the context of Search And Rescue). Cameras and memory are going cheaper and one is faced with GB's of data to store, map and share. Our experience is that the sharing is challenging when you go over 2 GB of data mostly because of small file format limits (2 GB). Zoomify is interesting and they need to figure out a way to deal with larger images. While Autopano allows for images taken at different times to be overlayed with each other (a very nice feature), the viewer might be interested in this time information. Right now I know of no tool that allows one to switch back and forth between different times for the same map.
References:
1. Comparing Satellite Imagery and GeoCam Data
2. A 150-km panoramic image of New Mexico
Hello All;
ReplyDeleteI have just started getting familiar with CS.But I countered a hopeless problem(which I saw a post about it too):
Undefined function or variable 'cvx_begin'.
Error in ==> how_to_wow_your_friends_CS at 22
cvx_begin
The main Question is here:How Can I really install SeDuMi and what do you mean by installing it?
Farshid,
ReplyDeleteI am not sure why you areposting on this thread, but as explained before, it is how you unzipped the sedumi package that eventually yields the error you obtained. You need to unpack sedumi correctly. Please read the installation manuale for sedumi or ask the maintainer of the code.
Hopes this helps,
Igor.
Hi Farshid,
ReplyDeleteI add to install the CVX software from the following link in order to use the how_to_wow_your_friends_CS code
http://www.stanford.edu/~boyd/cvx/
After that, everything went just fine ;-)