Tag Archives: CARIS

Malek Singer

23 Young Geospatial Professionals to Watch in 2023 – 2 of 23 Name: Malek SingerCompany: Teledyne Geospatial (Optech & Caris)Current Position: Product Manager, AirborneAge: 27 Education: BS Geomatics, Carleton University Biography: Singer is passionate about challenging traditional development roadmaps which have historically focused on “delivering more data. He has expanded Teledyne’s roadmap towards products that...

Teledyne Forms New Geospatial Company

Teledyne Optech and Teledyne CARIS have united to form the new Teledyne Geospatial, offering holistic solutions to seamlessly map land and sea through the integration of industry-leading lidar sensors and world-renowned software workflows. This collaboration empowers customers with a competitive edge in mapping and delivering data products inside of one complete workflow.Ease of collection and...

xyHt Weekly News Recap: 09/17/2021

Woolpert Acquires AAM, Global Geospatial Leader Sea Machines Embarks on First Autonomous, Remotely Commanded Voyage by an Ocean Tugboat Bentley Systems Acquires Seequent’s Minalytix Intermap Enhances Analytics for Airbus-owned UP42, a Groundbreaking Geospatial Platform Teledyne Combines Expertise of CARIS and Optech to Deliver Solutions for Land and Sea Golden Software Unveils 3D Drillhole Visualization in...

Weekly xyHt News Links: 3/9/2018

Teledyne CARIS and Teledyne Optech to showcase marine mapping solutions at Oceanology International Bluesky Develops Low-Cost Measurement Tool for Capturing Accurate 3D Spatial Data with SmartPhones  SPAR 3D Expo & Conference Announces 2018 Education Program

Shannon Hoy on the bow of the RVIB Nathaniel B. Palmer as she crossed through the Bransfield Strait in 2011. Photo by A. Margolin.

Epiphany on the Bow

Above: Shannon Hoy on the bow of the RVIB Nathaniel B. Palmer as she crossed through the Bransfield Strait in 2011.  Photo by A. Margolin.  A student’s journey from marine biologist to ocean mapper. Ever since I can remember I’ve wanted to work in ocean sciences. From when I was a child splashing in the tidal...