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NGS webinar 22 June 2023 transitioning to new NSR
OleManRiver replied 10 months, 3 weeks ago 9 Members · 24 Replies
It was a great presentation and discussion. I thought the panelists did a very great job. The AAGS certification I am looking forward to as well.
I think a opportunity is lurking for Surveyors. If a person steps to the side and looks outside the box while still understanding where we came from to where we are heading in terms of technology and datums. I believe we all in the surveying and geospatial realm should buckle down and lead from the efforts lets not waste the opportunity but own it become the Subject Matter Experts this was not done with GIS and I honestly believe that surveyor’s could have done a great job with that We must understand that autonomous driving is coming so that will effect roads design and layout in the future Remember now its not so much the GPS position as we look at our navigation on phones that’s wrong but the underlying maps datums thats not exactly correct. I believe we will see more requirements on roads like what is required on airports in a way Someone will have to educate the engineers that design them the contractor that builds them so we are all on the same datum reference frame coordinate system. How will this effect boundary surveys I believe it will be both we must follow history and the footsteps but we will also be positioning better and on a datum that relates directly to the same as the roads row over time Education and training education both formal and informal. I might be gone by the time this all comes to fruition but the ground work has been laid out years many years ago. Geo databases will become as common as a file cabinet system publishing more than one set of coordinates for a project will as well. Meta Data every state should already be looking at this and preparing time epoch will be a must to track and keep up with.
I am doing a job now that requires two different datums and coordinate system to be published on all corners and control. Energy projects will provide a lot of opportunities for re doing all the old control and location work is coming as well. And hopefully no more scaling to ground grid coordinates allowed without stating where is the origin and factor from and ellipsoid elevation or elevations used to determine that
Oregon has had a system of Low Distortion Projections incorporated in state statutes for a decade, but I still can’t get my GIS department to output data in that system – apparently ESRI doesn’t support it. Nor will Nearmap. I can get output in Botswana Central Zone, but not ORCS.
That’s a surprise to me because Esri has supported the Oregon DOT systems for a while, ArcGIS Desktop 10.4.0 and ArcGIS Pro 2.0 (2016 Desktop, 2017 Pro).
Maybe they can’t find them because they’re under the “State SystemsOregon” folder rather than the “County Systems” folder? I don’t believe they cover all counties which is why we didn’t place them in the County Systems folder.
Melita
Disclosure: I work for Esri.
I’m just one of those evil GIS people. Bwah-hah-hah! Seriously, I do coordinate systems and transformations at Esri.That’s a surprise to me because Esri has supported the Oregon DOT systems for a while,
Thanks. I guess that there is an ID-10t user error, not a software problem. The next time I run into this roadblock I’ll be better armed.
@norman-oklahoma You can build custom datums and projections in esri software aleast we could when i was using it. Now i didnt design it in esri i did that in other software. The. Just manually plugged in the parameters. I thought LDP was a favorite for many GIS folks as now they could relate easily. So always nad83 datum. Then whichever projection lambert mercator etc. This is news to me that gis folks could not handle a LDP.
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