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Thursday, April 10th, 9:00-5:00pm-ish
Indiana Government Center South, Auditorium
402 West Washington Street
Indianapolis, IN 46204
State Employees: FREE
IGIC Members: FREE
Nonmembers: As Available


At this full day event representatives from ESRI will present on current and future GIS technologies, applications and local impacts. Although geared primarily toward State government, the day will include something for everyone - from broad conceptual issues to specific technical solutions. Come for part or come for all, the cost is the same - $0 for state employees and IGIC members, although seating will be limited to the first 300 registrants.

Agenda

9:00 am Introduction and Opening Video
9:15 am Enterprise GIS for State Government
10:00 am Indiana Dept of Homeland Security - Address Integration Project
10:40 am ArcGIS Server 9.3 - A look ahead

12:00 pm Lunch on your own

1:30 pm Geodatabases at 9.2 & Geoprocessing
2:55 pm What's New at 9.3 with ArcGIS Desktop?
3:45 pm Accessing Support through ESRI
4:00 pm Questions & Answers


Friday, March 28th, 1:00-3:30, Indiana State Library, History Reference Room
IGIC Members: FREE
Nonmembers: $20


Every once in a while a new tool comes along that commands your attention. Oblique Aerial View (OAV) imagery is one such tool. It is changing the way that government agencies, emergency managers and private companies do business throughout their enterprise. Join us as Fred Baltrusis and Dave Surina from the City of Indianapolis, and Rick Hammond of Woolpert talk about the challenges of making these large datasets accessible to a wide audience, including implementation, training, data maintenance and all the lessons learned. You’ll also find out what makes all of the effort worthwhile.


Thursday, April 17th, 2008, 1:30-2:30pm
WEBINAR
Free


The Indiana Geological Survey (IGS) has created an interactive map (http://igs.indiana.edu/IHAPI) to facilitate retrieval of historical aerial photos (HAPs) by both expert GIS users and the general public. The website shows the locations of more than 100,000 individual photographs from the 1930s to the 1980s. Users can locate a time or area they are interested in, and order those photos from various archival collections, including the IGS archive which contains nearly 40,000 images. Denver Harper of IGS will walk attendees through an online tutorial showing how to use this exciting new tool.

Registrants will receive an email with login information and phone number one week prior to the event. Note: This is not a toll-free phone call, long distance charges may apply.


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