Archive for the ‘Photos’ Category

The 2008 ESRI Southwest Users Group Conference

November 3rd, 2008 by Rob Lenarcic

Laramie, WY October 22-24, 2008

For the last six years, Latitude Geographics has attended every Southwest Users Group (SWUG) conference. From Jackson Hole in 2003 through to Laramie in 2008, the SWUG conference brings together GIS users from Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. This year’s high plains geospatial roundup offered up blowing snow and chilly temperatures – a big departure for a guy like me accustomed to Victoria’s moderate climate. But the warmth of the SWUG organizers (kudos to the entire organizing committee for an awesome job!) allowed the attendees to quickly forget about the cold temperatures, and settle into a dose (actually, many, many doses) of Wyoming hospitality!

geo_cortex_Rodeo_v1The SWUG event is not your regular, regional GIS conference. John Calkins, ESRI’s “Corporate Technical Evangelist” kicked things off with an interactive keynote session that engaged the group in a geographic approach to problem solving. Plenty of great user and vendor presentations followed, topped off with an evening keynote by Wyoming historian Bruce Blevins. Aside from all the interesting work-related stuff, I’d have to say that the highlight of the conference was the BBQ, Bluegrass, and Broncs event (disclosure: we were also a sponsor). This was not my first rodeo – but it was undoubtedly one of the most unique I’ve seen. The University of Wyoming Rodeo Team put on a presentation just for us, and we got to enjoy steer wrestling, calf roping, barrel racing and bull-riding. Yee-Haw! Later in the evening, we two-stepped to music served up by the Zarks, a local country-western band. I reckon the user sessions were a little subdued the next morning, but attendees (AKA SWUG-uhs) seemed to be wearing a collective grin.

It’s events like these that make me appreciate the industry we work in, given its great mix of knowledge sharing, professionalism, and appreciation for local cultural activities!

Adventures in Portrait Photography

December 22nd, 2007 by Steven Myhill-Jones

As a web-centric company that does predominately remote work, we have lots of customers we’ve never actually met face-to-face. Back in 2003 when we redesigned our website, we decided to use staff photos on our websites (www.geocortex.com, www.latitudegeo.com). It’s proven very popular with customers. We always hear about people hitting F5 a bunch of times to see the people they work with. We’ve even had job interviewees come in knowing everyone’s name (that always kinda weirds everyone out, actually).

Anyway, the studio photo shoots are a hassle to set-up so we hadn’t done one in a while, which meant many staff didn’t have a photo up and the posted photos were getting outdated (Drew barely looks old enough to drive a car in his old photo). A few months ago I was browsing a photography store and had the bright (but dumb) idea of buying a whole prosumer lighting kit so we could do these photos in-house. I reasoned; I love photography and it’ll be so easy to just snap a shot of new staff when they start! Easy, right? Wrong. Anyway, most of the new photos are up. I think they look okay given that we still haven’t got the flash synched properly with the digital SLR we’ve been using.

Geocortex Picnic Photos

August 4th, 2007 by Kortni

Here’s the link to photos from the Geocortex Picnic at the 2007 ESRI International User Conference in San Diego: http://www.flickr.com/photos/geocortexblog/sets/72157601028331067/detail/

We host this free annual picnic for clients and guests so everyone can socialize, get some fresh air/sunshine in the park, and avoid 10,000 other people hunting for lunch over ten square city blocks. We had about 250 folks join us, and it seemed like people enjoyed themselves.

We’ve got Embarcadero Marina Park South (see map) booked for next years’ conference, and the caterer has suggested barbequed ribs. Too messy? Maybe…

Photos from the IMF/Geocortex User Conference

July 26th, 2007 by Kortni

There’s nothing like a newsletter (that references this blog post) being mailed out to eight hundred people to remind me to get some conference photos uploaded—not to mention getting our actual production blog exposed to the world.

Here they are: http://www.flickr.com/photos/geocortexblog/sets/72157601005380976/detail/

ucgroup

Ah, the memories. If you’re willing to share some of your photos (especially if you were on the whale watching outing), let me know and I’ll add them.

If you attended the IMF/Geocortex User Conference and you’d like to download presentations and other information, they are available for download at: http://www.geocortex.com/uc/archive/2007/login.html