Letter from the President
Transcription
Letter from the President
Letter from the President By Pat Sanders It’s Hot at HYPACK! Damn hot! With the thermometer hitting over 100 degrees, it seems everybody made it into the air-conditioned office for work. It seems from my previous comments that I have made certain makers of hydrographic survey equipment hot under the collar. So be it. If you don’t want to prove to me that your stuff can meet certain standards out in the real world, don’t expect me to go along with your inane claims. Somebody asked me recently if I was getting old and cranky. Damn right! HYPACK 2011 has turned out to be a very stable release. (I can tell because the Minesweeper scores of the support staff are at an all-time low.) I put it down to a better testing program. John Lindberg and the support staff have developed testing guidelines for each HYPACK® program. Before they sign off on a program, it has to prove that it can read certain files, generate certain outputs and be verified that the outputs have not changed (unless for a noted reason). 3D Visualization in HYPACK® SURVEY. One of the things that our competitors have done better than us is visualizing multibeam data in a real-time 3D presentation. (Hey, at least I’m honest! I’ll be happy to start reciting the things that we do better than them [including costing you a lot less.]) Lazar Pevac has been updating HYPACK® SURVEY for 2012 with a real-time 3D Matrix window that would bring our real-time visualization up to speed. We are continuing to work on a real-time MTX SERVER application that would create matrix files ‘on the fly’ and allow multiple applications to fill and read MTX information. It’s still up in the air if the MATRIX SERVER will be ready in time for the 2012 release (Jan 2012), but the 3D MTX view in HYPACK® SURVEY will definitely be in the release. The 1st Test!, but work remains…. Dynamic ENC: Bill Bergmann of HYPACK has been working to allow users of the ENC EDITOR to use the program as a predictive ENC. It can modify the shallow water and safety contour, based on the draft of the vessel, a safety margin and the current tide condition. The idea was to provide pilots with a tool to see where the safe water exists for different loading and tide conditions. The routine requires a lot of contours and depth areas in your ENC chart, but HYPACK® can already help you with that. We also can now hide contours which are prominent. Once we get some feedback from pilots and mariners, we’ll check out building it directly into SURVEY. July / 2011 1 FIGURE 1. Optional Green (Safe), Yellow (Caution), Red (Don’t Enter) Display from HYPACK’s Dynamic ENC Routine. CLOUD 2012: Ken Aiken of HYPACK has been doing some major work on our CLOUD program. It will be issued as both a 32-bit and 64-bit version in HYPACK® 2012. It turns out that a lot of our users are utilizing CLOUD for their final review and editing of multibeam data. We started to get complaints about CLOUD being slow to update as users were cramming more and more points into it. Ken has modified CLOUD so that it can display either all of the data points, or a subdivided set of data points. You can create a grid of n rows by m columns and then quickly display and edit the points in each grid cell. After selecting a cell, it is back-lit in grey to show that you have already examined that grid cell. We’re going to hold off sending this one out until the 2012 release. FIGURE 2. The new Cloud Control window (inset) in CLOUD. 2 QPS-IVS Merger. Someone was recently asking me my thoughts about the merger between QPS (QINSY) and IVS (Fliedermaus). To be truthful, I’m not losing any sleep over it. QINSY is a decent hydrographic collection/processing package (although a bit expensive) and IVS is an excellent visualization product. Never in the history of mankind has the merger of two software companies resulted in a better product for the end-user. Maybe these guys will be the first to ‘pull it off’ and I’ll soon be collecting an unemployment check (or picking up golf balls at a driving range), but it’s not going to be easy merging two technology companies, each one with their own ideas and methodologies. (The only thing that might be better for HYPACK is if a multibeam company bought one of them. It seems every time a multibeam company buys a hydrographic software provider, the software disappears within 3 to 5 years.) By the way, that’s Humphrey Bogart from the Caine Mutiny. It was between him and the Skipper in Gilligan’s Island (Bob Hale) for the picture in this newsletter. Bogie won. Pat Sanders 25 July 2011 July / 2011 3