| FOR
INMEDIATE RELEASE
August, 2008
“ESRI
President Receives Highest Award from International
Cartographic Association”
Jack
Dangermond Awarded Coveted Carl Mannerfelt Medal
at 2008 ESRI International User Conference
Redlands,
California—The International Cartographic
Association (ICA), the world's authoritative body
for cartography, presented ESRI president Jack
Dangermond with its highest honor, the Carl Mannerfelt
Medal, on Tuesday, August 5, at the 2008 ESRI
International User Conference. The Mannerfelt
Gold Medal was first awarded in 1980 and continues
to recognize extraordinary merits in cartography
including the conception, production, dissemination,
and study of maps. Dangermond is only the eleventh
recipient of the medal
"Jack Dangermond is a unique and outstanding
promoter of cartography, mapping, and geography,"
said Milan Konecny, immediate past-president,
ICA. "He is able to bridge the gap between
research ideas and the intentions of cartographers
on one side and real practical needs of users
from many different fields on the other."
Beginning as a small research group in 1969, ESRI
has grown to an organization with
10 offices in the United States and 80 international
distributors supporting users in 150 different
countries. ESRI is widely recognized as the technical
and market leader in geographic information system
(GIS) software. Under Dangermond's direction,
the company has pioneered innovative solutions
for working with geographic data on computer desktops,
across organizations, on the Internet, and in
the field using handheld mobile technology. A
graduate of the Harvard School of Design, Dangermond
holds six honorary doctorates from universities
around the world.
Dangermond was presented with the Mannerfelt Medal
for his development of new cartographic tools,
the creation of digital atlases, and his promotion
of cartography. The use of maps and GIS to assist
in many areas of human activities, ranging from
crisis management in disasters such as the recent
cyclone in Myanmar to issues of health and geography,
is especially innovative. Recent activities distributing
and sharing knowledge and capacity building through
fundamental projects include
• United Nations (UN) Global Mapping—Providing
opportunities for young users to become part of
the development of cartography through grants
awarded to those working with cartography in solving
problems in the contemporary world
• Highlighting and promoting, together with
ICA, the best drawings from the Barbara Petchenik
Contest in the book Children Map the World: Selections
from the Barbara Petchenik Children's World Map
Competition
• Publishing classic cartography books,
such as Eduard Imhoff's Cartographic Relief Presentation,
which help share the ideas of cartographers from
around the world
"Jack Dangermond is a pioneer defining and
delimiting the use of cartography and geographic
information in support of the UN's Millennium
Development Goals and the creation of a true knowledge-based
society," stated Konecny.
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Aeroterra S.A. is a privately
held organization that since its creation
in 1973 has been a leader of the geo-processing
field in the Latin American market. As an
exclusive distributor of ESRI Inc. and LEICA
Geosystems in Argentina and Uruguay, Aeroterra
has an installed base of over 8,000 licenses
in more than 1,000 sites. According to market
researches from the Inter-American Development
Bank (1995) and the Government of Canada
(1997/98), Aeroterra accounts for more than
80% of the GIS software market in Argentina.
The company is composed by a multi-disciplinary
team of professionals fully dedicated to
tasks related to geo-processing using the
most advanced tools available for providing
geo-related solutions to clients throughout
the world. The company has several strategic
alliances with international organizations
and a wide network of distributors and business
partners. |
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