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Computer Processing of Images In RSRU
Computer processing of images was done in the Remote Sensing Research
Unit (RSRU) of Geography before 1978, but black and white only, mostly
line printer overstrike output on 14" folded paper, which was then
taped together and hung on the wall due to its size. By 1978, RSRU was
using the VICAR-IBIS package. The software was supported in the Engineering
Department -- initially on a VAX 1145, then on a VAX 1170. Both machines
were huge and expensive with only a small fraction of the processing
power of today's desktop PCs.
At
the time, RSRU did mostly single image digital processing, but also
some multidate image overlay and analysis (raster mode only). Sometime
around 1979, digital/optical film scanner and film writers were added
to the system to allow digital image input and output. This equipment
generated the first color digital images produced in the Department
These
images were generated as a part of a Geography Department remote sensing
study of prime agricultural land in the State of California. To produce
these images, three bands of the original MSS data were photo-optically
converted to individual black and white film positives. These were then
pin registered and printed using a additive color photographic process.
The total time required to produce an image was approximately 60 hours.
To
the left is a photo of Jack Estes speaking with then Governor
Jerry Brown during a tour of the Map and Image Library, circa
1979. The individuals shown in the photo, left to right, are: Rusty
Schweikert (former astronaut and, at the time of the photo, Director
of State of California Space Institute,) Governor Brown, Jack Estes,
and a GRSU researcher.
RSRU first began to use ERDAS in 1984. It ran on an IBM-PC at the blinding
speed of 88 MHz. The hard drive, which cost approximately $5,000, was
20MB (that's Megabyte, not Gigabyte). This machine allowed researchers
to display and process an entire quarter of a MSS scene at one time.
ERDAS was used to do remote sensing image processing and GIS. Most of
the processings was in raster mode, but some was done in raster/vector
mode.
(Above information and photos courtesy of Joe Scepan,
staff member of RSRU)
First ArcInfo
License
Tracing back to when the Geography Department first got an ArcInfo
license from ESRI has been challenging, since detailed accounting books
are mandated to be jettisoned after a number of years. Meryl Wieder,
the Department MSO (highest ranking staff person), who has been with
UCSB 33 years, and Geography most of that time, probably has the best
idea when this occurred. "Simonett was the Chair [1974-1980]. My
guess is around 1979-80. I know that it cost the department $40,000,
and that was considered to be a huge discount."
Rick Church remembers, "Sometime during the time I was department
chair [1984-1988], Dave Simonett and I went to ESRI and talked with
Dangermond and others. Part of the
visit was trying to get a reduced price on their products. I know that
we had ArcInfo
before Mike [Goodchild] came." Mike concurs: "We had a license
when I arrived in 1988."
ESRI was not able to help with old records. Theirs only go back to
1992. "UCSB Geography's first ArcInfo license was March 13, 1992.
Stephen Miller requested key codes from ESRI for a server named 'rapa.'"
Thus, we conclude that the license was probably first obtained sometime
between 1979 and 1988.
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