As Steering Committee Chairman of the Pecora 15 and Land Satellite Information IV Conference, I am pleased to invite you to join us in Denver, Colorado November 10-15, 2002, for an important
technical exchange. We will examine a full range of issues around the theme
of "Integrating Remote Sensing at the Global, Regional, and Local Scale."
This year the Pecora Conference is again joining with the Land
Satellite Information technical meeting. Making this particular conference
even more unique, we are also holding it in conjunction with the
International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS)
Commission I Mid-term Symposium.
The overall conference goal is to transfer knowledge about satellite
data from successful innovators to users and potential users. The targeted
audience for the Pecora/Land Satellite Conference is the end user, the
professional facing an information problem that potentially can be served by
satellite data. The targeted audience for the ISPRS Commission I Mid-term
Symposium is the platform, sensor, and image specialist. Workshops,
tutorials, general and technical sessions, working group discussions,
exhibits, and a supplemental classified session will be offered.
The remote sensing discipline is facing many challenges and
opportunities in the next few years. On behalf of the conference and
symposium planning groups, I ask you to join us in what promises to be a
premier remote sensing event.

The United States hosted Commission-I during the ISPRS quadrennial 1968-1972. Dr. M.B. Scher was its President in those days, and the Commission's responsibilities related primarily to Aerial
Photography and Navigation. His Commission ended the very year and month
that Landsat-1 inaugurated the satellite era for civilian Earth
observations. Today, Commission-I focuses on sensors (cameras and scanners),
platforms (airborne and spaceborne) and imagery (both analog and digital).
The mid-term symposium in 2002 marks the 30th anniversary of the Landsat
Program, and the United States is pleased once again to host this very
important Commission.
The U.S. has always been a leader in developing aerial and satellite
systems to record the progress of human endeavors and our environmental
impacts. In the three decades since Landsat-1 was launched, the technology
has spread to many space-faring nations, as well as from strictly
government-owned to both government and privately owned systems. Spatial
resolution has improved steadily from 80 meters to less than one meter;
radiometry has improved from six-bit to 12-bit accuracy; and spectral
resolution has improved from four channels to more than 50 channels.
This combined ISPRS/Pecora Conference integrates the interests of
all remote sensing specialists. Commission-I focuses on sensors, platforms,
and imagery with a special subset of sessions on Future Intelligent Earth
Observing Satellites (FIEOS) organized by Old Dominion University and George
Mason University under the auspices of WGI/4. All registrants to the
conference are invited to participate in all of the technical and poster
sessions, and through this to enjoy the widest experience possible.
All of the Commission's working groups have worked hard to develop a
comprehensive program to meet the needs of our international colleagues. We
welcome you and look forward to a successful and rewarding meeting.

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