Google has signed an exclusive deal with satellite company GeoEye for sole
rights to images from its
GeoEye-1
orbiter.
GeoEye-1 will produce the highest resolution commercially available pictures
of the Earth's surface, and Google wants them for its mapping software.
GeoEye-1 is scheduled to launch this week, weather permitting.
Google spokeswoman Kate Hurowitz told Reuters that the company will begin
receiving images from the new satellite within three months, once the onboard
systems have been checked.
"The combination of GeoEye's high-resolution, map-accurate satellite imagery
from GeoEye-1 and Google's search and display capabilities provides users with
access to rich, interactive visual image maps of the Earth," she said.
The satellite will orbit at a height of 423 miles but will be able to
identify objects as small as 41cm across. It will orbit the earth 15 times a
day, mapping almost a million square kilometres every 24 hours.
The move is the latest battle over mapping software, which is moving beyond a
consumer technology into the area of business.
The boom in location-based businesses is making accurate mapping essential,
and Google is hoping to monetise its technology to pay for its initial outlay.
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