|
13 May 2008 |
page update:
8 Feb 05
|
Release Notes in PDF
Release Notes in MS Word
30 July 1997
Release of V5.70 TNT products
Table of Contents
Introduction
Summary of New Features
Priorities of
Features for V5.80
First Priority.
Second Priority.
MI/X (MicroImages' X
Server)
Modifications.
Public Release.
New Sample Geodata
Installation
Installed Sizes.
Upgrading.
TNTview® 5.7
Features.
Changes for
V5.80.
Upgrades.
TNTatlasTM V5.7
TNTliteTM
5.7
General.
Getting Started Booklets.
Summary of New Features.
Macintosh
Getting Started Booklets
Progress.
Status.
Future Plans.
TNT Reference Manual
Installation.
Features.
Contents.
New TNT Features
System Level
Features.
Display/Spatial Data (new prototype process).
Display/Spatial Data (older familiar process).
Import/Export.
Object Editor.
Regions.
*Automatic Classification.
Viewsheds.
Raster Databases.
Vector
Properties (interpret/Vector/Polygon Properties...).
Mosaicking.
Surface Modeling
DEM/ortho.
Autotrace.
*Databases.
Plots of Fields.
*SML.
Printing.
MicroImages
Authorized Dealers
Turkey--HAT Inc.
Training of
Dealers.
Printers
Computers
Web Site
Reference Materials
Papers on
Applications.
Staff Additions
Noteworthy Client
Additions
Promotional Activities
Abbreviations
Color Plates
Release
Notes Index
Introduction
MicroImages is pleased to distribute V5.70 of the TNT
products and the 42nd quarterly release of TNTmips. During the past
quarter, there were no special problems in the TNT products.
V5.70 introduces several completely new processes in
addition to expected improvements in many other processes. The new processes
are: 1) mosaic with many new, advanced features, 2) visualization process with
advanced layer control and integrated 2D and 3D views, 3) relational database
editor with graphical representation, 4) on-line reference manual now all in
HTML, and 5) statistical/graphical tools for grouping/naming classes produced in
unsupervised image classification.
Nine new Getting Started tutorial booklets are shipping in
printed format. All available Getting Started booklets are included on the V5.70
CD in PDF format for easy viewing in color in Adobe Acrobat Reader (Reader and
all sample geodata sets are also on the CD). Using the Reader, you can easily
print each Getting Started booklet in color for your personal use. Also enclosed
is a new TNTatlas sampler CD which was jointly prepared with the Maryland
Department of Natural Resources.
Over 150 new feature requests submitted by clients and
MicroImages' staff were implemented in various V5.70 processes since V5.60
was shipped. About an equal number of additional requests was logged from the
same sources in the same period. This holds the total count of new features not
yet implemented to somewhat more than 1700. It is hard to reduce this count
rapidly, as all clients and staff continue to have many good new ideas each
quarter which are added to this list. However, we are now at least beginning to
"hold our ground" in this area, and the count is showing a little
reduction. Your new and past requests for features are constantly being
prioritized, and those selected as providing the most value to the most clients
are given a priority for implementation.
Summary of New
Features
As usual, details on all the following and other new
features in V5.70 can be found in their expanded description in later
sections of this MicroImages MEMO.
The 2D display process you have been using in the TNT
products was created in V4.0 of the TNT products and expanded
and extended through V5.60. This four year old process has been
rewritten incorporating 2D, 3D, and stereo functionality and is being released
in a preview form.
Any field in the related attribute tables can now be
selected to show as labels for a layer.
A spatial DataTip (like a ToolTip in appearance) will pop
in to the view area to identify the nearest vector element, raster cell, ...
for the active layer. The property shown in the DataTip box can be the
contents of any attribute field you specify for each layer.
The graphical drawing tools now draw directly in the color
and line width you select.
The object edit process has many enhancement features which
you have requested such as cut, copy, and paste for vectors and their
attributes; edit functions via right mouse button; prompts for attribute
changes and additions; and so on.
The old mosaic process (six years old) is replaced by a new
process for assembling images into a composite raster(s). It has many new
features such as warping, transparency to map projection of images, improved
contrast matching, define irregular seams, edge feathering, and so on.
A completely new Database Management process is provided to
assist you in the creation, management, and editing of your relational
databases before or after they are attached to graphical elements. It collects
features already available for such operations which were scattered into
various hard to find places in other TNT processes.
The overall structure of SML was revised to make it
easier to add vector, CAD, TIN, and database functions. In connection with
this, functions are now available for matrix manipulation, vector
combinations, raster combinations, raster to vector conversion, and others.
MicroImages also announces that it will make SML available at no
additional cost as part of TNTview in V5.80.
Unsupervised image classification processes now have new
interactive class merging and naming (labeling) procedures using dendrograms,
co-occurrence tables, and so on.
The AutoTrace process now has an interactive preview
function to assist in selection of the parameters controlling the vector
filters it applies.
Queries can be performed on attributes attached to raster
cell values to control their use in principal components, multilinear
analysis, raster combinations, and decorrelation processes.
The on-line reference manual has now been fully converted
to HTML format for use in Internet Explorer or Netscape browsers.
Microsoft Internet Explorer V3.02 (Windows) and V3.01 (Mac)
is provided for use on the Windows or Mac platforms (Microsoft has delayed its
release for UNIX platforms until Explorer V4.0 is released).
TNTatlas is now FREE for use on all platforms supported
by the TNT products.
Each layer in an AutoCAD DXF layer can be imported
separately or combined as specified into a CAD or vector object in a project
file.
At least nine new Getting Started booklets and their
geodata sets from Ptolemy are shipping with V5.70 in black and white
printed format.
All available Getting Started booklets are on the V5.70
CD in Adobe Acrobat Reader PDF files for your review or printing in color
(Reader is also being provided).
Priorities of
Features for V5.80
First Priority.
Complete the transfer of all features from the old 2D and
3D Display processes to the new Visualization process, and delete the older
processes. [This activity is underway as a continuing process.]
Extend the new Visualization process to provide fly-bys
(any position above terrain), drive-throughs (a track on the terrain), sail-throughs
(restricted to a plane), and other modes. Provide new tools to be used to
design the path of motion in 2D and 3D to control the 3D view. Add interactive
control of the movement for a 3D view from mouse or joystick.
Allow map layouts to be moved into Adobe Illustrator using
its special EPS format (Illustrator Encapsulated PostScript). Output to the
generic EPS format will also be provided. Transferring the layout into
Illustrator on the Mac or Windows PCs allows the addition of fancier map
elements. This capability will be provided under the P8 printing option
similar to the output to TIFF files. [This feature was nearly completed at the
time of shipment of V5.70.]
Add the ability to create and use any SML script as
a standard feature in TNTview at no additional cost. This adds a
similar capability to customize TNTview as with Avenue (ArcView) or
MapBasic (MapInfo). However, SML can expand to provide many more
functions than either of these, since the TNT products already manage
more integrated objects and datatypes (for example, rasters and TIN objects,
all platforms, 1 to 128 bit rasters of many types, ...).
Add the ability, at no additional cost, to run compiled
executable (*.exe) processes in TNTview which were created using the TNTsdk
(software development kit) available for TNTmips. Remember also that an
SML script can include and run an *.exe process created with TNTsdk
or other independent C libraries.
Continue to add many new SML functions, especially
those dealing with vectors.
Allow selection and execution of an SML script as a
layer in any 2D or 3D view in any process. This will run the SML script
to determine and recreate this display or view layer at the time of each
redraw. Example use would be to plot real time GPS values as symbols on a
view.
Provide a mechanism so that your SML script can be
run from an icon which you add to the main tool bar in a process--such as the
visualization or object editor process. In other words, you can customize
these processes with your own icons and SML scripts.
Directly read live geopoints from GPS units via NMEA
(National Marine Electronics Association) and Trimble GPS communication
standards and also from saved geodata collected by GPS. Reposition the view
based upon coordinates of the live geopoints or other coordinate inputs.
Support GPS collection of geopoints to describe elements in the object editor
process in a fashion paralleling that for X-Y digitizers. Allow SML
scripts to read GPS inputs directly.
Add improved, easier, and expanded legend generation in
both the screen and print layouts. For example, provide a hierarchical-type
legend display window to TNTmips, and thus TNTview, providing
similar functionality to that found in ArcView and MapInfo displays. [This
activity is underway.]
During the past three months, a new method for describing
complex element styles has been created. It uses a script to describe how each
element type (for example, line) will appear when rendered on the screen or
printed map. Think of it as something like PostScript. The new process also
allows a query of the attached attributes to determine how a symbol style is
to be constructed (for example, how a line changes along a path from segment
to segment). A new rendering engine to read and display these designs has also
been implemented.
During this quarter, this new approach will be integrated
into existing processes to allow creation of many new styles which have been
requested. For example, geologists need asymmetric line styles (strike and dip
lines, characters and symbols in lines, depression contour lines, ...), and
other disciplines have their own complex symbol requirements. These changes
will be provided with new interactive style design tools, or you can specify
the style by creating a script to describe it. These tools will then be used
by MicroImages' graphics specialists to revise and expand the current
collection of point, line, and polygon styles. The mechanisms for managing the
styles assigned to objects will also be improved and simplified. [Internal
development of the prototype of this new style engine is complete, and a new
interactive symbol/line style editor is being written now.]
We will continue to add more new features which you have
requested into the automatic image classification processes. [This activity is
underway.]
Provide a means whereby the Raster Extract and Mosaic
processes can automatically cut a larger image into a defined subset of
georeferenced quadrangles (for example, individual objects for the grid
supplied). This will probably be accomplished using a vector object to
determine the areas to be extracted, so irregular areas can also be
automatically output (for example, farmer's fields).
The import from the SDTS (Spatial Data Transfer Standard)
format will be implemented. [This activity is underway.]
Export to coverage and E00 formats. [Both of these
activities are underway.]
The support for use of two-byte character sets for file
names and all user interface components will be completed (for Japanese,
Chinese, Korean, ...).
Modify the vector extraction process to use regions and the
region generation tools.
Add support for the use of stereo SPOT images in the DEM/ortho
process, and revise the restitution process (step D).
Provide interactive tools for combining saved regions or
between the active and a saved region (for example AND, OR, XOR, ...). [This
feature is finished.]
At least nine new Ptolemy Getting Started booklets will be
prepared on such topics as: • filtering images • exporting geodata
• editing CAD data • vector analysis operations
• editing TIN geodata • sketching and measuring
• using SML • digitizing soil maps
• raster analysis operations • getting good color
The Getting Started booklets entitled Displaying
Geospatial Data and Classifying Images will also be reissued to
match the revised processes. This will increase the total number of Getting
Started booklets and their sample geodata available to about 30. As usual, all
these new booklets will be posted on microimages.com during the quarter in
Adobe Acrobat PDF files as soon as they are available in draft format. Use
your Internet access to download these new booklets and sample geodata, and
view them on your system or print them in color.
Second Priority.
Allow cut, copy, and paste between objects of different types
(for example vector to raster and raster to vector).
Sort tables on more than one field.
Allow regions to be created from raster objects using
expressions.
Extend theme mapping to raster layers.
Allow queries on attributes attached to raster cell values to
control how they are viewed (similar to currently using a query to control how a
vector object is displayed).
Allow nodes in vector objects to have attribute tables
attached.
Populate tables by copying fields from other tables. Example
use would be to copy geocoordinate fields from one table and paste into another.
Add capability to save graphic views (histogram, X-Y plot,
...) as CAD objects so that they can be used as a component in a map layout.
Add capability to save tabular views so that they can be used
as a component in a map layout.
Modify watershed process to trace ridge lines in vector
elements.
Allow theme profiles (queries and display settings) to be
saved and reused.
Support the inclusion of "hard edges" in TIN
objects (in other words, fixed ridges, drainage, coast lines, ...), and modify
the necessary processes to use them.
MI/X (MicroImages' X Server)
Modifications.
Only minor transparent changes have been made in the
MicroImages MI/X servers in the past quarter to correct deficiencies
detected in their network operations. No significant future changes are
anticipated in this area.
Public Release.
Downloads of the MI/X servers by non-clients from
microimages.com have averaged approximately 1000 per week. A total of 20,000
direct downloads have been served. Together with the many mirror sites and
inclusion on the CDs of other freeware groups (for example, on the CD of MACLIFE,
the top selling Mac specific magazine in Japan), MicroImages estimates that
50,000 now have acquired one of these MI/X servers.
Unfortunately, it is not apparent that a minimum of a
thousand visits a week to microimages.com for access to MI/X products, or
the identification window which pops in when the server starts, significantly
increases the interest of these visitors in the other TNT products,
including access to a free TNTlite. It is not even apparent that anyone
is using MI/X to communicate with the workstation versions of ArcInfo or
ERDAS.
MicroImages does get short questions daily by email on how to
set up and use the MI/X products. Software support responds to all these
requests, often by referring them to the FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) list
being maintained on the site for this purpose. Also, there are frequent requests
for new features in the MI/X servers. These are answered to the effect
that the product is free, and new features will be added only if needed by
MicroImages' products and client base.
MicroImages also often gets frequent thanks for these free
products. Examples of these reactions follow.
email on 1 April 1997 from Slovenia
"I would just like to thank you for the version of
X-windows emulator for Windows 95. This is really a true gift to the computer
society who is not well enough to spend money for various software. The MI/X
server is great and very easy to use. Thank you very much once again."
email on 26 March 1997 from anonymous
"I run NT and have a Linux box to do some assorted
things. Being able to run X on my NT box is fantastic. Much appreciated."
email on 7 April 1997 from mbogner@latte.memphis.edu
"It does work! I am able to run the executables which
come with the x11r6 binaries. Once I do: set DISPLAY=localhost:0.0, I can run
xclock, oclock, etc. which reside on my hard disk. Please keep the server free.
It's a great product."
email on 25 March 1997 from mathew@uq.edu.au
"I have used both eXodus and Max X, and I think that
this is faster than both."
email on 23 June 1997 from augusto@FCGeorp.com
"I'm writing this letter to thank you for providing such
a wonderful Xwindows environment. I was impressed at the fact that you offer it
for free. Notwithstanding the fact that I understand it's something you actually
use to make your product work within a network I want to express my sincere
thanks and appreciation at the fact that you guys allow other people to use your
interface for free. This kind of collaboration is the reason why we have such a
wonderful worldwide phenomena as the internet. We are a high tech microwave and
cellular base station amplifier design and manufacturing company (http://www.fcgcorp.com).
If you guys ever need anything in the electronics design area don't hesitate to
call us because we will help you out and return the favor with pleasure."
New Sample Geodata
| NOTE: All the sample geodata
sets on the CD are subject to correction, addition, and modification
during the quarter as your feedback is received. Most geodata which
you might have installed from your V5.60 CDs have some kind of
change. It is therefore important that all sample geodata sets, not
just those which are new, be installed and replaced with each new
quarterly release. |
New sample geodata has been added to the V5.70 CDs
of the TNT products. Most of these geodata set directories contain the
Project File(s) needed for completing the exercises in the new Getting Started
tutorials shipped with V5.70. If you install all the sample Project
Files from the CD to your hard drive, it will require 115 MB.
IMPORT Directory. This directory contains files in the
various external formats imported as examples in the Getting Started tutorial
booklet entitled Importing Geodata.
MAPLO Directory. This directory contains the Project
Files used for the exercises in the Getting Started booklet entitled Laying
Out Maps.
PINMAP Directory. This directory contains the Project
Files used for the exercises in the Getting Started booklet entitled Pin
Mapping.
Installation
Installed Sizes.
Loading a full installation of TNTmips 5.7 processes onto your hard
drive (exclusive of any other products, data sets, illustrations, Word files,
...) requires the following storage space in megabytes:
| PC using W31 |
74 MB |
| PC using W95 |
93 MB |
| PC using NT (Intel) |
93 MB |
| PC using LINUX (Intel) |
71 MB |
| DEC using NT (Alpha) |
99 MB |
| Mac using MacOS 7.6 (680xx) |
74 MB |
| Power Mac using MacOS 7.6 and 8.0 (PPC) |
84 MB |
| Hewlett Packard workstation using HPUX |
101 MB |
| SGI workstation via IRIX |
124 MB |
| Sun workstation via Solaris 1.x |
89 MB |
| Sun workstation via Solaris 2.x |
85 MB |
| IBM workstation via AIX 4.x (PPC) |
112 MB |
| DEC workstation via UNIX=OSF/1 (Alpha) |
141 MB |
V5.70 of the HTML based on-line Reference Manual
including illustrations requires 31 MB. Installing all sample geodata sets for
TNTlite and TNTmips requires 115 MB.
Upgrading.
If you did not order an upgrade of your TNT professional product and
wish to do so now, please contact MicroImages by FAX, phone, or email to
arrange to purchase your annual maintenance and obtain the use of V5.70.
Upon receipt of your order and processing, MicroImages will supply you with an
authorization code by return FAX only. Entering this code when running
the installation process allows you to complete the installation and
immediately start to use TNTmips 5.70 and the other TNT
professional products.
If you do not have annual maintenance for TNTmips,
you can purchase it to gain access to V5.70 under the elective upgrade
plan at the cost in the tables below. Please remember--new features have been
added to TNTmips each quarter. Thus, the more quarters you are behind V5.70,
the higher your upgrade cost will be. As usual, there is no additional charge
for the upgrade of your special peripheral support features, TNTlink,
or TNTsdk which you may have added to your basic TNTmips system.
Within the NAFTA point-of-use area (Canada, U.S., and
Mexico) and with shipping by UPS ground: (+150/each means $150 for each
additional quarterly increment.)
| TNTmips Product Code |
Price to upgrade from TNTmips: |
| V5.60 |
V5.50 |
V5.40 |
V5.30 |
V5.20 |
V5.10 and earlier |
| D30 to D60 (CDs) |
$250 |
450 |
600 |
750 |
900 |
+150/each |
| D80 |
$375 |
675 |
900 |
1050 |
1200 |
+150/each |
| M50 |
$250 |
450 |
600 |
750 |
900 |
+150/each |
| L50 |
$250 |
450 |
600 |
750 |
900 |
+150/each |
| U100 |
$450 |
800 |
1000 |
1200 |
1400 |
+200/each |
| U150 |
$615 |
1100 |
1450 |
1700 |
1950 |
+250/each |
| U200 |
$780 |
1400 |
1875 |
2175 |
2475 |
+300/each |
For a point-of-use in all other nations with shipping by air express:
(+150/each means $150 for each additional quarterly increment.)
| TNTmips Product Code |
Price to upgrade from TNTmips: |
| V5.60 |
V5.50 |
V5.40 |
V5.30 |
V5.20 |
V5.10 and earlier |
| D30 to D60(CDs) |
$300 |
560 |
750 |
900 |
1050 |
+150/each |
| D80 |
$425 |
800 |
1050 |
1200 |
1350 |
+150/each |
| M50 |
$300 |
560 |
750 |
900 |
1050 |
+150/each |
| L50 |
$300 |
560 |
750 |
900 |
1050 |
+150/each |
| U100 |
$500 |
850 |
1050 |
1250 |
1450 |
+200/each |
| U150 |
$665 |
1150 |
1500 |
1750 |
2000 |
+250/each |
| U200 |
$830 |
1450 |
1925 |
2225 |
2525 |
+300/each |
TNTview® 5.7
Features.
The following is a summary of the new features added to V5.70 of the
TNT products which are now available in TNTview 5.7. Detailed
descriptions of these new features can be found in the appropriate section
below on New TNT Features.
- The new Visualization process incorporating integrated 2D, 3D, and
stereo functionality is being released in a preview form.
- Any field in the related attribute tables can now be selected to show as
labels for a layer.
- A spatial DataTip (like a ToolTip in appearance) will pop in to the view
area showing the selected attribute field value of the nearest vector
element, raster cell, ... for the active layer.
- The graphical drawing tools now draw in the color and line width you
select.
- The on-line reference manual is in HTML format for use in browsers.
- Microsoft Internet Explorer V3.02 (Windows) and V3.01 (Mac) is provided
and installed as a browser.
- Each data layer in an AutoCAD DXF can be imported separately into CAD
and vector objects in a Project File.
- Windows BMP, MRLC, NEXRAD (weather RADAR), ERS-1 SAR, EOSAT-1c, SPOTview,
DOQ/COQ (USGS orthophoto quads), and RadarSat raster formats can now be
imported.
Changes for V5.80.
TNTview 5.8 will provide the Spatial Manipulation
Language (SML) process at no additional charge. This expanding
geospatial analysis language will permit you to create powerful custom display
and analysis functions for your private use, for public distribution, or for
commercialization in partnership with the low cost TNTview product. TNTview
is gradually being positioned as a product which is similar in price but
superior in capability to MapInfo and ArcView. TNTview will also
eventually be able to read and use their geodata sets directly.
MicroImages is now focused on adding more between-object
functionality to the SML function library. It is also necessary to add
procedures to create more complex user interface components. However, SML
is already the only geospatial scripting language which can deal equally well
with complex raster objects in close integration with vector, CAD, TIN, and
database objects. It already provides the basis to build complex but efficient
geospatial applications that are essentially platform and map projection
independent.
SML is an interpreted language, as are MapBasic and
Avenue, but SML is progressively providing access in scripts to use more
and more of the large complex functions from which the TNT products are
built and which do not exist in MapInfo or ArcView. For example, the display
function available in SML is compiled and efficient and provides many of
the complex visualization procedures in TNTmips, such as projection
independence. The Project File (RVC) read and write functions automatically
manage the efficient buffering and storage of your raster, vector, CAD, TIN, and
database objects. The viewshed, multilinear raster regression, principal
components, linear raster combinations, vector combinations, raster and TIN
conversion to vector contours, and other functions released in V5.70 are
further examples of efficient compiled functions which can be used for major
tasks. These functions and new functions being extracted from TNTmips can
be called with a single statement in SML, and when you use the powerful
RVC access functions, are as efficient in operation as if used directly in TNTmips.
Can these kinds of things be done with MapBasic or Avenue?
Upgrades.
Within the NAFTA point-of-use area (Canada, U.S., and Mexico)
and with shipping by UPS ground: (+50/each means $50 for each additional
quarterly increment.)
| TNTview Product |
Price to upgrade from TNTview: |
| V5.60 |
V5.50 |
V5.40 |
V5.30 |
V5.20 |
V5.10 and earlier |
| W31, W95, and NT |
$95 |
170 |
225 |
275 |
325 |
+50/each |
| Mac and PMac |
$95 |
170 |
225 |
275 |
325 |
+50/each |
| LINUX |
$95 |
170 |
225 |
275 |
325 |
+50/each |
| DEC/Alpha via NT |
$125 |
225 |
300 |
350 |
400 |
+50/each |
| UNIX single user |
$155 |
280 |
375 |
425 |
475 |
+50/each |
For a point-of-use in all other nations with shipping by air express:
(+50/each means $50 for each additional quarterly increment.)
| TNTview Product |
Price to upgrade from TNTview: |
| V5.60 |
V5.50 |
V5.40 |
V5.30 |
V5.20 |
V5.10 and earlier |
| W31, W95, and NT |
$115 |
205 |
270 |
320 |
370 |
+50/each |
| Mac and PMac |
$115 |
205 |
270 |
320 |
370 |
+50/each |
| LINUX |
$115 |
205 |
270 |
320 |
370 |
+50/each |
| DEC/Alpha via NT |
$150 |
270 |
360 |
410 |
460 |
+50/each |
| UNIX single user |
$185 |
335 |
450 |
500 |
550 |
+50/each |
TNTatlasTM 5.7
Now Free.
TNTatlas is now FREE for use on each and every
platform supported by the TNT products. In other words, V5.70 of TNTatlas
no longer checks for the hardware key and thus becomes, in effect, a free
"runtime" product for your distribution of a Project File(s)
containing HyperIndex links. The now free TNTatlas software can be used
for making one CD at a time (via your CDR drive) or for a mass production run.
Remember that a TNTatlas requires only a single,
common geodata set in a Project File(s) for direct use on any and all platforms
with the appropriate version of the TNTatlas software. Furthermore, TNTatlas
supports identical viewing, measurement, and printing capabilities from that
single set of geodata on every platform.
Sample CD.
A new sample TNTatlas CD entitled Maryland's
Coastal Bays is enclosed. It has been developed jointly with the Maryland
Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) with geodata from this and other Maryland
state agencies. It is included with your V5.70 shipment to illustrate the
flexibility of TNTatlas to make a single CD which can be used on all
Microsoft Windows, Mac and PMac, LINUX, and the other UNIX platforms. It also
demonstrates how a single set of color printed instructions can be used with a TNTatlas
CD regardless of which platform the CD is subsequently viewed on.
The color-infrared orthophoto, SPOT, property boundary,
highway, and other geodata making up this sample atlas is a mere fraction of the
almost 100 gigabytes of similar geodata in Project Files covering the entire
area of Maryland. Good things, especially geodata, do not come cheap! This
geodata for the whole state has been built up using TNTmips by the
persevering GIS staff of the MDNR over the past 10 years. It now makes up
the Maryland Environmental Resources and Land Information Network (MERLIN). (The
merlin is the official state bird of Maryland and is pictured on the CD and the
delivery card.) The preparation of the more than 1200 color-infrared orthoimages
in MERLIN was not carried out in TNTmips. This major flying, control, and
compiling effort was contracted out for several million dollars to a
photogrammetric engineering firm who delivered these as Project Files (RVC
format) over the past seven years.
All this Project File geodata is now available via MERLIN
on-line on five NT-based file servers (each PC has 20 gigabytes of storage on
RAID hard drives) on the MDNR's 100 gigabyte Intranet, which reaches almost all
of its 3000 personnel. MERLIN is structured into TNTatlas form with over
5000 links. It is accessed and used across the department by the general staff
using TNTatlas software on their personal desktop W95 or NT machines.
There is also a large PC-based TNTatlas software server available on the
network for those general staff who wish to use only the MI/X server on
their desktop PCs. Regular courses of three hours' duration are provided to
MDNR's general staff on the operation of TNTatlas and MERLIN. As the last
of the color-infrared orthophotos is being completed and added to the MERLIN
system, it is beginning to be used at all functional levels within the MDNR. The
contents of MERLIN are also available to the public for the cost of their
reproduction in the various formats exported by TNTmips.
The structure and the layout of this sample TNTatlas
were designed by the staff of the GIS program at MDNR using materials in their
on-line MERLIN atlas. Starting with these completed Project Files in TNTatlas
form, MicroImages' staff added the TNTatlas software for each platform,
produced the CD reproduction masters, and contracted for the CD production.
MicroImages also created the graphics for the CD imprint, transmittal card, and
the color printed instructions. This CD and its transmittal and packaging
materials are just an example of what you can now do on your own with the free TNTatlas
publication software and your project materials.
TNTliteTM 5.7
General.
A total of 1500 copies of TNTlite 5.6 kits
were sold directly and via Dealers during the quarter, bringing the total TNTlite
CD kits shipped to 8500. Currently, completed downloads of TNTlite
from microimages.com range between 15 and 25 per week.
Getting Started Booklets.
The section below discusses the Getting Started tutorial
booklets in detail. It suffices to say that all these booklets can be downloaded
free as Acrobat PDF files for use with TNTlite. Those buying the physical
kit version of TNTlite will find it includes printed versions of all the
current booklets, and that the PDF files are on the V5.70 CD.
Summary of New Features.
The following is a summary of the new features added to the TNT
products to improve their usability in general and for TNTlite 5.7
in particular. Detailed descriptions of these new features can be found in the
appropriate section on TNTmips.
- Files in AutoCAD's DXF format can now be imported so that each layer
becomes a separate Project File. This allows a TNTlite user to select
only those kinds of features to import into each object. Using this CAD
layer selection, combined with the existing CAD area extraction procedure, a
lot more CAD materials fit into the size limits placed on CAD objects in TNTlite.
- At least 21 Getting Starting tutorial booklets will be shipping in the TNTlite
5.70 kits.
- The additional sample data sets for these booklets are included on the V5.70
TNT product CDs. Additional TNTlite booklets will be added
during the quarter as outlined below. Their sample data can be downloaded as
it becomes available.
Macintosh
MacOS 8.0 arrived just as V5.70 was shipping.
Preliminary testing indicates that TNTmips will operate correctly under
this latest version of the Apple operating system. As yet there is no
evaluation by MicroImages of the benefits of using the TNT products in
MacOS 8.0. Under 8.0, the MI/X server has a minor distraction in that
it does not restore the background color in the large X window after an area
is used (for example, a main menu is exposed). This is purely cosmetic and in
no way hinders or interferes with the operation of TNTmips. A revised MI/X
will subsequently resolve this.
Getting Started Booklets
Progress.
Introduction.
Nine new Getting Started booklets from Ptolemy are included
with V5.70 in black and white printed format. These tutorials now
provide about 450 pages of colorfully illustrated materials to your desktop.
This is approximately equal to a big book on Geospatial Analysis. The sample
geodata used in each of these, and all other previous tutorials, is included
on the V5.70 CD. The color versions of these, and all previous
tutorials, are on the CD in Adobe Acrobat PDF (Portable Document Format) files
together with the Adobe Acrobat reader for your easy direct viewing or
printing of them in full color.
A historic landmark is achieved with the concurrent release
of a detailed Getting Started booklet to introduce you to the features and
operation of the brand new Mosaic and the Database Management processes. A
booklet is also provided concurrent with the new features released in the 3D
display process. Perhaps this can be counted as one of the many ways in which TNTlite
has influenced and contributed to the professional users of the TNT
products? All of you will benefit from this approach and material. Perhaps by
now you have experienced the considerable additional value that can be derived
from using the color versions of these booklets on screen or printed from your
computer?
| IMPORTANT: The booklet Getting
Started: Displaying Geodata has been revised to match the features
provided in the new but incomplete Spatial Data Display process. It
has not been distributed in paper form with V5.70, as this
process will not be complete until V5.80. However, the
concurrent revised draft version of this booklet is available on the V5.70
CD as a PDF file for viewing and printing with Acrobat. |
Many other topics still remain which do not yet have a Getting Started
tutorial booklet. These topics will also require focused efforts for the next
six months or more. However, it is the long term goal that every new or
significantly changed TNT process is released with a concurrent new or
revised Getting Started booklet. It is possible that in some cases, revised
Getting Started booklets will temporarily be provided only in Acrobat PDF
files, as the second Displaying Geodata booklet on the V5.70 CD
only, which has been revised to match the preview of the new visualization
process. It is the DISPL58 PDF file located in the GETSTART folder or file on
the CD.
On-Line Viewing.
Many of you are already familiar with using the Acrobat
Reader to view other electronic materials provided as PDF instruction files with
other commercial software. MicroImages processes each Getting Started booklet
through the Adobe Acrobat Builder process (for example comes with PageMaker) to
produce a PDF file. Using the free Acrobat Reader appropriate to your platform
provided by MicroImages, you can view and print each PDF file in full color,
preserving its original complex layout.
You will find these Acrobat PDF files on the V5.70 CD
in a folder called GETSTART. You will also find your Reader in the Acrobat
Reader folder or directory on the V5.70 CD. V5.80 of the TNT
products will allow you to choose to install the Acrobat Reader and PDF files.
But for V5.70, you will have to do this manually. Copy the Adobe Reader
to any directory. Copy the individual Getting Started booklets (in other words,
PDF files) to a suitable directory, or leave them on the CD for direct but
slower use. Start your Adobe Reader, and open the appropriate PDF file to view
the Getting Started booklet it provides. It is very useful to use the Adobe
Reader concurrent with the operation of the corresponding TNT process.
This will allow you to flip back and forth between stepping your way through the
process with the test geodata while referencing the corresponding Getting
Started tutorial. Your Reader also provides rudimentary editing capabilities so
that you can cut and paste text out of these booklets into other products such
as Word, PageMaker, and so on. What could be easier?
Color Prints.
One thing that might be even easier than the on-line viewing
of Adobe PDF files is to print them on your color printer for review while
learning the process and for quick future reference on your bookshelf. Your
version of the Reader comes equipped to automatically detect your printer and
use it to produce a good quality color booklet on your small format printer. The
individual pages in each Getting Started booklet are designed to fit into a
5.5" by 8.5" printed format. When printed by your Reader, they will
usually come out to scale with the 5.5" by 8.5" area centered in the
larger 8.5" by 11" or A4 paper area. Some Windows printer drivers
produce the foregoing image size when the Print Quality print dialog option is
set to High but automatically enlarge and center this image to fit the entire
sheet when the Print Quality is set to Medium or Low. The attached sample color
page was printed on the HP Color LaserJet 5M using the Medium print quality
setting. It illustrates that this automatic enlargement provides good page
sizing, and that a very good quality booklet is printed by the Reader. On a Mac
or Pmac, if your printer does not automatically enlarge using the Reader (the
text is small at 5.5" by 8.5"), then set the enlargement and
repositioning of the margins in the system's Print Control dialog.
Unfortunately, this level of control is not available via the Windows printer
control and drivers.
Internet.
As soon as a professional writer at MicroImages completes a
DRAFT copy of a new Getting Started booklet, they immediately put it into
Acrobat PDF format. The Webmaster then immediately places it on microimages.com.
This all takes a couple of days and goes on periodically over the quarter with
upgraded and final versions substituted as they become available. All current
Getting Started booklets are now there in this PDF format, which replaces their
previous cumbersome postings in the GIF screenshots. New booklets will appear as
they become available. Watch for new Getting Started booklets at this location.
Netscape and Microsoft Explorer both have plug-ins which
enable them to access the Acrobat Reader and view these PDF files separately or
while you are running TNTmips. Use your browser to view or print them
over the Internet. You can also use the downloading feature provided at this
same location on microimages.com by our Webmaster to transfer any PDF file(s) to
your computer for local viewing and subsequent printing.
Status.
Previously Completed Booklets. [12 units already in your possession]
| Announcing TNTlite |
Surface Modeling |
| Displaying Geospatial Data |
Georeferencing |
| Feature Mapping |
Theme Mapping |
| Editing Vector Geodata |
Image Classification |
| Editing Raster Geodata |
Navigating |
| Importing Geodata |
| Style Manual (the reference guide for creating uniform booklets) |
New V5.70 Booklets. [9 units shipping]
| 3D Perspective Visualization |
Interactive Region Analysis |
| Pin Mapping |
Acquiring Geodata |
| Managing Databases |
Making DEMs and OrthoImages |
| Mosaicking Raster Geodata |
Laying Out Maps |
| Building and Using Queries |
Partially Completed Booklets. [3 units--mid August availability]
| Filtering Images |
Editing CAD Geodata |
| Digitizing Soil Maps |
Scheduled for V5.80. [10 units + 1 updated]
| Vector Analysis Operations |
Spatial Manipulation Language |
| Managing Geoattributes |
Constructing HyperIndexes® |
| Exporting Geodata |
Sketching and Measuring |
| Editing TIN Geodata |
Changing Languages (localization) |
| Getting Good Color |
Raster Analysis Operations |
| Displaying Geospatial Data (revised for new process) |
Remaining. [15 units]
| Creating and Using Styles |
Vectorizing Scans |
| Interpreting Airphotos |
TNT Technical Characteristics |
| Using the Software Development Kit |
Understanding Map Projections |
| Mapping Watersheds and Viewsheds |
Warping and Resampling Geodata |
| Mosaicking |
Using the Electronic Reference Manual |
| Scanning |
Combining Rasters |
| Modeling Watersheds and Viewsheds |
Hazard Modeling |
| COGO |
Future Plans.
Resources Available.
The three MicroImages professional staff currently writing
the Getting Started booklets (Dr. Merri Skrdla, Keith Ghormley, and Dr. Randy
Smith) each have seven to eight years of full-time experience working with the
TNT products. Like all the MicroImages professional staff, they are
doing an excellent job at this task, but have other responsibilities at
MicroImages. For example, in the process of writing these booklets, they are
the first line in checking that the features in the processes are working. As
a result, they can only produce between six and nine booklets per quarter.
However, as each quarter passes, they will have to spend
more and more time updating the existing booklets for newly released changes
in the processes covered. For example, during this quarter, time was spent in
updating the already existing Getting Started Display Geospatial Data.
As a result, the goal of completing the series becomes progressively harder to
reach. Please consider the dates of availability presented in the above
schedule as tentative and optimistic, as good things always seem to take
longer than anticipated.
Current Priorities.
MicroImages' management has decided to place the most
emphasis each quarter on getting booklets out that correspond to new
processes. Second priority will be getting booklets out on scheduled older
topics where no booklet has ever been created. For the next couple of
quarters, a low priority will be given to upgrading existing booklets until
the more important missing booklets are available. Limited resources always
mean priorities have to be established, and these will prevail for the next
six months.
Professional people with in-depth experience in the TNT
products coupled with computer, writing, and illustration talent cannot be
created overnight. This of course means that some of the existing booklets are
going to be out of date. Some of these differences will be minor interface
differences with the current software. Others will be more significant. For
example, the significant changes in the naming procedures for unsupervised
classification are not covered in the Getting Started Image Classification
published last quarter.
Keeping Up.
All Getting Started booklets are included in black and white
printed format along with the CD in each TNTlite kit shipped. The current
price of an individual kit is $30, and at this time it will include 21 booklets.
Additional printed Getting Started booklets will be added as they are completed
during the quarter. Some time in the middle of the quarter, this will increase
to 25 booklets and require that the price of printing and shipping the kit
increases to $35. New TNTmips professional products also contain all the
published printed booklets and the associated geodata. Existing MicroImages
clients with active maintenance contracts get all new booklets published that
quarter in their upgrade shipment. If you want additional printed copies of any
one or all of the published booklets, please order a new TNTlite kit. You
are also free to copy the published booklet, duplicate it via the PDF file, or
request it in electronic format for duplication (for example, PageMaker format).
MicroImages has these booklets printed from print files at Kinko's Copy Centers
on large Xerox Docutek printers (they automatically produce the whole booklet
including printing, cover integration, stapling, folding, and trimming). These
print files can also be provided for use on your nearest Xerox Docutek printer
to automatically produce the identical black and white assembled booklets.
TNT Reference Manual
Installation.
The TNT Reference Manual has now been fully
converted to HTML format for use with Internet Explorer or Netscape browsers.
The previous View Manual process has now been deleted from TNTmips.
When you now select Display/Reference Manual from the TNTmips menu, it
will launch the Internet Explorer browser on the Windows-based platforms.
During installation you will be provided with the option to install the
Reference Manual and Internet Explorer for the Windows-based platforms. If you
prefer Netscape and have it installed already, you can use it and launch it
via the same TNT menu choice.
Microsoft has delayed delivery of Internet Explorer for
UNIX platforms, so it is not on the V5.70 CD. For the time being, on
UNIX platforms this menu choice will default to launching Netscape which you
will have to obtain, as Netscape does not allow its browser to be
redistributed by others. If you use a different UNIX browser such as Mosaic,
you can edit the TNTHOST.INI file to set a different UNIX browser command via
the "HTMLBrowser" field in the "[files]" section. (This
field is used by TNTmips only on UNIX systems.)
Microsoft Internet Explorer is supplied for the Macintosh
platforms on the CD but cannot yet be installed by the TNT products
installer for the Macintosh. To install Internet Explorer, find the "Mac
Internet Explorer 3.01" folder on the TNT products CD-ROM. Double
click on the "IE 3.01 PPC Minimal Installer" icon if you have a PMac,
or click on the "IE 3.01 68K Minimal Installer" icon if you have a
68xxx-based older Mac. Your browser cannot be launched from the TNTmips
menu on the Mac at this time. You will want to install the HTML Reference
Manual using the TNT products installer and then manually double click
on the "index.htm" file inside the "Reference Manual
(HTML)" folder inside your TNTmips product folder.
Features.
Providing the TNTmips Reference Manual in HTML format
gives you a consistent, familiar, uniform user interface across all computing
platforms within each browser family. This interface follows industry standards
for viewing HTML documents. Browsers are generally freely available from their
developers. Using other products for viewing and printing the documentation
allows MicroImages to expend its efforts working on geospatial analysis tools
for TNTmips. The following HTML features have been included in the
structure of the TNTmips Reference Manual in HTML format.
Hyperlinks. Hyperlinks are special blocks of text that
"jump" to another location in the Reference Manual when clicked on.
This feature allows you to find out more about a topic. Hyperlinks are like an
automatic index that saves you from having to look up terms and topics in a
list.
Embedded Images. Text and full-color illustrations are
inserted into the Reference Manual with a clean layout. Illustrations are no
longer displayed in a separate window. Illustrations can be viewed and printed
in full color.
Searching within pages. You can search for key words or
phrases in each HTML file.
Page Viewing History. Your browser will retain a list of
pages that have been previously viewed and let you navigate back to earlier
topics of interest.
Connection to the World Wide Web (the Internet). When
combined with your local Internet service provider and a modem, the browser used
for the TNTmips Reference Manual is also a tool that can provide access
to error fixes, beta product updates, and other information at
www.microimages.com. The Reference Manual can be directly accessed at http://www.microimages.com/refman/html.
At the present time, the Reference Manual is only being updated quarterly on
microimages.com concurrently with the release of the TNT product CDs.
Contents.
The Reference Manual this quarter has 2692 single spaced
pages and installs into 31 MB with the illustrations or into 6 MB without them.
Last minute supplemental sections which do not occur in the on-line or Microsoft
Word versions were created for new processes and features. These sections were
completed for V5.70 after the master CDs were created for the
reproduction process. These 42 additional pages are included in supplemental,
printed form as follows.
Polygon Properties (4 pages)
Voronoi Polygons (6 pages)
SML Language Reference (additions to printed version
of Appendix 3 shipped with V5.50--32 pages)
New TNT Features
* Paragraphs or main sections preceded by this symbol
"*" introduce significant new processes or features in existing
processes released for the first time in TNTmips 5.7.
System Level Features.
Graphical Tools.
* Color Drawing Lines. The graphical drawing tools now
draw directly in the color and line width you select. This improves the
visibility of the tool against any background, including color image displays.
The graphical tools include the line and polygons tools, the zoom box, slide
view, and others. The tools still draw in the harder-to-see complement mode in
special situations when whole lines are being moved and speed is important.
For example, the complement method is used when you are moving a whole line(s)
such as in the calipers, the +-----x line dragging, pulling-out a vertex, and
so on. But, in these cases, the line is being moved rapidly over a background
and twinkles so that it can be seen. When its rapid movement is stopped, it
will be rendered in color.
Solid color drawing lines have been requested for years by
many of you. Since the TNT products (and their MIPS predecessors)
never required a special display board with a graphics overlay plane, this
feature was difficult to implement. Now your TNT systems are fast enough
so that this and other similar features can be implemented using a virtual (in
other words software) graphics overlay plane.
To set the color and line width for the graphical drawing
tools, use the main menu under "Setup/Preferences/Interface". The
Object Editor has its own color and width settings located in its
"Setup/Preferences/Color" section. If the graphical tool is too slow
on your older computer, turn off these color effects, and use only the
complement method to improve your performance.
Move Box Tool. The move box tool can now be positioned
and sized by manual entry. This box is used in the object editor for CAD objects
with respect to block insertions, copy, and move operations. It is also used in
the "Paste" tool to accurately position the to-be-pasted object.
Regular Polygon. A new graphical tool has been added to
create accurate regular polygons including triangles, hexagons, octagons, and
any 'n' sided polygon up to 45 sides. It allows you to set the circumscribed or
inscribed radii and a rotation, as well as its exact location. This tool is
provided in the object editor for use in editing vector and CAD objects.
Histograms.
There is a new standard Histogram window. It has three data
presentation modes: Bar, Outline, and Strip. The Bar mode portrays the histogram
as a set of 3D-Bars, the Outline mode as a 2D graph, and the Strip mode as a 3D
strip, color coded from green (low) to red (high) depending upon histogram
counts. The new display also provides two optional modes: Cumulative and
Logarithmic Scale. Grid option is provided to allow you to overlay vertical and
horizontal grid reference lines and label them. You can pick the size of the
font and add an optional box around the labels to increase their readability. A
histogram can also be saved as a snapshot raster for use elsewhere. If you press
and hold the left mouse button, a ToolTip will show you the actual count and
value of the histogram at the current cursor position. Pressing the right mouse
button shows a ToolTip containing statistical information about the histogram
data.
Pin Mapping.
Pin Mapping now allows control of label distance from the
"pin". This is useful for symbols which are not centered over the pin.
Element Selection Dialog.
The ability to copy a table from another database object has
been implemented via the "Make Table/Form" icon menu in the element
row. It allows the selection of a database object even if it is a part of
another raster, vector, CAD, or TIN object and brings up a list of tables to
select. The table selected will then be copied to the current object's database
where it can be used just like any other object.
Display/Spatial Data (new prototype process).
Background.
The Display/Spatial Data process you have used in the TNT
products was created in V4.00 of the TNT products and expanded
and extended through V5.70. This four year old process is being
recreated in a new process for visualizing and viewing 2D and 3D geospatial
data. In V5.70, both the new integrated and the previous separate
display 2D and 3D processes are installed and available. When V5.80 is
released, the older 2D and 3D display processes will be dropped. Please use
the new process as much as possible, and provide feedback for its improvement.
General.
The preview of the new V5.80 process retains many of
the view control elements you are familiar with, but has been redesigned to
have:
- more functionality using fewer windows,
- layer and other control windows simplified for beginners,
- layer controls, providing much more graphical control over views,
- dialog complexity reduced by extensive use of icons,
- open geo-locked 2D and 3D views in a single group,
- open multiple 3D views in a group with different viewpoints,
- control viewpoints in 3D views in a group via gadgets on 2D views, ...
The redesigned interface eliminates the separate views/groups/layers lists
which were confusing to beginners. The new interface combines the layers and
groups into a single "list" for each "layout". Each layout
has its own layer controls via an Object Display Controls dialog. The
interface uses many more icons and allows a group to be expanded and collapsed
as needed. Please see the attached color plate entitled New Display
Features: Group Controls for an introduction to the new Group Controls
window used in this process. This uses (and replaces) many of the features
found on the "Element Selection" dialog in the old 2D and 3D display
process.
Integrated Views.
Concurrent 2D & 3D. It is now possible to open a
separate "group" outside of a layout. This group allows simpler
viewing of a set of spatial objects (rasters, vectors, ...). These groups can
be either 2D or 3D. A 3D group can have more than one View window open so that
perspective and overhead views are displayed at the same time. This allows
multiple views of the same layout or group with independent control of the
area viewed. You can have a single vertical 2D or overhead view and two
different 3D views of the same area from different directions and viewpoints.
Each 3D view will then have its own set of viewpoint and position gadgetry.
Positioning Gadget. A new 3D positioning gadget has
been created to allow wider control of the viewpoint position using the 2D or
overhead view as a frame of reference. This gadget automatically appears on
the 2D view when you create a 3D view. The gadget is illustrated in the
attached color plate entitled 3D Perspective Display Groups. Using this
gadget, the viewpoint for the 3D view can be set to either keep a specified
point centered in the 3D view (for example, look at the same mountain from any
direction) or keep the 3D viewer at a specific point (look in all directions
from the same mountain top). If multiple 3D views are open, the position of
the viewer for all viewpoints can be independently controlled (in other
words, a separate positioning gadget will be provided on the 2D view for each
3D view).
Independent Layer Control. Layers and groups may be hidden
independently for each view. Thus, your collection of 2D and 3D views in a
3D group can show quite different views of a common ground area. For example,
build up a layer list containing two images with a common DEM. One image can
be before a disaster (flood, earthquake, ...) and the other after.
Add to this layer list the overlaying CAD and vector layers of the
infrastructure (roads, power lines, buildings, ...). Open a 2D view to show
the before disaster image and the overlays (toggle off the after
disaster image's icon in the layer list). In the 3D view, show the after
disaster image with the same overlays (toggle off only the before
disaster image's icon in the layer list). Now as you move around the view
control gadgets on the 2D view (before disaster), you will get the
requested 3D view (after disaster). This 3D view will show the areas of
possible infrastructure damage relative to the damage shown in the after
disaster image. Of course you can toggle the 2D or 3D views between images.
Or, if you have a big display screen or more than one screen, you can open a
second 3D view to show before and after 3D images for comparison
(in other words, one 2D and two 3D views).
Redraw. When you have multiple views open in situations
like those outlined above, all views will be redrawn if they are affected by
the changes made in any one view. For example, if you simply toggle a layer
off for the 2D view, it would not be necessary to redraw the associated 3D
view. However, if you delete a layer, all views in the group must and will be
redrawn when an automatic or manual redraw is requested.
Color Reconciliation. If you are still using an 8-bit
display board or display mode, its limited number of colors (less than 256)
are shared among all your View windows. The automatic reconciliation of these
limited colors for each view and between views has been improved to support
the expanded use of multiple 2D and 3D views.
Fields as Labels.
Any field in the related attribute tables for a layer can now
be selected to use as labels for that layer (labels are no longer restricted to
the prepared label field). This feature has been requested by many clients and
has been added to this new Display process and the older one as well. You may
also use a query on multiple fields across related tables as the label field.
| IMPORTANT: Choosing to label
with a field does not confine the label value to a predetermined field.
The field selected can use the results of a query or a computed field to
model a value (such as a linear combination of fields). Use your
imagination in setting up your labels for a layer. |
DataTips.
Concept. Showing many labels in a view for a particular
layer can be very cluttered and confusing. The icon ToolTip idea has thus been
extended to show individual labels one at a time for the active layer in both
Display processes. When this option is selected, a spatial 'DataTip' pops in
(looks and behaves like a ToolTip) to show the value from a selected attribute
field which can also be a computed field for the nearest element (raster cell,
point, line, polygon, ...). It pops in when you pause your cursor long enough
near that element in the active layer (you set the time delay). This spatial
DataTip can be a totally different field from that used for the labels of the
layer. In other words, a layer can be rendered with any field as its labels,
and its spatial DataTip can use a totally different field.
The new prototype Display process provides a toggle button on
the tab panel for each vector element type in the Object Display Control window
to switch the DataTips option on and off. The DataTip... push button on this
same panel is used to select the content of the DataTip as the field or computed
field from the attribute tables attached to the object. The new Vector Object
Display Control window and the use of the DataTips are illustrated for the new
Display process in the attached color plate entitled Tabbed Panels and
DataTips.
Selecting. An Object Display Control window is shown for
each object type. It provides tabbed panels to set up the display
characteristics of each graphical element type (points, lines, polygons, ...).
See the color plate attached entitled Tabbed Panels and DataTips to
illustrate these new features. For example, this plate shows the location of the
toggle button which can be used to toggle the DataTip features on and off when
the polygons in the particular vector object are part of the active layer. The
DataTip... button on this same panel is used to select the content of the
DataTip as the field or computed field from the attribute tables attached to the
object.
| IMPORTANT: DataTips are not
confined to a predetermined field. They can show the results of a query
or a computed field. For example, use a DataTip to display a modeled
value (such as a linear combination of fields). Use your imagination in
setting up your DataTips. |
Example Use. The fields attached as related attributes to
a USDA/NRCS (Natural Resource Conservation Service) soil map (for example in
CB_Soils.RVC) can be used to solve the Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) to
yield potential erosion. The soil loss modeled by the USLE is a linear
combination of four soil map attribute values and a precipitation rate factor.
Start with the soil polygon vector object in CB_Soils.RVC. Four soil attributes
in the related tables for the soil polygons can be used to solve part of the
USLE. Simply create a computed field which is a linear combination with scaling
coefficients of four soil attributes in the related tables. This potential
erosion computed field can be selected as the DataTips field for the polygons in
this vector object. The coefficients of the modeled potential erosion shown in
the DataTips can then be easily changed by editing the equation for the computed
field. This same computed field could be used to provide a potential erosion
label for every polygon using the new label field procedures outlined above.
The next step in this kind of dynamic, interactive-based GIS
model would be to include the fifth precipitation rate variable to predict soil
loss for use as labels or viewing via a DataTip. But, this would require a
raster map of the spatial variation in precipitation rate or an actual map of
precipitation rate. If the soil polygon vector object was converted to a raster
object, exactly the same potential erosion computed field can be evaluated for
each soil type cell. A computed field accessing both raster objects could
implement the entire USLE. Currently this is not possible, as a computed field
cannot yet use fields from more than one object even if they are coincident in
cell size, extent, and so on. Thus, the full USLE can only be solved by
computing new combined objects, which reduces flexibility in evaluating changes
in the USLE (in other words, in evaluating changes in the USLE's coefficients).
Please also note that a more complicated Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSEL)
is now used by the NRCS.
[see A Geographic Information System (GIS) Approach for
Modeling a Soil Erosion Map from Available Data. Young-Ky Yang and Lee D.
Miller. Journal of the Korean Society of Remote Sensing. 1986. Vol. 2,
No.1, pp 23 to 33. (Dr. Y-K Yang was a Ph.D. student of Lee D. Miller)]
Status Bars.
The status bar now shows the progress of the redraw of each
layer in each View window and has been moved into the lower right corner to make
more room for other information in this data bar. Several views in a group may
need to be updated by your single action such as deleting a layer. Watch this
status bar to see which layer in which view is currently being reconstructed.
Missing Features.
The following major features are missing from the preview
version of the new Display process: printing, legend creation, HyperIndex Linker
and playback, CAD overlay in 3D, TNTview setup preferences, the
integration of the separate stereoscopic viewing process, and the positioning
tools in the Locator window. Printing is being actively worked on now and is
nearly done and will be automatically available in any revised versions from
software support. The procedures for designing your legends are being improved
and expanded and will not be available in this process until V5.80. Other
missing features noted here and identified by you will be added as this quarter
progresses and will be available through the Tuesday and Thursday posting of all
of TNTmips on microimages.com.
Modifications since V5.70 CDs.
DataTips are available for use only with vector objects in
this new Display process. Since the CDs were prepared, this feature has been
extended to show DataTips for all primary objects (in other words, rasters =
cell values, CAD, and TIN).
Display/Spatial
Data (older familiar process).
Fields as Labels.
Any field in the related attribute tables for a vector
object can now be selected to use as labels for that layer (labels are no
longer restricted to the prepared label field). This feature has been
requested by many clients and has been added to the familiar Display process
and the new one as well. You may also use a query on multiple fields across
related tables as the label field.
DataTips.
Showing many labels in a view for a particular layer can be
very cluttered and confusing. The icon ToolTip idea has thus been extended to
show individual labels one at a time as DataTips for the active layer in the
Display processes. It can be used for vector, raster, CAD, or TIN objects.
Select the database table and field to be viewed as the DataTip and which
graphical elements have ToolTips under "Layer/Setup ToolTip...". When
this option is selected, a spatial 'DataTip' pops in (looks and behaves like a
ToolTip) to show the value from a selected attribute field which can also be a
computed field for the nearest element (raster cell, point, line, polygon, ...).
It pops in when you pause your cursor long enough near that element in the
active layer (you set the time delay). This spatial DataTip can be a totally
different field from that used for the labels of the layer. In other words, a
layer can be rendered with any field as its labels and its spatial DataTip can
use a totally different field.
Nautical Depths.
A new label style has been added to assist in labeling water
depth on international nautical charts showing isolated point depths (for
example, rocks). It provides several parameters to accurately position each
isolated depth value on the chart relative to the actual sea position. The
decimal portion of the depth is shown as subscript. The negative depth of a
point exposed at low tide is shown with an underline and so on.
Import/Export.
* DXF Extraction During Import.
Each layer in a single AutoCAD DXF file can now be imported
into separate vector or CAD objects in a Project File. This has been requested
by several clients. It allows you to pick which layers of information to
import from all those available in the source DXF file and place these layers
into separate CAD objects. This is particularly useful if you plan to edit the
CAD object (for example, update it over an image) and then convert it into a
vector object for GIS analysis.
Importing from a DXF into separate CAD objects creates a
number of small CAD objects instead of one large composite CAD object. This
separation "by data theme" is particularly useful to TNTlite
users, as each separate CAD object can be more easily kept below the size
limits of TNTlite but contain more of a particular graphical data type
(for example, roads, hydrology, building, or ...).
Windows BMP Import.
The standard format used by Microsoft Windows for images
(BMP) can now be imported into a raster object in a Project File.
MRLC Import.
Multi-Resolution Land Characteristics (MRLC) LANDSAT format
raster files (BSQ) can be imported into raster objects in a Project File. MRLC
data contains multi-resolution land cover data of the conterminous United
States from local to regional scales with 38m land cover characteristics
database using LANDSAT Thematic Mapper (TM) data. The MRLC geodata is produced
in a cooperative effort of six programs in four U.S. Government agencies:
United States Environmental Protection Agency's Environmental Monitoring and
Assessment Program and North American Landscape Characterization Program;
United States Geological Survey's National Water Quality Assessment and Earth
Resource Observation System Data Center Programs; Department of Interior
National Biologic Service's Gap Analysis Program; and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration's Coastal Change Analysis Program. Files selected
for import have the file extension BSQ. Header Files with the DDA file
extension, image files with the BSQ file extension, and a co-registered 16 bit
DEM can also be selected for import in this MRLC import process.
NEXRAD Import.
NEXRAD weather radar scans can be imported into a raster
object in a Project File. NEXRAD is the United States' National Weather
Service's Next Generation Weather Radar Program. NEXRAD is distributed by the
WSI Corporation as commissioned by the NEXRAD Information Dissemination Service
Program. These images are also frequently downloaded via Internet.
ERS-1 SAR Import.
European Space Agency's ERS-1 satellite's synthetic aperture
radar (ERS-1 SAR) images, including leader and image files, can be imported into
a raster object in a Project File. ERS-1 SAR image files have the file extension
.bsq. As part of the import, you select the projection used during the import
process. The TNT Import process lets you select any portion of the ERS-1
SAR raster data for import by defining the range of lines and columns to be
imported. The size selection option is especially useful for those creating
project materials for use with TNTlite.
EOSAT-1c Import.
Earth Observation Satellite Company's EOSAT TM Fast and EOSAT
TM TIPS formatted data can be imported into raster objects in Project Files. You
can select the range of lines and columns to be imported from either EOSAT TM
Fast or EOSAT TM TIPS formatted images.
SPOTview Import.
In addition to the SPOT Image format, you can import SPOTview
images into raster objects in Project Files. SPOTview files are cartographic
quality SPOT images. You are allowed to select the Header (.hdr), georeference
(.rep), info (.rsc), and image (.bil) files for importing.
RadarSat Import.
RadarSat's CEOS radar image and leader file can be imported
into raster objects in Project Files. Earth Observation Satellite products
developed in Canada to monitor environmental change and support resource
sustainability are created by the Canadian Space Agency and use this Commission
on Earth Observation Satellites (CEOS) standard for formatting their Synthetic
Aperture Radar (SAR) images collected via C-band with a swath from 35 to 500 Km
with a resolution from 10 to 100 meters.
DOQ/COQ Import and Export.
Digital Ortho Quad uncompressed (DOQ) or Compressed Ortho
Quad (COQ) orthophotos from the United States Geological Survey can be imported
into a raster object in a Project File. Correspondingly, raster objects can be
exported into the DOQ or COQ format.
Object Editor.
General.
The object edit process has been enhanced to add new
features off the list built up from your requests as follows:
- cut, copy, and paste between vector objects via clipboard;
- copy all or part of an attribute table and paste in vector object via
clipboard;
- spline, thin, and auto label generation have a preview mode;
- right mouse button pops in customizable list of edit functions;
- prompts for attribute changes for edits of vector and CAD elements;
- default records can now be set for vector and CAD elements;
- "connect the dots" into lines or polygons from imported GPS
points;
- elastic, equal-sided polygon tool for up to 45 sides;
- island topology maintained "on the fly" in vector objects;
- nodes in TIN object can be moved;
- improvements in WYSIWYG in raster editing; and more.
All Objects.
Color Drawing Lines. You can now set the graphical tool
color and line width for all tools in the editor. This allows better visual
perception of the tool, especially against a color reference raster. This
feature has been requested for years, but the machine and display speed have
been too slow to make this practical until now. This feature has been
discussed in more detail above in the section entitled "Graphical
Tools".
More Previews. The Spline, Thin, and Auto Label
Generation operations now support a preview mode. This permits you to
determine if the final result is what you want before making the additions or
changes permanent. The option to change the preview color and width is under
"Setup/Preferences/Color".
Right Button Menus. A new method has been added for
quick selection and editing of vector, CAD, and TIN elements independent of
the "Element Selection Dialog". This method is invoked by placing
the mouse cursor on the element and then pressing the right mouse button. The
element is highlighted, and a menu pops up with a list of operations to
perform on that element. If the goal is to select a node, which is hard to
select due to the fact that the lines attached to the node will most of the
time be closer, press the TAB key while the menu is viewable to cycle through
the element types.
The capability to control which operations show up on the
popup menu is located under "Setup/Right Mouse Button...". This dialog
will allow control of which operations are enabled and, if the operation
requires it, the capability to set the parameters for the operation.
Certain operational parameters are not capable of being set
unless an editable object exists and is the current object, for example,
"Auto Label Generation". If this type of operation is selected and
invalid parameters are specified for the operation, a dialog is brought up to
allow entry of correct parameters. Examples of operations which behave in this
manner are the Auto Label and Attribute operations. The list of possible vector
operations includes Attribute, Auto Label, Delete, Edit, Reverse Line, Snap,
Spline, Straighten, and Thin. The list of possible CAD operations includes
Attribute, Break Line, Copy Element, Delete, Edit, Move Element, Place Back,
Place Front, Reverse Line, Spline, Straighten, Style, and Thin. The list of
possible TIN operations includes Delete and Edit.
Mac Right Buttons. On the Mac and PMac, the
"right" mouse button is simulated by MI/X using a Command Key
Sequence. The sequence can be just a key or a combination of a special key and a
mouse click. This sequence can be set using "File/Preferences ..."
from the MI/X menu. Here are the defaults:
left (Button 1): the mouse button
middle (Button 2): the option key plus the mouse button
right (Button 3): the "Apple" or command key plus
the mouse button
(#1, #2, #3 are the X names for these buttons. The X system
is designed to support left handed people. For a left-hander, Button #1 is on
the right and Button #3 is on the left. Under Windows products, the TNT
products support the mechanisms provided for flipping the order.)
The "Apple" or Command Key plus mouse button
sequence is very common in Mac and PMac graphics software. If a Mac or PMac has
a mouse with two or three buttons, the extra buttons may be used directly.
Attribute Prompting. Prompting for adding attribute
records is now operational in the editor for vector and CAD objects. Vector
editing actions which will result in prompts for attributes include adding
lines, points, and polygons; splitting lines and polygons; and joining polygons.
CAD editing actions which will cause prompts include adding, splitting, and
joining elements. The controls for setting up which attribute table to use in
the prompt are under "Setup/Database Prompt...". One attribute table
can be selected for the prompt for each element type: vector polygon, line,
point and CAD elements. In defining the attribute table to set as the prompt
table, you are allowed to copy a table from another object into this object.
Record Defaults. The ability to set a default record for
use when adding elements has been implemented for CAD and vector objects. In the
object toolbar in the "Attributes" group, press the element type for a
list of operations on the attributes. Use the "Default Record..."
operation to set the default record contents. The default attribute table used
is the same as the attribute prompting table discussed above. For example, you
can set up an attribute table prompt for the record to enter, and the initial
record shown will be the default record.
GPS Editing. A "connect-the-dots" tool is now
implemented for adding lines to vector or CAD objects. It is especially useful
when GPS observations describing polygons are imported as individual points. The
"dots" can be points in any reference or editable CAD or vector layers
and reference database record pinmap layers or the current editable layer
itself. The tool works by snapping the line vertices to the points in the
reference layer. As with other TNT product operations, the georeferences
of the two objects do not need to be the same.
DataTips. Spatial DataTips are now enabled for the object
editor and are outlined in more detail above in the section on DataTips. Set up
which database table and field to be viewed as the DataTip and which elements
have tool tips under "Setup/Spatial Data Tips...". When active, you
can place the cursor over the element and wait for the specified delay interval
to see the value of the selected attribute field for that element. Spatial
DataTips can be enabled for raster, vector, CAD, TIN, and database pinmap
layers.
Regions. You will now be asked if you want to save
regions created in the object editor when leaving the editor. This save region
feature is turned on by default. It can be disabled under
"Setup/Preferences/Other".
Polygon Drawing Tool. The vector and CAD editors now
provide an elastic drawing tool to create geometric polygons. It allows setting
the number of segments to make pentagons, hexagons, octagons, and so on. The
range of segments is from three to 45 segments. The manual entry section
includes controls for the circumscribed and inscribed radii along with center
point and rotation controls. On-screen rotation of the tool is achieved by
placing the mouse cursor on the perimeter as you would to resize it. Press and
hold the shift key, and press the left mouse button and drag.
Clipboards. The Cut, Copy, and Paste clipboard approach
is now supported in the object editor for vector objects. The "Cut"
tool allows a piece of the vector object to be placed into the clipboard and
that area removed from the editable vector object. There are two methods to
define the area to remove from the object. The first is a
"User-Defined" method using the "Multiple Line/Polygon Tool"
to define multiple areas to cut from. The second method is by using a region
tool or region object. Either can be used to specify the bounds of the irregular
areas to be cut from the vector object. The standard six spatial methods to
further specify the area to cut from a vector are available: "Completely
Inside", "Partially Inside", "Clip Inside" (default),
"Completely Outside", "Partially Outside", and "Clip
Outside".
The "Copy" tool acts much like the "Cut"
tool except for three ways. First, the operation doesn't alter the source
object. Second, the operation works on reference layers, since they are not
altered. Third, you can select the whole object to be in the clipboard.
The "Paste" tool is active if something exists in
the clipboard and the editor can paste into the current editable object. A
position box is presented when the paste tool is activated. This box defaults to
the correct georeference position of the clipboard object in the current object.
The box can be moved, rotated, and resized, and a button exists to reset the box
to the default |