DGI 2016 (past event)

18 - 20 January, 2016

Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre, London, United Kingdom

Contact Us: 44 (0) 207 368 9836

Mediacenter

Attendee List

Thinking about attending DGI 2016? Want to know who else is confirmed to attend? Let me tell you, you’ll be impressed with who we have attending so far. This year’s event will be sure to cover your biggest Defence and Security GEOINT challenges so don’t miss out. Fill your details below to download the latest attendee list.


The Met Office

The Met Office is the UK’s National Weather Service and a Trading Fund within the Department for Business Innovation and Skills. As a trusted partner of the Ministry of Defence, the Met Office has supported UK troops in both peace and war time operations when the need for reliable and resilient support is critical. Find out more about the Met Office and its involvement with UK Defence.


How to Build Safer Communities: An Executive Summary

Safe Communities is a new initiative that aims to rapidly empower government agencies with shared situational awareness through geospatial technology. It builds on decades of successful use of GIS technology for managing information. Multiple organizations with overlapping missions can use the GIS platform as a system of engagement to connect many systems of record, improving and integrating strategic and tactical efforts across the national security spectrum. Defense, intelligence, emergency management, fire, law enforcement, health, transportation, and utility workflows will all use GIS in their daily operations as part of an overall interagency, multi-jurisdiction information strategy to more effectively provide safety. Read the executive summary to learn how to build a safer community.


DGI 2013 - 2014 Benchmarking Report

This survey, conducted in September 2013 with 322 senior-level GIS focused participants from defence and government organisations worldwide, was designed to help benchmark the current ‘state of the industry’, looking at what their current requirements and concerns are and where they see future trends heading. We hope these results will bring new insight to the industry as to precisely what the key decision makers are focusing on and how they see their budgets shifting.


Cybersecurity: A critical new domain for GIS

Brian Biesecker, Techincal Director, Intelligence Community at Esri, spoke at DGI 2014 about the increasing concerns on the threats posed by cyber attacks.


Brian Biesecker, ESRI Interview

We interviewd Brian Biesecker, Techincal Director, Intelligence Community at Esri, at DGI 2014.


Imagery That Drives Intelligence

As the industry matures, users requirements have gone beyond the pixel and there is a significant shift towards providing geospatial insight that help users make critical decisions faster


Nigel Lee, Lockheed Martin Interview

Nigel Lee, Lockheed Martin Interview, at DGI 2014.


Social Media Intelligence – Al-Shabab’s use of Twitter

The case study is a response to requests received from government agencies around the world for detailed analysis of how Al-Shabab has been using Twitter to engage a global, particularly English-speaking audience.


Dr Karl West, Helyx Interview

Dr Karl West, Helyx Interview DGI 2014.


Nvidia grid: Graphics Accelerated VDI with the Visual performance of a Workstation

NVIDIA's GRID technology is a break-through in remote visualization, delivering interactive, high-performance modern graphics user interfaces (GUIs), 2D, imaging, and 3D graphics … anywhere, any time, on any device.


Anticipating and Identifying Risk and Opportunities

DigitalGlobe Analytics routinely develops predictive analytic models that process hundreds of layers of geospatial data to identify the physical, cultural, and social factors that correlate with various activities. Find out more by downloading this human landscape product case study.


5 Challenges Facing The Defence Geospatial Intelligence Community

In a survey conducted by Worldwide Business Research over 60 global and military agencies were surveyed to understand their existing concerns with the current geospatial capabilities.