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Attendees Rave Over Leica Geosystems HDS Worldwide User Conference

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Leica Geosystems announced that attendee feedback has been "staggeringly positive" for its highly successful 2007 Worldwide HDS User Conference held Oct. 21-25 in San Ramon, California.

 Leica Geosystems High-Definition SurveyingT (HDST) laser scanners and software are increasingly used for faster, more accurate and more complete topographic and as-built surveys.

"Attendee after attendee has remarked to us about the exceptionally high quality of information in the presentations, the strong networking, and attendees’ remarkable openness in sharing their ideas and experiences", stated Geoff Jacobs, Sr. VP, Strategic Marketing.

Conference attendance was up 25% from 2006, with total registration close to 300 from 17 countries.

"The goal of the conference is to help Leica Geosystems’ HDS customers increase their success with HDS, which is  a rapidly emerging and improving technology. I think what attendees appreciate most is that the conference delivered big time on achieving that goal", adds Jacobs. "Just by listening to and talking with so many successful HDS users, attendees came away armed with great ideas to implement in their own organizations and also came away highly motivated to do so. Their enthusiasm was contagious."

2007 conference highlights included 40 presentation sessions on a wide range of HDS-specific topics and seven (7) hands-on workshops with over 130 participants. A key focus was on user experiences with Leica Geosystems’ newest HDS products – ScanStation 2, HDS6000, TruView, Cyclone 5.8, and CloudWorx 3.3. Attendees learned how others were using these newest tools with outstanding success. Applications included topographic & site surveys; plant & ship as-builts; architecture and BIM; forensics; entertainment; heritage; and advanced research. The revolutionary impact of HDS in heritage documentation was underscored in a keynote given by Prof. Dr. Carlo Bianchini, Università di Roma "La Sapienza", who showed publicly, for the first time, interior scans of St. Peter’s Cathedral at the Vatican.

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