Here are just a few of the people that made the VTP happen,
primarily in the early period of 1999 to 2005.
-
Chris 'Xenon' Hanson for code submissions, and building a bridge
from the non-realtime terrain world!
- Pete Willemsen
for Unix porting and useful work in road representation
- Roger James
has contributed much work on buildings, roofs, imagery, format
support, and much more
- Mike Flaxman
for huge contributions to the VTP community including assembling
the first massive
real-world planning application
- Paul Selormey helped moderate the mailing list
- Lots of people who did the translations for
internationalization of
the applications
-
Cassandra, for some research, modeling, and handling the distribution
requests for 2 years
- Matt Wilkie for enthusiastic
end-user testing and feedback
- Randall Hopper did lots
of work on the Unix port of the VTP software
-
Johan Hammes for great technology and ideas, and plants
- Robert Osfield of OSG,
for a wonderful and well-supported 3D library
- Frank Warmerdam
for amazing, tireless support of immensely useful libraries
- the late
Seumas
McNally, for proving that regular-grid LOD works for consumer
apps, and writing what was then the best CLOD algorithm in the world
- Paul Hansen, Omnitect, for
good ideas on global texturing and inspiring demo work
- Stewart and Bernd
of
Greenworks, for their fresh approach to plants
- Tom Hubina, John Ratcliff, Thatcher Ulrich, Chris Babcock, and
many more developers in the game community for rendering ideas
- Travis
and Tracey Heggie, geographers, met while they were at UH Hilo
in 1999
- David Koller, for help implementing his LOD algorithm and enthusiastic
encouragement to attempt the improbable
- Dave Eberly of Geometric
Tools for the occasional algorithm
- Rachel Nador for cool work on
intersections
- Peter, Lori, and the other folks who made
Virtually
Hawai‘i, for some early satellite images and website inspiration
- Bill Graham of ITESM's
Ecovis project
in Guaymas, Mexico, for collaboration and encouragement
- Honolulu-based
STI Services, Florida-based
Imagelinks, and Air Survey Hawai‘i for
early demo imagery
- Priscilla Millen of
UH for the excellent site
Plants in the Hawaiian Environment
- Jack (3dweb.com), Josh,
and other friends and associates who gave feedback for the explanation
page
- the nice but overworked government employees at the Menlo Park
USGS ESIC
- Robert W. Gray
for his excellent educational notes and demonstration on the Dymaxion
projection
- Richard Horne for sharing the source to his program
3DEM,
which first showed how to read DEM files
- Deanan DaSilva, Erik
Larsen and other in the graphics community that have contributed
useful references
- Roger Bedell and Scott Williams for advice on the
Building Extractor
- the thousands of VTP recipients, for testing and feedback
anyone i'm forgetting, please
email to remind me!
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