BOLEF%ALBEDO@IO.ARC.NASA.GOV (11/12/87)
The Center for the Study for the Center of Earth from Space (CSES), at the University of Colorado has an opening for a VMS systems programmer. CSES uses digital imagery from earth orbiting satellites to help geologists map mineral deposits in Utah, botanists tell how oil drilling affects the environment in Alaska, anthropologists study early human settlements in Puerto Rico and to find the sources of ancient jade in Central America. We are also assisting in the design of the 200 (simultaneous) spectral band imager NASA will put on the Space Station. We use clustered uVAX GPX's. We have (or on order): 5 uVAX GPX's (color 8 Plane), 2 are uVAX III's, 3 are uVAX II's 5 1k x 1k x 24 bit color image displays, w/4 graphic overlays 2 uVAX II disk servers with 12 GBytes of on-line disk 2 2.3 GByte helical backup tape drives E size color plotter and hi-res (3k x 4k) digital color camera 1/2 tape drives, laser printers, digitizer tablets, etc. 9 Macintoshes, including 2 Mac II's Out software includes practically every DEC layered product: Fortran, Pascal, C, MMS, CMS, PCA, LSE, SCA, DEC/Test Manager DEC/SHELL, GKS, VAX Notes, SCAN, Basic, etc. and third party: Precision Visual's PicSure graphics ESRI's ARC/Info Geographic Information System NASA's Land Analysis System image processing software NASA's Spectral Analysis Manager (for hyper-spectral scanners) Yes, we're on the NASA-SPAN worldwide DECnet, with >2000 nodes and direct gateways to ARPAnet, Usenet, Bitnet, NSFnet, CSnet, etc. Best of all, you'll be in Boulder, Colorado, where there are 5 ski areas within an 1.5 hour drive. Rock climbing, hiking and cross-country skiing are in your back yard. Denver (and the airport) are 40 minutes away, but safely out of sight and smell! We have funds for moving expenses, so get your resumes in, postmarked by *** NOVEMBER 30,1987 *** to: Martha Rife (CSES Secretary) University of Colorado Campus Box 449 Boulder, CO 80309 Thanks, Larry Bolef (tell your friends and associates!)