Searching for various information and the exact location of the target is quite an exciting process. Every detail is important here, any little thing can become a clue and lead us to the goal, be it a road sign, traffic light, mountain topography, road markings, signboards, power lines, etc. In the United States, geospatial intelligence (GEOINT) is intelligence about human activities on Earth obtained through the use and analysis of imagery and geospatial information that describes, evaluates, and visually displays the physical features and geographic context of activities on Earth. GEOINT, as defined in the US Code, consists of imagery, imagery intelligence (IMINT), and geospatial information. GEOINT knowledge and related trades are no longer limited to the US government or even the world’s leading military powers. Analysis of geospatial intelligence has been blithely defined as “seeing what everyone has seen and thinking what no one has thought” or as “anticipating a mental map.
However, these views confirm that the creation of geospatial knowledge is a cognitive process that requires effort on the part of the analyst; it is an intellectual endeavor that arrives at a conclusion through reasoning. Geospatial thinking creates an objective connection between a geospatial representation of a problem and geospatial evidence. Here, one set of activities, information gathering, focuses on finding information, and another set of activities, making sense, focuses on making sense of information. Foraging and making sense actions in geospatial analysis were included in the Structured Geospatial Analytical Method.
Registration of cars (cars and others) from all countries of the world in 2022.