1978 ISP COMMISSION V INTER-CONGRESS SYMPOSIUM - STOCKHOLM SWEDEN
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Torlegárd: Ladies and gentlemen, dear colleagues. We have now come to the
closing Session of our symposium. This closing session comprises two parts:
first a brief summary of the technical and scientific contents, and second
plans for the future activities of Commission V, especially the arrangements
that have already been made for the Congress in Hamburg in 1980. During
this second part Dr. Doyle will act as chairman.
Now we will have the summaries which will be given by the five session
chairman in the order that the sessions were held.
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Linkwitz: Mr. President, ladies and gentlemen. I will first give a brief
resumé of the two meetings of the Working Group on Industrial Photogrammetry,
that we had here. Since the whole symposium deals with industrial photo-
grammetry, I should perhaps better say, the Working Group for the Promotion
of Industrial Photogrammetry, because that turned out to be the main target
of this group, at least for a starting period. There were two meetings. We
discussed the possible lines of endeavour and programs, and also the means
of achieving our aims. We found agreement here, and we found also that it
really means work in this working group if we want to win our goals.
Now the means which we so unanimously agreed upon are the following. Each
of the participants of the Working Group will try to establish, in his own
environment, contacts with the other side, the mechanical engineer or the
physicist dealing with the measurement task, and try to find out what there
might be for photogrammetry. We agreed also that we would have a close
interconnection of communication, to keep each other informed. This will
be done through us in Stuttgart, where such possibilities exist.
Secondly we found it very important to establish official contacts with
national and international organizations dealing in the field of measure-
ment within industry. We heard that there may be an international congress
of some Society in Moscow dealing with industrial measurement, and if that
should be so, we think that perhaps some of us should go as observers, and
if it is possible even to give a presentation of our work. These are to
say the immediate things, because what we think in a similar way has become
well established officially is the co-operation of photogrammetry in the
field of architecture.
As two more possibilities we thought that it would be very advisable, and
even a necessity, to conduct a survey to determine where photogrammetry is
already applied regularly. But we know this is difficult and really needs
a joint effort. And in this context potential fields of application of
photogrammetry could be detected. And perhaps lastly there would be a
meeting of the Working Group next year possibly in connection with the
Photogrammetric Week, and if possible with representatives of the other
side, for example mechanical engineers, and perhaps combined with a visit
to some place where photogrammetry is already being applied. We know, for
instance, of a name which was suggested. So this regarding the Working
Group on Industrial Photogrammetry, extracting their work from the overall
work of this symposium, having observed the events here with great interest.
And now I will give a summary of the lines of development and tendencies
which to me seem important within this symposium. Without being complete,
I would touch on a few fields. I found it very remarkable that systems on