About me
Noah Flick is a geospatial professional in the Pacific Northwest whose work focuses on the systems that transform satellite signals into usable spatial data. He works with Frontier Precision at the intersection of GIS, surveying, and GNSS, with a particular focus on field instrumentation, positioning infrastructure, and the workflows that bridge survey-grade measurements and GIS analysis.
He holds a B.S. in Geography and GIS from Portland State University and has presented at numerous regional and national conferences on applied geospatial technology. His work often involves explaining how modern positioning systems function in practice and translating complex geospatial infrastructure into workflows that practitioners can understand and apply.
Outside of work, he enjoys sailing, backpacking, climbing, and most outdoor activities that involve a map. Other hobbies include building small geospatial projects, including 3D-printed terrain models, DIY bathymetric mapping projects from his sailboat, and several other ideas that are perpetually almost finished.