Alfredo Covaleda,
Bogota, Colombia
Stephen Guerin,
Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
James A. Trostle,
Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut, USA
One of the interesting and most challenging aspects of cartography is that of mapping ideas and their ebb and flow in populations. Think of trying to dynamically map memes and at what scale. How, for example, does the concepts of neo-conservatism or approval of national health care move through a society and what does that movement look like on a map? Recently, following race riots down under, the Sydney Morning Herald took a crack at trying to map “tolerance.” While the results are not perfect, it's a good go at a difficult problem. Here's how the CCA blog reported it. “Mapping Tolerance in Sydney Published Sunday, December 25, 2005 by CCAer The Sydney Morning Herald has a story on a map produced after the Cronulla race riots earlier this month. The map is based on a survey of 1,800 respondents and was conducted by Associate Professor Jim Forrest, of Macquarie University, Kevin Dunn, of the University of NSW and others. From the article: “Less tolerant areas include outer locations such as Gosford and Campbelltown, but also culturally mixed areas such as Bankstown and Ryde. Bankstown has a substantial Muslim population, while Ryde has many Chinese and Koreans. Culturally diverse areas such as Parramatta, Marrickville and Penrith, and the suburbs Hurstville, Randwick and Botany, are tolerant.” The map itself is fairly generalized and could use a better colour scheme. Based on 1,800 respondents across the area, that means that less than 100 residents would determine how a neighbourhood is classed. Still, in light of recent events in Australia, an interesting map.”
The NYTimes online site has done a nice job of apparently utilizing some Google Map tools to gather and report news of the transit strike and related citizen stories. See the “Interactive Feature” on the NYT opening page.
By Tamara Thompson Investigations
Bird's eye view maps have long been an interesting perspective for mapmakers and users of maps. (They have also been a splendid tool for hyping real estate and city development on America's spread to the west, but that's a story for another day.) Comes today this interesting resource at http://ccablog.blogspot.com/2005/12/birds-eye-views.html
Tom Patterson of the U. S. National Park Service has published a 32 page paper on the creation of bird's eye views. The paper, published in NACIS’ fall issue of Cartographic Perspectives, is available on his Shaded Relief website and is in pdf format. Also available are numerous examples. From the abstract: “A brief historical review looks at the antecedents of current NPS products dating back to the Renaissance. The practical second half of the paper focuses on how the NPS now designs these bird’s-eye views with 3D software, with an eye toward cost savings. Topics include viewing parameters in a 3D scene, preparing DEMs, modeling buildings, designing trees, and creating environmental special effects.” Patterson points out in his paper that “If the output from 3D software has a visual fault it is the tendency for it to look hyper-realistic—too smooth, shiny, and simulated.” The paper contains numerous tips for the creation of a realistic bird’s eye illustration.”Thanks again to the http://ccablog.blogspot.com/
From “Cartography,” the Canadian Cartography Association's mostexcellent blog at http://ccablog.blogspot.com/“The self-declared goal of the Map Projections web page 'is to present on-line, as complete a collection as possible, historical published map projections.' Currently there are over 300 such examples, all as black line drawings in pdf format, classed into 7 categories. The map projections were produced using personally developed computer programs, some of which is available for download or by way of email request (see About – in pdf format).”For the Map Projection page, seehttp://www.ilstu.edu/microcam/map_projections/
The LLRX newsletter reports:
Old and New
THOMAS, the legislative Web site from the Library of Congress, has received its second facelift in the space of a year. (For information on the previous set of tweaks, see my January 2005 column THOMAS: New Congress, A Few Changes.) The latest redesign, announced in a November 2005 press release, does not add much substantial content or functionality but gives THOMAS an updated look similar to the main Library of Congress web site and a consistent site-wide navigation scheme that certainly was needed.
[click to enlarge]
The current THOMAS website.
Beth Kopine, Resource Center Director at the Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc., has done some fast and insightful work creating a page of digital resources that will assist anyone in covering the NY City transit strike, and any other, for that matter. See “IRE and NICAR Resource Page: NY Transit Strike”
Gerry Lanosga, an investigative producer at WTHR-TV in Indianapolis, was kind enough to send along this link — http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~markane/i590/contributors.html to a nifty first shot at merging GoogleMaps with The Fundrace Project., that site that shows you who in any ZIP Code made contributions to which politicians. Matthew Kane, a CS student at the Univ. of Indiana, put this together, and it's a fine beginning. Be alert, however, that the Fundrace data is not always correct. For example, we know a guy named John T. Johnson, who lives in ZIP 87505, fairly well. The Fundrace Project says he is an airline pilot who works for UPS. We know for sure that is not the case.
The drill-down on Kane's Following the Dollars doesn't give the degree of detail that the Fundrace Project does itself, but keep on truckin', Mr. Kane. We need all of these utilities we can get.
The non-US press is picking up on the story of “rendition” flights, those special charters hauling folks — apparently always males — who have been kidnapped by the CIA and handed over to other nations for, um, “interrogation.” While The Washington Post has gotten perhaps a bit too-much credit for breaking the story, the first reporter on it was Joachim Dyfvermark, a reporters for TV4 in Sweden. Now the French newspaper Le Mode is on the case. See “On the track of the hidden activities of the CIA in Europe” The maps on the site would seem to indicate that Algiers is a popular stop-over with Germany an equally popular destination, presumably for hand-off.
Ran across this today: “The Headmap Manifesto — Know Your Place – Headmap manifesto and the spatialised internet revolution.” See http://www.sirc.org/articles/know_your_place.shtml Even though it's more than a year old, just the phrase “Headmap Manifesto” would seem to have potential. Headmap fits neatly with another collaborative thinking/organizing tool we've started to investigate, CmapTools, a online, shareable concept mapping utility. Seems to us that if/when we merge the concepts of Headmap, CmapTools and “First Mile,” something's going on that suggests major change in the offing.