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MapInfo ties more data to maps
May 29th, 2006 by Tom Johnson

More from Directions Magazine

''MapInfo Embraces Web Services
by Adena Schutzberg, Executive Editor

I'm
trying to remember how many years ago it was that I first heard the
vision of Web services for GIS. I suspect it was in the mid/late 1990s.
The big Web service on everyone's list? Geocoding, also known as
“locationally enabling datasets.”
With MapInfo Professional v8.5, that vision is reality.

Moshe Binyamin, senior product manager, gave me the tour, just as the product was announced for release
on June 6 of this year. In this release MapInfo laid the groundwork for
the
desktop product to interact with Web services of many kinds, including
SOAP and XML (thus RSS). This core technology allows developers to
connect MapInfo Pro to existing Web services “with a really minor
development effort that utilizes XML” per Binyamin.

The first example shown was a connection to Salesforce.com,
an online customer relationship management
service. MapInfo developers created a sample application using MapBasic
that, once loaded, allows users to access data records from a Salesforce.com
account and place customer locations on the map. Alternatively, the
user can directly link back and display full record information in the Salesforce.com app by clicking on the map.

Geocoding customer  data from Salesforce.com


A
second example illustrated pulling in Yahoo traffic (via an RSS feed)
to a MapInfo map. Yahoo uses its own XML format for this data which
MapInfo had to “decipher” to make the application work. Most feeds,
Binyamin suggested, would need some sort of custom parsing to be fully
useful. The MapInfo tool automatically pulled the central ZIP Code from
the existing
map, allowed for a magnification level (10 mile radius or more) and the
ability to select traffic data based on severity. This tool and its
source code will be included as one of the sample applications that
will ship with MapBasic v8.5.
…'' Read more


The precursors of JAGIS (Journalism & GIS)
May 29th, 2006 by Tom Johnson

_
Mapping the World : An Illustrated History of Cartography
– by Ralph E. Ehrenberg

Mapping the World
is a collection of cartographic treasures that spans thousands of years
and many cultures, from an ancient Babylonian map of the world etched
on clay to the latest high-tech
maps of the earth, seas and the skies above. With more than one hundred
maps and other illustrations and an introduction and running commentary
by Ralph E. Ehrenberg, this book tells a fascinating story of
geographic discovery, scientific invention and the art and technique of
mapmaking. From National Geographic, 2005.
Source: Directions Magazine



Those cities keep sprawling, apparently
May 4th, 2006 by JTJ

Some questionable methodology here, but still worth taking a look.

Measuring Urban Sprawl

By CCAer

The
Neptis Foundation, a Toronto-based organization that focuses on urban
development, has utilized satellite and air photo data to create a 8.7
billion data cell image depciting land development in the United
States. According to a paper entitled “Causes of Sprawl: A Portrait
form Space” that will be appearing the Quarterly Journal of Economics,
Pittsburgh is more sprawling than Miami and recent sprawling than Miami and recent development in Boston is more scattered than in Los Angeles.[
more]


Roll your own GPS system on your laptop
Apr 26th, 2006 by JTJ

Build Your Own Web-Based GPS Tracking System


By Martin Flynn


Having your own Web-based mobile Global Positioning System (GPS)
tracking system doesn't have to be a complicated and expensive
ordeal. Now you can build your own simple mobile GPS tracking system
from a laptop and have the data delivered right to your own computer.
With the addition of a Web server–and a Google Maps client-side
JavaScript–you'll be able to see the data via the Web on an
interactive map.[more]


Pioneer map librarian Walter Ristow dies at 97
Apr 17th, 2006 by JTJ

One of those fine, “I didn't know that” obits in the NYTimes today






Walter W. Ristow, who was known never to have gotten lost and would
have had no excuse if he had — considering he was in charge of more
maps than anybody else in the world — died April 3 in Mitchellville,
Md. He was 97.

The cause was coronary artery disease, his family said.

Dr. Ristow was head of the map divisions at the New York Public
Library, which has more than 400,000 maps, and later at the Library
Congress, which holds more than 5 million maps.

He is credited with molding the profession of the modern-day map
librarian, and was a prolific cartographic scholar as well, writing
hundreds of articles and several important books.

“Walter Ristow may be accounted one of the most influential figures
— perhaps the most influential figure — in map librarianship in the
United States, and he has won the highest international standing in his
field,” Helen Wallis, the map librarian at the British Library, wrote
in 1979.

Dr. Ristow's writings covered maps as far back as those of
16th-century explorers. But quirky detours into more populist terrain
kept popping up: Dr. Ristow (pronounced RIS-toe) wrote discursively
about the history of free gas station road maps, lamenting their
extinction after billions were printed.

He also told of the usefulness of maps of 12,000 American cities and
towns produced by the Sanborn Fire Insurance Company. “Geography is
about the human interaction with the land; a map makes a very definite
statement: 'This is where it is,' ” said John Hébert, head of the
Geography and Maps Division at the Library of Congress. “Dr. Ristow
knew that maps can take us from where we are to where we aren't.

“He saw maps as the way we document man's impact on the land.”

When Dr. Ristow began work in 1937 at the New York Public Library, there were fewer than 30 American map librarians.

Over the next half-century, introduction of computerized cataloging;
his writings on the field, including the influential “The Emergence of
Maps in Libraries” (1980); and his spirited recruitment of map
librarians jump-started a new field.

“He was the leading light in the beginning of map librarianship,”
said John Wolter, Dr. Ristow 's immediate successor at the Library of
Congress.

Dr. Ristow paved the way for today's computerized cartography,
through which people can essentially create personalized maps. His push
to automate the Library of Congress's map catalog was helpful in
globalizing map data, Mr. Hébert said.

Walter William Ristow was born on April 20, 1908, in La Crosse, Wis.
His father was a streetcar conductor who worked 365 days a year to feed
seven children, Mr. Ristow's son Steve said.

In fifth grade, Walter announced he would no longer attend a
German-language Lutheran school, partly because of lingering
anti-German feelings from World War I.

In 1931, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin, where he
majored in geography, then earned a master's in geography from Oberlin
College and a doctorate from Clark University.

One explanation of his initial interest in the subject was his
enchantment with still-unexplored places. Another was that geography
was then considered a science, but required no labs; he could not pay
lab fees and needed to fulfill a science requirement, his son explained.

At the New York library's map room, Dr. Ristow was delighted that
his job included fielding geographic questions. Where were the Western
cattle trails? How do I get to Ebbets Field in Brooklyn? Where is the
Far East? Could you settle an argument and tell us how far a ship would
be visible before disappearing over the horizon?

A visitor once requested and got a map of Pomerania from Dr. Ristow,
who later asked if she had found what she wanted. “Not yet,” she
answered, throwing open her coat to reveal a Pomeranian dog. “I'm
looking for a name for him.”

After Pearl Harbor, Dr. Ristow showed up at Room 312 on the
library's third floor only at lunch hours. It turned out that he was
huddling with spies in a nook of Rockefeller Center, making map packets
for bomber pilots. The two jobs came together when he was asked to use
the library to find spellings of place names from intercepted messages.

After the war, the Army found itself with hundreds of thousands of
maps it had confiscated. Existing map libraries were the logical
repository, and new ones were soon added.

“All of a sudden, somebody had to take care of these things, and a
whole field was born,” said Alice Hudson, the current chief of the map
room at the New York Public Library.

Dr. Ristow joined the Library of Congress in 1946, became chief of
the map department in 1967 and retired in 1978. The next year, he
helped found the Washington Map Society, which named a prize after him
for the year's best writing on cartographic history or map
librarianship. In 1985, he published a book on commercial cartography,
an oddly neglected subject.

His hobbies included using watercolors to reproduce historic maps.
After he died, his family found a bulging file of handwritten maps —
directions to people's houses and so on — he had collected over many
years. He had evidently been planning to write about them.

Dr. Ristow is survived by his sons, Richard, of Providence; Bill, of
Seattle; and Steve, of Falls Church, Va.; his brothers, Fred, Bob and
Harold, all of La Crosse; and three grandchildren. His wife of 43
years, the former Helen Doerr, died in 1987.

“She was probably the weakest map reader of the bunch, which suited
him,” Steve Ristow said of his parents and family vacations. “His role
was clear.”





2005 TIGER/Line Files with New Economic Census Geographies
Apr 4th, 2006 by JTJ

Yeah, it's a press release about a commercial product, but one that may be of interest and use to some of our readers:

2005 TIGER/Line Files with New Economic Census Geographies

Dear  GeoStats USA Subscriber,

GeoLytics has released the 2005 TIGER Line Files in their newest product, StreetCD 2005.  This CD/DVD set includes the new economic census boundaries and updated voting districts.  You get the latest Census Bureau updates in this very asy to use data set that comes complete on just two DVDs.

With GeoLytics StreetCD 2005, you can quickly and easily export any layers from the 2005 TIGER Line Files street and boundary data for use in ArcView and MapInfo.  With GeoLytics intuitive windows interface you can export boundaries in seconds.  You can also view and map the layers yourself with the product’s built-in mapping software.

StreetCD 2005 is also easy to use.  All you have to do is click on the geographic layers you want, pick the geography, and run your selection – that's it!  It instantly creates ArcView shapefiles and can quickly convert these to MapInfo mid/mif files if you use this software.

In addition to the new economic census boundaries \and voting districts, the StreetCD 2005 provides detailed classifications for all roads, railroads, hydrography, and landmarks, as well as legal, statistical, and administrative boundaries for census, transportation, health, education, and more.

For customers who already own the StreetCD 2004, you
can upgrade to the latest StreetCD 2005 for only $396 for the entire US
and $199 for a single state.  For previous Geolytics customers we are
offering StreetCD 2005 at a 10% discount of $445 for the whole US
(regularly $495) and $224 for a single state (regularly $249).


For more information about StreetCD or to take a guided tour, please visit our website at: http://www.geolytics.com/USCensus,StreetCD,Products.asp

If you have additional questions or to order, please call us toll-free at 1-800-577-6717.
If you do not wish to receive further emails, please send an email to remove@geolytics.com with 'Remove' in the subject line.  To be added to the newsletter subscription list send an email to info@geolytics.com with 'Add' in the subject ine.

Sincerely,
Katia Segre Cohen
GeoLytics, Inc
28 Brunswick Woods Drive
East Brunswick, NJ 08816
katia@geolytics.com
phone: 732-651-2000
toll free: 800-577-6717
fax: 732-651-2721



Mar 30th, 2006 by JTJ

Generally recognized as a strong, analytic program, and the costs of the course is quite fair, we think.

Quantitative Crime Pattern Analysis With CrimeStat

June 12-15, 2006
This three-day workshop in spatial analysis, held at Michigan State
University's School of Criminal Justice, will use the full-featured
Windows-based spatial statistics program CrimeStat III,
commonly used by law enforcement agencies and criminal justice
researchers. CrimeStat produces output for use with geographic
information systems (GIS) and can be linked with the crime mapping
efforts of police departments. The course will cover computing spatial
dimensions, distance measures, and several “hot spot” methods including
fuzzy mode, nearest neighbor, risk-adjusted nearest neighbor, and
K-means clustering. This intensive workshop will also offer
opportunities for hands-on computing experiences using NACJD data or
data from related agency or research projects. Participants will learn
how to produce results in CrimeStat and import them to ArcGIS for
further analysis or presentation.

Please visit www.icpsr.umich.edu/sumprog for details.

Ronald E. Wilson
Program Manager

Mapping & Analysis for Public Safety Program and Data Resources
@ the National Institute of Justice

http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps/

810 7th Street, NW
Room 7201

Washington, DC 20531

National Map Location: USNG 18SUJ2464707639



Is your census data normal(ized) for mapping?
Mar 27th, 2006 by JTJ

Long-time IAJ friend George Dailey, ESRI's K-12 Education Program manager, contributes a fine, basic article to the current issue of ArcUser on how to normalize census data.  It's would make an especially good handout to have while teaching.

See “Normalizing Census Data Using ArcMap” at
http://www.esri.com/news/arcuser/0206/files/normalize2.pdf



Changing colors in the Red and Blue states
Mar 20th, 2006 by JTJ

The CCA has posted a link to this neat animated GIF showing, state-by-state, the occupant of the White House's approval rating.  This wouldn't be hard for a newspaper to do, and it's  easily updated.

The Changing Red-Blue Map
Published Sunday, March 19, 2006 by CCAer | E-mail this post  


Following
the 2000 and 2004 U. S. presidential elections, the red-blue divide has
frequently been talked about and mapped, so much so that the map has
become ubiquitous on the Internet (see 1, 2, 3 and so on). Radical Wit has posted an animated gif map
of the country showing George Bush’s approval ratings using the same
partisan colours as the election results maps. The map begins with the
2004 election and changes every five seconds to the next month. Maps of
individual maps are also available as static images.



Show us the money!
Mar 11th, 2006 by JTJ

The Canadian Cartographic Association today points us to another interesting application of data collecting, analysis and charting.  See: http://ccablog.blogspot.com/2006/03/index-of-economic-freedom.html

Index of Economic Freedom

Published Friday, March 10, 2006 by CCAer | E-mail this post  



The
Index of Economic Freedom has been published every year for the past 12
years. It assesses each country’s economic freedom by evaluating a
country’s performance on a number of factors, including trade policy,
fiscal burden, government intervention, monetary policy and property
rights, among others. Using the latest results (
available in Excel format), the index creators have also put together a map of the world (also in pdf format) that provides a quick overview of economic freedom throughout the world. Also interesting to view is a chart showing the correlation of per capita income and economic freedom. Individual country reports / analysis are also available.


The complete report, along with the methodology and process used, is available for download.


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