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And for lovers of maps and historians of cartography
Dec 21st, 2005 by JTJ

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

Bird's Eye Views

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/



Still thinking about Christmas gifts? How 'bout a wonderful map projection?
Dec 21st, 2005 by JTJ

From “Cartography,” the Canadian Cartography Association's most
excellent 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, see
http://www.ilstu.edu/microcam/map_projections/



A GoogleMaps-FundRace MashUp
Dec 14th, 2005 by JTJ

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.



Resources related to Crime Mapping
Dec 7th, 2005 by Tom Johnson

We
don't know if there has as yet been any empirical research done on how
interested media consumers are in online crime mapping — and how good the coverage is —  but there is a body of
literature debating readers' interest in crime per se.  It would
seem to be a pretty good bet, though, that if people are interested in
crime AND if more and more are going online via broadband, that
some dynamic crime maps would get some hits. 

Remember
that crime mapping is not just about pushing digital push-pins on a
map, GoogleMap or otherwise.  “Journey to Crime” maps or maps
showing where a car was stolen and when it was recovered can provide
interesting insights.

Here are some links recently posted to the CrimeMapping listserv that could be of value to journalists:

Journey-after-crime: How Far and to Which Direction DO They Go?
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps/boston2004/papers/Lu.ppt

Linking Offender Residence Probability Surfaces to a Specific Incident Location
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/nij/maps/dallas2001/Gore.doc

Journey to Crime Estimation
http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/CRIMESTAT/files/CrimeStatChapter.10.pdf

Applications for Examining the Journey-to-Crime Using Incident-Based Offender Residence Probability Surfaces
http://pqx.sagepub.com/cgi/content/refs/7/4/457

The Geography of Transit Crime:
http://www.uctc.net/papers/550.pdf

See, too: Paulsen, Derek J.  “WRONG SIDE OF THE TRACKS: EXPLORING THE ROLE OF NEWSPAPER COVERAGE OF HOMICIDE IN SOCIALLY CONSTRUCTING DANGEROUS PLACES.” Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture, 9(3) (2002) 113-127


And the GIS light went on at the The Eagle-Tribune
Nov 28th, 2005 by Tom Johnson

This week's edition of GIS Weekly 
tells the tale of how another newspaper figured out that GIS could be a
vital tool for circulation.  Of course, many folks in the
newspaper industry knew that long before word reached the editorial
department, but no matter: more and more publishers and even some
editors are “getting it.”  See “
The Cultivation of Newspaper Readership Using Segmentation Software” by Susan Smith. 

Here are some quotes:



“We mapped the single copy purchase points to determine where they are
and how likely prospective newspaper readers were to be near them or
see them and we found that we could a) increase the density of our
single copy purchase points and b) relocate them to be more in field of
travel of likely newspaper readers. When we did that, we saw in the
Essex County Capital newspapers, basically the North Shore of Boston,
for example, a 25% increase in single copy sales, during the course of
less than a year.”


What was the company's initial investment in the software?
“On an annual basis it's about $20,000-$30,000,” commented [
research director Forbes] Durey. “The
MapInfo software is priced in various stages. MapInfo's sales team was
very flexible in designing a pricing strategy to meet our current
needs. Our initial investment was $800-$900. We tested that for about a
year, and then we decided to dive in and use all the data and
capabilities that MapInfo offers. At this point, we purchased the full
set of capabilities from MapInfo's TargetPro software. Newspapers can
expect a varying degree of investment from $1,000 up to $30,000 or
more.”

If you look at
the MapInfo investment we made, it equates to roughly 20 cents per
subscriber per year. What fraction of the value of the subscriber is 20
cents? In the newspaper business today it's a very small fraction.”



New GIS Tutorial Book just out
Nov 25th, 2005 by JTJ

ESRI Press has a new book out, a tutorial for ArcView 9 by friends-of-the-IAJ Wilpen Gorr and Kristen S. Kurland at Carnegie Mellon University. What's of special interest to journalists is the example projects, one “creating a voting
district map for a local election” and another “
comparing
county financial information in a map.”  These, and more, would be
perfect fits in a journo's tool box.  Don't be put off by the list
price of $70; Amazon has it marked down to $45.



New GIS Tutorial Book Provides Self-Study Instruction for ArcView
21, 2005 — Redlands, California—All geographic information system (GIS) users, from classroom instructors to field surveyors, can now turn to a common resource to enhance their work.

A new workbook from ESRI Press shows how GIS meets the needs of a wide range of professions and technological abilities. GIS Tutorial: Workbook for ArcView 9
offers exercises and instructions that users can adapt to specific
training needs, whether it is teaching GIS in a classroom or using the
book for individual study. The book takes readers through the process
of using a variety of GIS functionality, from creating maps and
collecting data to using geoprocessing tools and models for advanced
analysis.

GIS Tutorial includes scripted exercises that use detailed step-by-step instructions and graphics to illustrate specific ArcGIS
tools and GIS workflows. Exercise assignments give precise instructions
and pose real-world problem scenarios including creating a voting
district map for a local election,
comparing county financial information in a map, geocoding household
hazardous wastes, and analyzing populations in California cities at
risk for earthquakes. A fully functioning 180-day trial version of ArcView 9 software on CD-ROM and a CD of data for working through the tutorials are included with the book.

GIS experts Wilpen L. Gorr and Kristen S. Kurland prepared the book
with comprehensive instruction in mind. Gorr is a professor of public
policy and information systems management at the H. John Heinz III
School of Public Policy and Management, Carnegie Mellon University,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Kurland holds a joint faculty appointment at
Carnegie Mellon University's Heinz School of Public Policy and
Management and School of Architecture, where she teaches GIS, CAD, 3D
visualization, and computer-aided facilities management.

GIS Tutorial: Workbook for ArcView 9 (ISBN 1-58948-127-5, 374 pages, $69.95) is available in bookstores and online retailers worldwide or can be purchased at Amazon Online Store or by calling 1-800-447-9778. Outside the United States, contact your local ESRI distributor. Books published by ESRI Press are distributed to the trade by Independent Publishers Group (tel.: 1-800-888-4741, Web: www.ipgbook.com).



For pricing information or to order a copy of “GIS Tutorial: Workbook for ArcView 9,”
visit Amazon Book Store.

Press Information:
Nikki Snowhite, ESRI
Tel.: 909-793-2853, extension 1-2194
E-mail (press only): Email Contact
General Information: Email Contact”



Map Mashups: When a good idea takes off
Nov 22nd, 2005 by JTJ

CNET.com News serves up a good overview of what happens when a company pushes its powerful code kernels out to the world.


Mapping a revolution with 'mashups'

By Elinor Mills

Staff Writer, CNET News.com

November 17, 2005 4:00 AM PT

Even before Google gave its blessing, Paul Rademacher was hacking
away at the code behind its mapping application so he could mix it with
outside real estate data and see exactly where homes listed for sale
were located in the San Francisco area.

Little did the computer graphics expert know that his HousingMaps.com, which combines a Google map with house listings from the popular Craigslist community,
would be the start of an Internet phenomenon. Although Rademacher
created his site about two months before Google publicly released its
application programming interface–the secret sauce that allows
developers to create their own recipes with its maps–the company
wasn't angry.


In fact, Google hired him shortly thereafter.


“Now we see that all along there has been a huge amount of interesting
information tied around location,” Rademacher said. “Before, they had
no way of expressing that and doing anything useful with it.”


With such “mashups”–hybrid software that combines content from more
than one source–digital maps are quickly becoming a centralized tool
for countless uses ranging from local shopping and traffic reports to
online dating and community organizing, all in real time and right down
to specific addresses.


Online mapping is evolving into a historic nexus of disparate
technologies and communities that is changing the fundamental use of
the Internet, as well as redefining the concept of maps in our culture.
Along the way, map mashups are providing perhaps the clearest idea yet
of commercial applications for the generation of so-called social
technologies they represent.


They are, in a very real sense, bridging the gap between the virtual and physical worlds.


“This information has been on the Web for years,” said Mike Pegg, a Canadian programmer who runs a site called Google Maps Mania. “The map is all of a sudden bringing this information to life for us. I think it has inspired a lot of people.”


So prolific has the mapping movement become that Pegg has dedicated his
site to documenting the staggering growth of mashups. He estimates that
at least 10 mashups are created every day, each providing data that pop
up in info balloons from the digital pushpins dotting various online
maps.


Not surprisingly, this unprecedented interest is forcing change at
old-world cartography institutions. Just last week, Rand McNally
announced a new online mapping service of its own called MapEngine,
which will allow businesses to integrate maps, directions and location
search functionality into their Web sites. But such established
companies will increasingly compete with free applications that have
sprung up organically on the Web.

A monster mashup

The term “mashup” was first used in pop music when artists and DJs
began playing two songs simultaneously. In technology, it refers to a
Web site or application that combines content from multiple sources but
appears seamless upon use. Although used for various software, mashups
became an unparalleled phenomenon in digital cartography because of the
relatively easy ability to overlay all types of data on an online map
with tools from such companies as Google and Amazon.


Already, hundreds of mashups overlay maps with everything from such practical information as gas station prices, hurricane movements, hot springs sites and crime statistics to the more entertaining if not frivolous, including photos of urinals, UFO sightings, New York movie locations, taco trucks in Seattle and Hot People by ZIP Code, a mashup of Google Maps and the HotorNot.com Web site.


This wildfire popularity has touched off feverish competition among the major portals that provide mapping services,
especially since Yahoo, Microsoft's MSN and Google all released their
map programming software to the public. But another reason cited for
the boom in map mashups is one of hardware, specifically the processor
speed and storage capacity needed for satellite photos and other
resource-hogging images.

“They are taking off because the hardware has gotten to the
point where it is possible and the software has achieved a bit of
maturity, especially with Google Maps,” said Rich Gibson, co-author of
the book “Mapping Hacks.” “Until very recently you couldn't effectively
do mapping work on a personal computer.”


Hardware and software aside, however, it is the ability for anyone to
add information to a map


“You can plan a jogging route and it calculates when you should take
rests,” said Bret Taylor, product manager of Google Local, which
includes Google Maps. “It amazes us how popular this site is.”

 Google all over the map


Has Google created a de facto standard with its mapping technology?

Click here to watch video


The “about” section of Gmaps Pedometer explains: “As a runner training
for a marathon for the first time, I found myself wishing I had an easy
way to know the exact distance a certain course is, without having to
drag a GPS or pedometer around on my runs. Looking at Google Maps, and
knowing there was a vibrant community of geeks hacking it, I knew there
had to be a way. So here it is.”


Real estate and travel mashups, which inherently lend themselves to
geographically specific information, are proving particularly hot. Some
examples: Dartmaps, for real-time locations of commuter trains in Dublin, FBOweb.com, for tracking airline flight status, and TravelPost.com, which allows travelers to post journals and photos on maps, as well as get hotel reviews.


“The map is all of a sudden bringing this information to life for us. I think it has inspired a lot of people.”


–Mike Pegg, programmer, Google Maps Mania


“Travelers often have a world map on their wall with thumbtacks of
where they've been,” TravelPost.com Chief Executive Sam Shank said. “I
wanted to carry that online. I thought it was an incredible metaphor
for travels.”


For those not worried about a housing bubble, HomePriceRecords.com lists how much people paid for their homes, while real estate mashups Trulia.com and HomePages.com combine data on homes for sale with detailed neighborhood information such as park and school locations.


Other mashups have a distinct community or social perspective, such as CommunityWalk.com, which allows people to create and share maps, WeFixNYC.com, which features a map showing the potholes in New York City and tracks how long it takes to fix them, and Zvents.com, which lets people search for events according to type, date or location.


Still more are combining photos and maps, such as SmugMaps.com, which allows people to do location-based searching for photos around the globe, and Amazon.com's A9 map service, which shows street-level photos for specific addresses.


“Taking a picture and putting it on a map ties it to the real world in
a way that the Internet hasn't been able to do yet,” said Jared
Upton-Cosulich, founder of CommunityWalk.com. “In general, the Internet
has not been good at giving this information. What's near me? What's in
my neighborhood? A map makes that information easy to digest.”


“Travelers often have a world map on their wall with thumbtacks of where they've been. I wanted to carry that online.”


–Sam Shank, CEO, TravelPost.com


One Web site called KMaps,
has created software built on top of Google Maps that allows people to
get location-based information on various mobile devices, such as the
addresses of nearby restaurants and directions to get there. Developers
have already expanded the applications to include the ability to
quickly find a date in the neighborhood and other social networking
uses.


As with all successful technologies, of course, commercial interests
are never far behind, and mapping is no exception. While mashups
typically are labors of love created by passionate people who want to
share information with others, businesses see the potential for highly
targeted advertising and other lucrative applications.


“If you can build an interface and database that is useful, you can
serve contextual and geo-targeted advertising against it,” said Greg
Sterling, an analyst at The Kelsey Group.


Because they are linked to relevant information, search- or
keyword-based advertisements are more effective than traditional
“display” ads designed simply to promote a brand. Targeting ads not
only to a keyword search but to a person's specific location could be
even more effective.

It can be assumed, for example, that someone searching for
restaurants in a particular neighborhood may well be planning on dining
there. That kind of specific behavioral prediction is exactly the kind
of incentive that can lure local merchants, who have declined
advertisements to global readerships in the past because they were not
worth the relatively high price.


Local search is expected to grow from being a $418 million market this
year to $3.4 billion in 2009, according to a forecast from The Kelsey
Group.


Although Google has not served up ads on mashup sites, the company
reserves the right to include advertising in the map images provided to
mashup creators, and users must agree to display those ads without
modification, according to its terms of use.


Yahoo is selling sponsorships to certain merchants for placement on
prominent buttons that appear below a map that will show locations of
stores, wireless hot spots and other sites. Yahoo Maps also includes a
feature that shows traffic conditions and a SmartView feature that
allows people to pinpoint on the map various destinations such as
Chinese restaurants, hospitals and hiking trails.

To improve its mapping service, Yahoo Japan has been accepting
information from the public about information in their neighborhoods,
such as the opening of new stores–another illustration of the value of
social technologies and networks.

Yahoo Local
directly integrates user content and places it on a map. Typing in
“best margaritas” and a city and ZIP code, for instance, brings up
three sponsored results followed by reviews and ratings written by
customers.

“Yahoo, in particular, has seen maps as another doorway into local
information,” Sterling said. “I have historically used Yahoo Maps
because I can plot a point and find a hotel in proximity to that
location, within walking distance. That kind of information is hard to
get a sense from most text links or standard searching.”

“Taking a picture and putting it on a map ties it to the real world in a way that the Internet hasn't been able to do yet.”


–Jared Upton-Cosulich, founder, CommunityWalk.com


Companies are looking at subscription and pay-per-transaction
strategies, but so far advertising has been the “most tried and tested”
business, said Jeremy Kreitler, senior product manager for Yahoo Maps
and Local.


“For example, Holiday Inn can be plotted on a map and provide links to
do bookings and get more information,” he said. “Those are good for
getting brick-and-mortar advertisers engaged.”


Justin Osmer, MSN Search product manager, agreed. “The advertising
model is the one that will take the lead. Pay-for-call is an
interesting model. With a pizzeria example, if you click on that ad
maybe MSN Virtual Earth gets 5 cents from that call. It's taking the
click-through model one step further.”


MSN Virtual Earth allows people to layer multiple searches on one map,
for instance, pinpointing locations of restaurants, movie theaters and
hotels. Microsoft is looking into business models that would allow
merchants to add photos of their stores, hours of operation and other
information, Osmer said.


In addition, real estate mashups provide opportunities for local agents
to advertise and list, said Matt Heinz, senior marketing director of
HomePages.com. “Real estate is a killer app for aerial mapping.”


Alternative ways of making money are being tried on a small scale. On his GeocoderUS
site, author Gibson lets people enter an address and find the longitude
and latitude for free, but he charges businesses $50 for 20,000
queries.


“There will most likely be a shakeout down the road as methods for
monetization evolve and those with a solution survive,” Kreitler said.

In all likelihood, it is far too soon to tell what mapping
services or mashups will prove the ultimate successes. Driven by the
power of collaborative grassroots thinking, technology is advancing too
rapidly on this front to predict with any certainty–commercially or
otherwise.


Online maps are quickly becoming far more dynamic than ever imagined
and will soon enter new phases of development as other technologies are
mashed into the mix. Pegg of Google Maps Mania cited the street
conditions as one fertile area, where truly real-time data would
drastically change their usefulness with such alerts as traffic
accidents and storm damage.


“For a really killer map interface, the only thing left is a live video
satellite,” he said. “That's the only thing that is missing–up-to-date
mapping.” 




Geocoding and the GISCorps
Nov 10th, 2005 by JTJ

An interesting piece today from CNN on the value of geographers in the hurricane rescuse and recovery business.

See http://edition.cnn.com/2005/TECH/11/10/gis.technology/

'Geocoding' used to locate Katrina survivors

Street addresses not very useful after hurricane hit

By Marsha Walton
CNN

(CNN)
— Police, firefighters, and Coast Guard crews may be the first to come
to mind when naming the lifesavers during disasters such as Hurricane
Katrina.

It might be time to add geographers to that list.

In
the sometimes desperate hours following Katrina's landfall, experts in
geographic information services — GIS — helped search and rescue
crews reach more than 75 stranded survivors in Mississippi.

One
of their most valuable tools was a process called “geocoding,” the
conversion of street addresses into global positioning system (GPS)
coordinates.

With streets flooded, street signs missing, and
rescue crews unfamiliar with the Gulf Coast area, street addresses were
not very useful.

“They would get phone calls, or the Coast Guard
would come in with addresses in their hands and say, 'I need a latitude
and longitude for this address.' So the GIS professionals would do a
geocoding, give it to the Coast Guard who got on helicopters and saved
lives,” said Shoreh Elhami, director of GISCorps.

Elhami,
co-founder of GISCorps, said that since 2004, the organization's
volunteers have responded to disasters such as the Asian tsunami and
Hurricane Katrina, as well as efforts to provide humanitarian relief,
sustainable development, economic development, health, and education in
all parts of the world.

The Corps had 20 volunteers on the ground in Mississippi less than 48 hours after Katrina's landfall.

GISCorps
is part of URISA, the Urban and Regional Information Systems
Association. Elhami said more than 900 qualified volunteers have GIS
experience, and range from from city and state government officials to
academics to people in private industry.

Volunteer Beth McMillan,
a field geologist and professor at the University of Arkansas in Little
Rock, worked in Pearl River County, Mississippi, a couple of weeks
after the storm.

“A couple of days after the hurricane hit, I
felt so down, and wondered what I could do. I could give a little bit
of money, but that doesn't seem very satisfying. To be able to have a
skill that can be used is much more empowering, it doesn't make you
feel so helpless,” said McMillan, back in Little Rock.

Although rescue efforts were over by the time she arrived, there were scores of other tasks she and her colleagues completed.

“We
had laptops and map plotters, and a database that the group from the
first week had put together. One map we produced showed cell phone
towers in the county, and the estimated coverage of those towers.
Everybody was communicating with cell phones and they needed to figure
out where to go within the county to talk to one another,” McMillan
said.

McMillan described the volunteer efforts as a sort of “Maps to Go” for a wide range of people needing immediate information.

Their
maps detailed road conditions, power outages, underground gas storage,
and facilities with hazardous materials. Agencies from FEMA to the Red
Cross to local utilities relied on the information that they constantly
updated.

“This is how technology can make a difference,” said
David Shaw, director of the GeoResources Institute at Mississippi State
University.

“It was a great team effort,” said Shaw, for a crisis that he said had deteriorated into a Third World situation.

Shaw
said he was amazed at the talent and the creativity of, basically, a
roomful of strangers at these county Emergency Operations Centers.
While eventually satellite links and Internet connections made the
tasks easier, in some cases large amounts of data had to be driven
several hours from one site to another.

Volunteers are never sure
of the conditions they might face when deployed to disaster sites or
developing countries. Assignments usually last between two weeks and
two months. McMillan said her many experiences “roughing it” as a field
geologist helped her deal with the living conditions in Mississippi.

“They
said be prepared for really hot weather, and bring a sleeping bag,” she
said. “I slept in an empty U.S. Department of Agriculture building on a
cot, with probably several hundred other people. But it did have power,
bathrooms, and showers, so conditions were not as bad as they could
have been,” she said.

She and her colleagues ate MREs (military meals ready to eat) and worked 12-plus hour days every day.

“We
did get a chance to tag along one afternoon with a couple of National
Guardsmen from Mississippi on a trip to the coast. That was one of the
most memorable experiences of my life. I've never seen such
destruction, and the only way to really understand it is to see it in
person,” she said.


 
 



Big digital doors to GIS
Nov 7th, 2005 by JTJ

Susan Smith, editor of GISWeekly Review, reviews a new book from ESRI Press on GIS portals.  See review below or check out Spatial Portals: Gateways to Geographic Information



==============================

Spatial Portals Book Review
By Susan Smith

A new book out from ESRI Press called Spatial Portals: Gateways to Geographic Information
by Winnie Tang, founder and CEO of ESRI China (Hong Kong) and
Japan-based independent consultant Jan Selwood, offers a comprehensive
look at spatial portals from an ESRI point of view, using as examples
spatial portals developed with ArcExplorer Web Services, Geography
Network software, ArcIMS for internet mapping, and ArcSDE for data
management.

Spatial portals are described in this book as Web sites
that either “assemble many online resources and links into a single
location to form easy-to-use products or provide search tools that help
users find information on the Web.” Of course, portals such as America
Online and CompuServe have provided this type of single source for
resources for a long time; Google and Yahoo! and MSN have provided
search tools that are now in direct competition with ESRI in some
areas.

Three types of spatial portals are currently in use: application portals, catalog portals and enterprise portals.

Catalog portals maintain indexes or catalogs of available
information services. Generally service providers can add metadata to
the portal and it is then organized into a catalog that allows users to
access information.

Application portals are for the well-defined audience or those
with specific requirements and generally combine information services
into a Web-based mapping package that is task-specific. They usually
include dedicated application and data servers and provide services
that are more complex than catalog servers.

The enterprise spatial portal is designed to integrate spatial
data with business enterprise solutions. Initially they were originated
by Oracle and SAP, and their focus was on enterprise wide resource
planning, office automation and document management. Now they also
encompass spatial information.

Spatial portals are often the spatial data infrastructure
(SDI) front end to a network of information, and although SDI has been
used by organizations and governments since the 90s to organize, access
and search information, spatial portals allow faster access to
information than ever before.

What we've seen repeatedly in the past couple of years has
been the proliferation of spatial portals after a natural or other type
of disaster, such as the Indian Ocean tsunami or Hurricane Katrina. An
example is the Pacific Disaster Center's portal
launched within hours of the news of the tsunami, providing news, data
and links to mapping services related to the disaster. Also the PDC
launched a Map Viewer and an underlying map service.

Besides this portal, the PDC hosts a number of permanent portals to
help improve coordination of efforts and access to information.
Disaster and resource managers and others can register services such as
online or downloadable datasets with the Asia Pacific Natural Hazards Information Network
(APNHIN) so that governments, planners and non-governmental
organizations can search for and access information pertinent to hazard
evaluation and response planning.

Hurricane Katrina occurred after this book's publication so
the myriad of spatial portals developed to aid in response and recovery
for that disaster are not covered here.

Some time is spent on Geospatial One-Stop, whose mantra is
“two clicks to content.” The One Stop program, launched in December
2002, is an intergovernmental project managed by the Department of the
Interior in support of the President's Initiative for E-government.
Geospatial One Stop builds upon its partnership with the Federal
Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) to provide easy to use geospatial
information access to the public and government, drawing from databases
and directories across the nation.

In 2003, the Norwegian government endorsed Norway Digital, a
plan to develop a spatial data infrastructure with spatial portals at
its heart. Norway is a land of contrasts – 11 percent of the total
population live in Oslo, the nation's capital, while 45 percent live in
provinces located in 100 kilometers of the city, concentrating
population in the southeast. There are fewer than six people per square
kilometer in some municipalities.

While national mapping programs all have their own challenges,
Norway has addressed its problem of mapping remote regions by building
partnerships between public agencies and private industry. Although it
is focused on government agencies, Norway Digital embodies the building
of a national geospatial framework that is composed of multiple spatial
portals that can be used by participating members to build their own
sites and services. A new NMA portal is
geoNorge, which adds search functionality and indexing as well as hosts topographic map services across the whole framework.

The South Carolina Department of Health and Environment Control (DHEC)
has developed a portal called the South Carolina Community Assessment
Network (SCAN) South Carolina Community Assessment Network (SCAN)
that provides a real -time, interactive gateway to DHEC's databases.
Users can use it to integrate and analyze health data with other data
from state, local and federal agencies and provides efficient access to
public health information.

Each of the case studies found in the book are interesting
examples of what has been accomplished using spatial portals. The book
is described by one reader as a “true portal on spatial portals.”
Whether or not this is the case, the book is a valuable resource
showing just what spatial portals are capable of and how they are
changing the way we view, manage, sort, find, share and use geographic
information.
Spatial Portals: Gateways to Geographic Information, by Winnie Tang and
Jan Selwood, 176 pages
ESRI Press
ISBN 1-58948-131-3





More churning in the mapping API world
Nov 4th, 2005 by JTJ

Interesting
announcement from Yahoo Maps this week.  Seems as though Google,
Yahoo and Amazon (with it's A9 entry) are starting to look like three
NASCAR competitors on the backstretch of the lap before the finish
line.  Here's the latest from Yahoo:


==========================

November 02, 2005

Announcing New Maps APIs

In June of this year, we gave developers the ability to overlay
geographic data on a Yahoo! Map. Since then, we've seen a lot of
terrific maps mash-ups. But you wanted more. You wanted the ability to
embed Yahoo! Maps on your own Web site. You wanted to programmatically
convert addresses into geocoded longitude/latitude pairs. You wanted
more data feeds, such as highway traffic and local data, to plot on a
map. But most importantly, you wanted a user experience that's better
than any online mapping product out there.

Today we build on the success of the Simple Maps API
by adding several new APIs for Yahoo! Maps. These products enable
developers to use Yahoo! Maps in exciting new ways — including
embedding maps on your Web site.

With this release, we are providing:

Of course, the Simple Maps API
we released in June is still there, giving developers and
non-developers the ability to plot locations on Yahoo! Maps with no
programming and no rate limits.

We're giddy with excitement about this release, and we can't wait to
see how you use the new APIs. We know there's lot to digest here, so if
you have questions, feedback, or just want to show off what you've
done, please join us in the yws-maps group.

Jeffrey McManus


Director, Yahoo! Developer Network





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