Happy New Year, everyone!
Very interesting animation of the growth of Wal-Mart’s store locations. It would be interesting to see an accompanying real-time graph with some statistical interpretation, such as rate of growth, sales volume, revenue, etc.
Watching the Growth of Walmart Across America
Tags:animation·geography·mercantile·retail·Wal-Mart
I accidentally bumped into this site whose purpose is “crowd-sourcing crisis information”. (Sorry; bad metaphor.) Initial deployments still in alpha, but should be interesting to follow in the coming months, especially in light of the value demonstrated by the Twitter platform during the recent siege in Mumbai.
Ushahidi :: Crowdsourcing Crisis Information (FOSS)
Tags:FOSS·Mumbai·open source·social_software·twitter
Tags:iPhone·LBS·linux·Mobile·telephone
Business Week attributes an increased interest in Open Source software to the shrinking economy.
ReadWriteWeb cites a report conducted by Accenture that millenials (i.e. those born between ’77 and ’97) will ignore IT departments that don’t support their IT preferences and applications. That is to say, many emerging social apps like Facebook, Twitter, blogs, and wikis, as well as support for some of those on mobile devices. The report also cites a shift away from email as preferred mode for communications.
What is the role of government to insure we have a robust Internet-based public domain? Principles articulating public policy with regard to digital content.
Columbia Journalism Review article on the role of Twitter in journalism. (See also #mumbai.) Flickr, too. Oh, and there’s Wikipedia, too. While I’m at it, Sean has a related post here on the issue of whether free geospatial information enabled the recent siege in Mumbai. I to reflexively clamp down on public access and availability to geospatial information.
Tags:economy·government·Internet·open_source·social_software·Web
On the eve of Thanksgiving, the folks at FortiusOne speculate whether Americans will be driving fewer miles on this most heavily traveled of holidays.
Fuzzy Tolerance released Geospatial Portal v2.0, with RESTful services for query and spatial analysis. It’s a good example of (local) government use of open source geospatial software. It’s released under the GNU GPL, so you can download the source code and implement it for your enterprise. Read all the details on the project page.
SlashGeo links to Places iBegin, a tool that allows anyone to map their local, informal geography. Another tool for user-generated content, specifically geospatial content.
Tags:geospatial GIS open_source geography user_generated_content
With the frenzy of the elections past, I’m gradually returning to normal life. Here are some things that have recently caught my attention.
Fuzzy Tolerance calls attention to a slew of recent open source software releases. Shiny new toys!
From the Google Geo Developers Blog comes word of a snazzy new KML Manual. (Must add this to my book list, since I much prefer to obtain knowledge by looking at pigment on sheets of cellulose-based material.)
Via Andrew Turner comes word of Apps for Democracy. Although it’s too late to enter (entries closed yesterday), I want to call attention to it because it’s a good example of how the web makes it possible and affordable to do something at a micro (i.e. neighborhood) level. There are very few local governments that can afford to organize and stand up programs that meet the same needs that some of these mashups. Examples appeal to the enlightened self-interest of a dispersed group to take collective action in the social realm.
Tags:geospatial·Google·KML·mashups·open_source·reference
To put the magnitude of Obama’s victory in perspective, here are links to two interesting maps of election results. Both of these resources provide a much better explanation of the outcome than do the state-level maps, which look pretty evenly divided. The county-level maps are overwhelmingly red, but when adjusted for population the margin of victory is abundantly clear.
First, the Washington Post shows the election results in 3D here:
Map: Presidential Election Winners by County | Election 2008 | washingtonpost.com
Second, be sure to see the cartograms produced by Mark Newman at University of Michigan. If you just look at the results at the state level you would miss the real story, which occurs at the county level. And, you would miss the impact of highly populated urban areas versus the vast, thinly populated areas of the country.
Tags:mapping cartogram election 2008 obama
Studs Terkel, -the Chicagoan’s Chicagoan, has passed away. My first introduction to Studs was through “Working” but I think it was “Division Street” that really made his mark. The obituary from the Chicago Tribune called his books “written radio”, which had never occurred to me, but it’s quite an apt description.
Obit from the Chicago Tribune
Studs Terkel, Author and Activist, Dies at 96 – Obituary Obit – NYTimes.com
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Via Slashdot, this article suggests that the public would be better served by exposing government data through a simple standards-compliant data infrastructure.
In his Computerworld post, Patrick Thibodeau cites the example of JDLand blog in how the public (bloggers, in this case) might make use of a standardized public data infrastructure. More here: Let’s turn the federal government over to bloggers | Computerworld Blogs
Slashdot | Princeton Researchers Say Feds Need Data Standard
Tags:government·public.access·standards
Here’s another sign (as if we needed one) that geospatial information is rapidly merging with mainstream IT. Linux.com published a nice article on getting started with Geoserver.
Linux.com :: Serving and styling maps with Geoserver
Tags:Geoserver·geospatial·OGC·open source·OpenGeospatialConsortium