Sophia Parafina — Open Source Mapping in Windows

The real game changer is the release of TileMill for Windows.

She’s right, lots of great new options for Windows users.  As Brian Timoney says:

Those are universal skills no matter if you are on Windows, Mac OS X or Linux.  Cross platform apps gives you the ability to use your skills everywhere, rather than scripting VBA Microsoft Access “databases”.

 

 

Apple Uses Mapping Data — For Reals?

Apple iOS — Now with Mapping Data

Look, I totally get it. The big shiny object in the sky is Apple. Anything they do is “interesting”[ref]Disclaimer: I give every other paycheck to Steve Jobs for his new shiny objects[/ref]. I saw this news this morning about TomTom being in Apple’s Legal Doc[ref]The amount of GNP devoted to reading Apple’s tea leaves has to be bigger than most eastern european countries[/ref] and let out a big meh. Clearly as location becomes more integrated in smartphone workflows, companies will start adding additional data sources for their customers to use. Since Apple uses Google Maps as the default mapping app on the iOS, we probably won’t see any changes to that for quite some time (if ever). TomTom/TeleAtlas data is used by many companies for many things so the possibilities that Apple would use their data isn’t that far fetched[ref]I’m actually surprised that it wasn’t in there before, it is hard not to use TomTom or NAVTEQ these days[/ref].

Adena did a great job highlighting the companies that are now (or have been) part of Apple’s legal description. Let’s see… We’ve got parcel data, we’ve got neighborhood data, we’ve got routing data and we’ve traffic data. If I didn’t know any better, I’d be guessing Apple is trying to build a smartphone[ref]Side note, I’m very happy for Waze and Urban Mapping here. Great job guys![/ref].

The OpenStreetMap whining is already started with folks wondering why Apple didn’t use their data.  Clearly Apple is picking and choosing what they need here.  Apple is one of those companies that uses whatever makes best sense for them and their uses.  That is why they still use Google Maps, it really is still the best solution out there and they can afford to pay Google the licensing costs.  I still believe, as many of you do, it is only a matter of time for Apple to roll their own mapping solution.  This is a company that loves to control everything and to think they allow a competitor to have a mapping app on iOS by default has got to hurt them.   Of course how many years did Apple include Internet Explorer as the default browser on Mac OS X before rolling Safari.  Yea, only a matter of time.

Many don’t remember, but Mark Twain was a big user of iOS mapping applications and thus a user of mapping data.

Restaurant and Bar Map of the Gaslamp for ESRI UC

Thanks to Martha Rodger we’ve got a new updated restaurant and bar map of the Gaslamp ready to use for the ESRI UC.  According to Martha, there are 24 new places in the Gaslamp this year making this map even more useful.

Not that anyone has any time to head to the Gaslamp during the UC.

This Just In: Excel Is The World’s Most Used “Database”

I’m sure none of us make it though a day without running into one of these wonderful Excel databases people create. Personally I also like using Excel to plan my garden. Is there nothing this thing can’t do?

Take a look at this sweet map I made in Excel of the oil spill in the gulf. I’d upload it to GeoCommons if they just supported Excel.

Wut? I got it all mapped!

ArcGIS Explorer Online Beta is Released

So hopefully not lost in the ArcGIS.com release is ESRI’s latest GIS tool, ArcGIS Explorer.  The one sentence explanation from ESRI about what it is:

ArcGIS Explorer Online is similar in appearance to the desktop version of ArcGIS Explorer, and has some of the same capabilities, but it’s a lighter weight version that works in a browser, and is built using Microsoft Silverlight.

ArcGIS Explorer Online is a Silverlight based browser application

So what we have here is a cross platform GIS analysis platform.  I’ve liked what I’ve seen from ArcGIS Explorer Online and I think it is a solid start to platform agnostic client applications.  It requires Silverlight to run, but I’m able to use it flawlessly on my MacBook Pro laptop.  It mimics the Microsoft UI standards with the ribbon, but I’ll be frank that I’m beginning to like the ribbon interface.  Of course if you hate it, you’ll probably hate the app.

Presentations are important to ESRI and ArcGIS Explorer Online

When you start working with the app, the first thing that will catch your eye is what ESRI has stuck in the upper left of the toolbar.  If I had never seen ArcGIS Explorer Online before, I’d assume that ESRI would have put “Add Data” or “Search” or even “Basemap” in that prime spot.  But as you can see to the left, Presentation gets the first place everyone looks.  I’m not sure if this is by design but ESRI thinks we’ll be making lots of presentations with ArcGIS Online.  I had see Bernie Szukalski use the presentation mode with great success at the ESRI Developer and Business Partner conferences so I get the power.  I’d just assume presentations would be a ribbon on its own and not on the primary one.

The basemap button doesn’t disappoint.  If there is one thing ESRI has gotten right over the years, it is the freely available basemaps they’ve offered up through ArcGIS Online ArcGIS.com.  These are all available here including the Bing layers, ESRI’s Imagery and Streets, the wonderful ESRI Topographic map and of course now the OpenStreetMap layer.

There are tons of basemaps available including OpenStreetMap

Adding content is where I think ArcGIS Explorer Online will eventually shine, but for right now it is limited to only web services that are available on ArcGIS.com or ArcGIS Server services.  I’ve been told OGC support will be coming soon, but as of today you can only add ESRI web services or consume services from ArcGIS.com.

As you’d expect, you can save your maps to ArcGIS.com and choose to save them privately, share with a group or share with the world.  There is no ability to share a permalink as you might with Google Maps, but saving to ArcGIS.com and then sharing that URL is probably the method for now.  ESRI also has provided some “Featured Maps” (I’m assuming this comes from featured maps on ArcGIS.com) that you can get started with.

You can grab existing "Featured Maps" that ESRI provides to get started.

I like the start of ArcGIS Explorer Online.  Building it on Silverlight seems like a smart move as it runs flawlessly on any computer I used.  The biggest limitation I see right now is the lack of OGC support (WMS, WFS, CSW and of course KML) but ESRI has told me that is coming down the road.  I also would have liked to see a permalink feature to share quickly with friends maps I create, but I’m guessing ArcGIS.com is the driving force here so I might as well get used to sharing ArcGIS.com links.  I’m not sure how I could share my ArcGIS Server services with ArcGIS Explorer Online (embed or link that I can put in a blog post), but hopefully that part of the story will be set by the ESRI UC.

Map of Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill, Pipelines, Platforms

Matthew Baker sent me this great looking map and some good resources you can use to make your own maps to track the oil spill and oil infrastructure.


Click for larger view

Matt was able to get the data from the following sources:

The pipeline and platform data:

The past week’s data came from these KML files:

http://www.google.com/crisisresponse/oilspill/

Is anyone creating some mapping on their own tracking the spill and the response?

Update: Looks like ESRI has a resource site up and running.

Wait! What? MapQuest?

Programmable web has a timely post on what MapQuest has been doing.

MapQuest continues to add services to its developer network. Have they caught up with the geo-tools available from Google and Yahoo?

Most recently the mapping pioneer released a geocoding web service and static maps. In fact, many recent posts on its developer blog have included multiple announcements, testament to how much the company has been releasing.

Some cool new stuff for sure.  My only issue is that I can’t find Legend City using its geocoder.

No Legend City in these parts....

No Legend City in these parts....

Using SVG to create interactive maps on the Apple iPhone

So you can’t have Silverlight, Java or Flash to develop interactive mapping on the iPhone and have to “resort” to using JavaScript. Well maybe not, could SVG be the way forward to creating mapping websites on the iPhone?  My 2G iPhone seems to support SVG fairly well, but many SVG sites aren’t optimized for the iPhone.  Take ESRI’s abandoned (?) SVG Viewer:

ESRIs ArcWeb SVG Viewer

ESRI's ArcWeb SVG Viewer

It loads and you can turn on and off the “widgets” with ease.  But navigating it was impossible.  I know zero about developing with SVG so I suppose someone else will have to comment on if it is possible to create iPhone compatible navigation for SVG apps.  Heck if ESRI were to make a ArcGIS Server SVG API compatible for the iPhone, every ArcGIS Server implementation would be viewable on the iPhone.

County GIS Mapping Websites

Adena blogged about a county mapping site from Morris County, New Jersey (OK, I’ll admit right now I was born in Morristown, NJ; the county seat of Morris County).  I had not seen the website before, but this comment from Adena got me curious:

It’s a quite complex app, the kind I’ve not seen implemented in Flash. It must be pretty slick; it was named site of the day by Adobe earlier this year. Do be warned: you may need to read the help to use the site!

Go to the website yourself and take a look.  I don’t want to take away anything from the people who implemented it because it is very impressive, but is this the kind of GIS web map site that should be the public face of a county?  My current county has a horrible MapGuide mapping site (you know the classic ActiveX plugin MapGuide thing?) that is difficult for even me to use.  Most county websites (no matter if they use ESRI, Autodesk, open source, other*) are very difficult to use, take forever to load, run very slow, require plugins, require reading a manual and frustrate the heck out of me.

Shouldn’t a country web mapping site be simple and easy to use?  I would assume the average user of a county website doesn’t have an engineering degree so why not aim these sites at the user level?  And we need to be held acountable for accepting them (I’ve been using the Maricopa mapping site for as long as I can remember and I’m pretty sure I’ve never complained to the county, just on this blog).  So right now I’m going to contact my county and let them know their website isn’t useful and you should do the same.

Wont someone please think of the GeoMonkey?

Won't someone please think of the GeoMonkey?

* Manifold