Author: James

  • Allan Doyle on OGC vs GeoRSS

    I had caught Howard Butler’s post on his take about OGC and GeoRSS and now I see Chris Tweedie and Allan Doyle responded. One comment by Allan that caught my eye:

    “But when it comes down to which organization I support directly by my efforts, it matters a lot. Right now, the first compellingly neutral organization that jumps to mind is the Open Source Geospatial Foundation. I wonder if the time is right to have the Open Source Geospatial Foundation become the sponsor/host/supporter of GeoRSS?”

    I’ll save my rant about OGC for another day (I’m in too good of a mood right now to get worked up over that), but it is interesting to see how quickly an open standard can become closed right before your eyes if people aren’t vigilant.

    Also it is important to remember that much discussion goes on via email lists in the geospatial community. Subscribing to these lists is an great way to keep up on news that takes days or weeks to get out onto the blogs.

  • ArcScripts has been cleaned up

    ArcScripts Alert
    I’ve been pretty hard on ESRI about commercial scripts being in the ArcScripts section of the support site. Well Brian Goldin told me to take a look today and it looks like most of the commercial software I knew was gone. I believe Brian said ESRI has gotten over 800 alerts sent in by ArcScripts users seeing commercial software. It looks like the top 10 downloads only includes Avenue scripts as most of the top downloaded scripts were commercial for ArcGIS.

    I can’t remember the last time ArcScripts looked this clean. 🙂

  • Adding Google Earth and SketchUp to the real estate web marketplace

    A post on the Zillow Blog got me thinking about how people could use Google Earth and SketchUp to better market and sell their real estate. Could a better detailed SketchUp model of your house make is sell better in the future than a standard web based aerial photo? Interesting thought, virtual walk through are already done with QTVR (or similar products) so why not just take the next leap? Wonder if Google has plans for something like this or will services like Zillow take the lead? Heck someone might be able to make money creating these models for people to put up on craigslist where I’m sure it would get great play.

    If there was a way to integrate Bird’s Eye View with the SketchUp I’m sure we’d all be blow away (at least where Bird’s Eye View is available, ie not in Phoenix).

    The future of online housing sales?

  • On review my first impresson was correct

    Idelix.gifI had gotten an email from IDELIX and promptly ignored it as their idea sounds like a hassle given the simplicity and ease of use Google Maps and Virtual Earth offer us. Well after a weekend of seeing everyone post about it I thought I’d give it another look. Well I think I was correct in ignoring it, the more middle men you put between me and the data, the less interested I am in it. The technology looks impressive, but to me it almost seems like a technology looking for a purpose rather than filling a need. Plus it turns the speedy Google Maps and Virtual Earth into a slow “Java-like” web application, rather than the lightweight AJAX solution that they are. I’m sure that there is an application for this technology out there, but the demo doesn’t show it.

  • Shape2Earth – shapefile to KML converter – Beta 2 available

    Tim Beermann posted in my comments that:

    Shape2Earth can now be downloaded and tested at http://interactiveearth.blogspot.com/.

    I have not had much time to implement a lot of the features I would like .. but those will come with time.

    For those who have not been following Shape2Earth Beta 2 news, you can get up to speed on the enhancements over on Tim’s blog. Good news as GIS professionals are really starting to take a liking to Google Earth and making it part of their workflows.

    Ah, but Google Earth’s pesky EULA gets in the way.

    Take those old fashion shapefiles and make them more usable

  • Steve Lombardi, Virtual Earth Program Manager responds to my comments about Virtual Earth

    Steve Lombardi, the Virtual Earth Program Manager took some time to respond to my post on the quality of imagery in Phoenix, AZ.

    The things our users have been asking for include maps and geocoding Internationally (number 1 by a landslide. See Daanish’s comment above as an example of typical feedback), trip planning, ability to correct bad geocodes, ability to add their own content to maps and printing improvements. Not surprisingly, in this release we added features like Real Time Traffic Overlays, the ability to move algorithmically geocoded pushpins, and Collections which allows someone to build their own layer of points to share with others. Our new Print menu isn’t gonna get us a lot of coverage in hardcore GIS blogs, but its features like that that users need to complete the tasks they actually want to do at WLL.

  • Adobe drops Freehand (GoLive too)

    _**Update – **Thanks to Daanish for posting a Yahoo! News story updating us on the status of the products. It looks like at least for now both are safe, but you have to wonder for how long. So for now, no worries. 🙂 _

    My first computer based cartography work was done on Freehand so this kinda makes me sad even though I don’t use Freehand anymore (our company uses Illustrator). Actually the last version of Freehand I used was version 5.5 on Macintosh so that pretty much dates me and is probably why Adobe is dropping Freehand. Also I’m sure many Dreamweaver users will be happy to hear that GoLive is going away also. I used to have GoLive Cyberstudio before Adobe bought the product and renamed it, but about the time that happened Visual Interdev came out so I just ended up using that instead.

    Ah the days of Freehand on Macintosh
    courtesy GUIdebook

  • Yes I did change the blog theme

    The other theme was so hacked up it was driving me nuts. This one supports the latest features of WordPress 2.0 so it should be easier to handle. Plus I wanted something a little wider than the 768px width of the old theme.

    Oh and yes that old blog header was from ArcGIS Explorer so if you remember what it looked like you can see San Francisco. 😉 I got rid of it because I wanted something more simple and nothing is more simple than text on a background color.

  • ArcGIS Explorer Beta 1 Snapshot 2

    ArcGIS ExplorerI hadn’t tried AGX in a couple weeks (been really busy) but I loaded the latest build on my computer this weekend. It is still closed beta so I can’t go into details but I’m very impressed with the progress over the last month. One of the new features really makes me wonder why Google hasn’t thought of something similar with Google Earth. As a ESRI developer I really can’t wait to see what I can do with it as it should help integrate AGX into our client workflows. I guess we should be seeing a public beta later next month but I’m beginning to think about how we can start using the ArcGIS Server 9.2 with AGX. Of course ArcGIS Server is in closed beta so we probably won’t be showing anything in that for quite some time.

  • Arizona State University campus map powered by Google Maps

    Apparently Arizona State University has a new online campus map in beta that was designed by Google. It is unsure if ASU paid Google to create this map or if it was part of a partnership with Google considering that Google is moving onto the ASU campus. It is a pretty slick Google Maps mashup that ties into their existing campus tour as well as the ASU campus locations; Tempe Main Campus, ASU West, Polytechnic campus, Downtown Phoenix campus, ASU Research Park and Skysong (where I think Google might locate permanently).

    Google and ASU sitting in a tree, K-I-S-S-I-N-G.....