Category: Thoughts

  • This Week’s Hangout:: Ubuntu GIS

    We’ve got a great hangout this week, Matt Baker joins me to talk about using open source software for GIS, graphics, publishing and everything in between. What happens when you go all open source? Clearly you can not only do your job, but thrive. Matt will be screensharing so we’ll have some great examples.

    Join us at 11am MST (10am PST) to learn more!

    Matt’s also got some podcasts on using FOSS for geospatial. Part 1, Part 2

  • GIS is a Supermarket

    Last week I mentioned that GIS applications are so hard to use in workflows. It’s like an old Yakov Smirnoff joke:

    In the real world, software works for you.
    In GIS, you work for the software!

    It’s not to say you can’t get value out of traditional GIS packages, just that you’re locked into doing things their way. I was just about to write a clever analogy but I think I’ll keep this simple. When in your GIS package, you generally are limited to only their processing tools. While this does allow you to gain familiarity with their use, you end up making compromises to get things done. You can buy your groceries at the gas station convenience store, but you have to work hard to make it all happen (wait, did I just use analogy anyway?). It’s at the supermarket where you can choose from 20 different kinds of marinara sauce to get exactly the right one.

    I really think GIS is like a supermarket. When you do your projects outside of these proprietary GIS applications, it gives you the freedom to pick and choose which analytical libraries you want to get each analysis done. I can use GDAL, Arc.py, sci.py, R and even some Erdas to get my work done. Just how I’d make dinner, pulling different ingredients from different companies. Just like some nice ziti, you end up with great output and something that works wonderful with your work flows.

    Ziti

    My feelings are GIS software should adapt to how I work, not the other way around. You should too…

  • Ian White Should be on Your Hangout

    We go live at 10 am MST.

    We’ll be talking on the IRC channel again so either use the IRC Web Client or better yet, point your IRC client to #hwjf on chat.freenode.net.

  • Don’t Be Hating on Mercator

    The hipsters are hating on Mercator all over twitter and the blogs. I don’t know about you but I’m grateful for Mercator every time I travel. I seem to move left and right from Phoenix on a map. Plus who cares about Greenland? Let them have their big map, you don’t want to live there anyway.

    MercatorFTW

    Look, if you’d rather live in a world of the Bonne projection I won’t stop you. I’ll just come find you on my practical Mercator map.

    Map CC-By-SA: Strebe

  • GIS for those who hate GIS

    I’ve been helping a couple people out the past week or two with some GIS projects, since I have some time…

    Anyway, it is a good reminder as to why I’ve been trying to change how I do GIS. It all feels like trying to use a screw driver to hammer a nail. So much of what we do is one compromise over another. I picked up a project and I swear the PM put his hand on my shoulder and said, “I’m sorry”. What a miserable life we all lead.

    Nail-Screw illustration//embedr.flickr.com/assets/client-code.js

  • This Week’s Hangout:: They Tell Me Ian White Needs to be on Your Hangout

    Well it’s time to start things back up, Friday, February 1st at 10am MST. Hangouts With James Fee: Attitudes Across Latitudes will have our first guest since “the break”. Ian White of Urban Mapping joins me to talk about why he was the last host of This Week in Maps (i can’t even find a link to it) podcast to join my hangout. WeoGeo was kind enough to give me all the code for the webpages, but I’ve been too busy to get that all back up. In the meantime I’m doing this old-school on Google+ Events. Just go to the event page and it will take care of everything else.

    HWJF

    As always we’ll be talking on IRC. Join #hwjf on chat.freenote.com or online.

  • New NACIS Award for Imaginative Cartography

    Looks like the NACIS has a new award that recognizes “imaginative cartography” aptly named the Corlis Benefideo Award for Imaginative Cartography.

    Cartography is often seen by the public as work opposed to imagination, grounded entirely in established fact. While this devotion to reflecting what is forms the heart of cartographic thinking, cartographers and artists who use maps as a basis for their work can (and do) take that grounding in fact and use it to venture into the world of the possible. Some explore real places from perspectives that allow us to see it fresh and full of possibility, and some take our established traditions of mapmaking, and indeed take fully-constructed maps themselves, and turn them on their heads to make us see ourselves anew. This award is to recognize this work and the perspective it brings to the field of cartography, and the contributions it makes to the world as a whole.

    Sounds quite interesting, doesn’t it? All nominations should be submitted by email to cb@nacis.org. The deadline for nominations is March 15, 2013. More details on what needs to be submitted is on the webpage. I wasn’t aware of who Corlis Benefideo was but this old blog post should fill you in.

  • Get 50% off PostGIS in Action

    Well happy Friday to all of us, I have a 50% off code for PostGIS in Action, Second Edition!

    Between now and January 22nd, use pgislaunchau and get 50% off the price of the book. It also includes a free ebook of the first edition to tide you over. Let’s face it, PostGIS is the defacto choice for most GIS people and this is the bible to make you proficient. Don’t hesitate, the 22nd is right around the corner.

  • Status of Hangouts With James Fee

    I wanted to update everyone on the status of Hangouts with James Fee. WeoGeo and I have come to the agreement to let me take the show with me. They’ve also be gracious enough to give me the videos and code that makes up the show. I’ve enjoyed doing the hangouts and I know a lot of you enjoy watching them. I’m out all next week but when I get back I’ll get these integrated into my blog and start back up. I appreciate everyone’s support and we’ll have a great time continuing the show.

    The following is based on actual events. Only the names, locations and events have been changed.

    Anchorman

  • CartoDB and MapBox Fight On

    The web mapping and visualization world is one of many choices. Google, Esri, and many other solutions give users the ability to visualize spatial data in so many ways. Two that I’m quite fond of are CartoDB and MapBox (none of which should surprise regular readers). This week good things are happening around both projects.

    CartoDB is an O’Reilly Media Publishing Startup Showcase finalist.

    …O’Reilly Media announced the finalists for its Publishing Startup Showcase, and we’re very excited to say that we’ve been selected as one of ten startups.

    It’s an honor to be included in a group of such progressive companies who are disrupting and impacting the publishing industry, and as a non-traditional company in the space, we are humbled.

    That’s pretty awesome news for the CartoDB team. Google Fusion tables is pretty powerful, but it has almost no visualization tools built in. That’s where CartoDB steps in. It gives you all that great “fusion table” power, plus some really awsome visualization stuff. Esri users can leverage Arc2Earth Sync which can synchronize your local Esri data with CartoDB.

    Tom MacWright of MapBox wrote and article on the MediaShift Idea Lab Blog about the new OpenStreetMap editor that the Knight Foundation has sponsored.

    At MapBox, we believe that the collaborative approach of OpenStreetMap is the future of mapping. By adopting local knowledge and local management of data, it’s possible to build a complete, accurate, and freer map of the world. How OpenStreetMap gets its data is essential – the most trusted source is always on the ground, with GPS units and local knowledge. But for much of the world, this isn’t an immediate option because of distance and time. Instead, home users edit the map, referencing GPS tracks made by others and satellite data. So far, this has been a tricky process. OpenStreetMap’s editing tools are complex and do little to help users understand details like road classifications. We want tools for contributing map data to be accessible to anyone, in any language, with any level of computing skill.

    I’ve always felt OSM was held back by it’s editing tools. They are designed by nerds for geeks. When you understand how they work, they are very powerful. Put my Mom in front of them and she’s quickly typing www.marthastewart.com into the URL bar. If you haven’t seen the editor in action, the video below will give a good overview. The whole article is definitely worth a read for anyone who has developed or used a web mapping editor application.[vimeo 57155953 w=400 h=300]
    Oh and in case you didn’t know, Arc2Earth Sync can also open your ArcGIS Mxd documents directly in TileMill. Mind = Blown

    Mind Blown