Archive for April, 2009

Here’s where we’re headed…

zappos.jpg…to Zappo’s to buy shoes!  Twittervision (see last post) looks like the first in what will probably be a mesmerizing flock of new real-time map mashups.  In this Zap-map application, if you tire of the shoe-parade, click on a shoe and you get the details and an order form.  The map is actually not very useful, except for the compelling representation of a retail businesses volume and customer base.  Can’t help wondering if the speed will noticeably change as the economy recovers.  As a sales gimmick, this worked on me.  I hadn’t heard of Zappos before (not buying shoes online, obviously), and I just ordered my first pair (just to see if the map would fly to Amsterdam.)

Twittervision 3D

twittervision.jpgCaution.  Twittervision might make you dizzy.  Maybe it is also a cure for loneliness, if you can bear it.  It is certainly makes one ponder the meaning of it all.  These effervescent messages from real people around the globe, vanish as quickly as they appear, an alarming demonstration of time and space convergence.  Where are we headed?

Bird’s Eye Street View

perfect_map.jpgThey beat me to it!  Mapchannels created this very neat customizable mashup of Google Street View with Microsoft Bird’s Eye, with all the elements I was muttering about, to myself.  As a matter of fact, Mapchannels has several other nice tools which you can customize and put on your website.  So who are they?  Apparently, a very low profile organization, no name or location to be discovered, a mystery.   So in case you read this, Mapchannels, THANK YOU!  The application is embedded in my page “Amsterdam Map“, with a starting point near the Dam.  You can type in any other location in the world where Street View exists, and enjoy the slick results.

Serious Business

internet_nyc.jpgA recent video, The Internet is Serious Business, created by New York’s Center for Urban Pedagogy (CUP), explores the Internet infrastructure in NYC, who owns it and why that matters.  This awareness-raising film targets schools and youth programs.  It was filmed by CUP staff and young people from the City-As-School  program and features a wacky alien (extraterrestrial, that is).

Geography of Buzz

cluster_maps_sidl.jpgAn  article in the New York Times  today discusses the use of a GIS spatial analysis technique referred to as ”cluster analysis” for an unusual application.  Researchers Elizabeth Currid of USC and Sarah Williams of Columbia University’s Spatial Information Design Lab  presented their conclusions at a meeting of the Association of American Geographers recently.  The researchers geocoded 300,000 photos and 6000 events from the Getty Imges database.  With this data set, the Global Moran’s I statistic was used to find hotspots in New York and LA.  The conclusions may not be so very surprising, but the use of photo media is interesting.  This type of social research is likely to show up more often as people begin to mine data from geocoded images (e.g. Picasaweb and Flickr) or geotagged Tweets

The study was partly inspired the work of  Richard Florida who developed the concept of the “creative class” and created a stir with Amsterdam planners at a 2003 conference titled “Creativity and the City”. 

Economic crisis

nrc_map_eu_unemployment.jpgThis nicely constructed interactive flash map was published by the Dutch paper, the NRC, at the end of February, with data through 3Q 2008.  Hopefully they will update it for 4Q, etc.   The data source is listed as Eurostat, which appears to be an excellent resource for general EU statistics.  Not pretty, even in pink.  

nyt_unemployment_map_dec_2008.jpgFor US economic statistics, a rich data source is the St. Louis Fed.  The NY Times published an  interactive mapbased on Fed data, showing unemployment by county.  They updated the map from December to January (the image is December and the link is to January), but don’t yet have a map allowing monthly comparison.   In fact they use two different color classification schemes making comparison between the two maps visually impossible.   It would be nice if they made a comparative map like the NRC map.

Dutch Street View

mountain_of_bikes.jpgGoogle Street View arrived in the Netherlands last month, along with a creative application for Street View “sightings”, those funny and weird things caught by the Google car’s 360 camera.  If you don’t want to spend all your time coming the streets for something hilarious, you can take a look at what other people have found at Streetview Nederland.  So far just Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Groningen.  Note: anything too salacious or incriminating seems to be quickly removed, and if you want your house “blurred”, Google will do that.