Four weeks ago I blogged here about the availability of open data, posting it on the open web and its potential social impact. Two weeks ago I blogged here too about tracking three hurricanes in the Caribbean via the brilliant but closed earth.nullschool.net. In between I compared & contrasted open & closed regimes on my Medium channel... and that 2½ yrs after a previous blog here on same!
My web presence
1986 |
select poetry | buy poetry | my year in kuwait || shutterfly | flickr! | slideshare | youtube || pers. & prof. portfolios | pers. & prof. channels
Showing posts with label webmap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label webmap. Show all posts
Tuesday, 26 September 2017
Free tools & data to predict hurricanes
Labels:
aggregation,
ArcGIS Online,
Caribbean,
community,
Disaster,
Earth,
environment,
flood map,
free data,
geoportal,
Harvey,
Houston,
Hurricane,
Irma,
Jose,
Maria,
Nullschool,
open data,
water depth,
webmap
Friday, 1 September 2017
Emergency response maps as easy as 1-2-3
Update 5: read here my new occupation inspired by this 18 months later
Update 4: for a predictive app using Esri & Alexa, see this example in Maryland
Update 3: presented at European Petroleum GIS Conference in London, 2 Nov 2017
Update 2: Medium professional channel posting on Open Data issues raised here
Update 1: Youtube of freely available data show flood spread from 27 to 30 August
Update 4: for a predictive app using Esri & Alexa, see this example in Maryland
Update 3: presented at European Petroleum GIS Conference in London, 2 Nov 2017
Update 2: Medium professional channel posting on Open Data issues raised here
Update 1: Youtube of freely available data show flood spread from 27 to 30 August
Saturday, 4 April 2015
New business, renewed website
[Update: find on my map blog the full story on how the video below was created]
Since www.zolnai.ca will be the landing page for my new business, I spruced it up to reflect my new brand. zolnai.ca is indeed now registered in England as a Sole Trader.
The banner has been changed to show some example web maps created since 2006, a topic will be renewed at center page, and the navigation has been improved.
Since www.zolnai.ca will be the landing page for my new business, I spruced it up to reflect my new brand. zolnai.ca is indeed now registered in England as a Sole Trader.
The banner has been changed to show some example web maps created since 2006, a topic will be renewed at center page, and the navigation has been improved.
Saturday, 14 June 2014
From static to dynamic maps, my travel so far
I tell people "I know just enough java to be dangerous", and it has served my well in my prior attempts logged in my old web page. These were all Google Maps API v.2 I built about 5 years ago. This blog as well as my new map catalog showed how I built maps in QGIS then ArcGIS, and then posted them on giscloud.com and AWS via Mapcentia GeoCloud2. I recently posted maps on arcgis.com on desktop and smartphone, static results of 'traveling salesman' geoprocessing on the desktop or online.
Saturday, 10 May 2014
Handy maps
A 'handy' is what Germans call a mobile or cell phone. I uploaded free ArcGIS for Android on my smartphone, which now has a decent screen to read maps on - love my Navigon Europe on it, and Google Maps too - but here is a quick&easy application of arcgis.com for the rest of us.
Sunday, 30 March 2014
... now HOW open is open?
[Update: Part II is on my Medium professional channel 2½ year later: Almost open data]
A lot of (virtual) ink has flowed around opening up data, as in this blog, GISuser crowdsourcing open data (below left) etc. etc. And everyone is getting into the act, from White House (below center) and Whitehall (UK Cabinet Office) to the number of open data hits (below right).
A lot of (virtual) ink has flowed around opening up data, as in this blog, GISuser crowdsourcing open data (below left) etc. etc. And everyone is getting into the act, from White House (below center) and Whitehall (UK Cabinet Office) to the number of open data hits (below right).
Tuesday, 11 February 2014
Maps are forever (Part III)
My first post on this theme traced beautiful medieval maps from the British library in London to the Harvard Libray online, to land on a 1610 beauty.
Sunday, 2 February 2014
Map catalog page 4
My map catalog also works well to post new projects: added British Geological Survey web mapping services to East Anglia web map, in order to compare historic and current geology. The Snapshot format also give a variety of viewing options of the catalog.
Sunday, 26 January 2014
Map catalog continued
In my ongoing suite of posting webmaps in my new and fresh Mind the Map blog, here is another take on loading global vectore megadatasets but this time on Amazon Web Services direct via Mapcentia's GeoCloud.
Sunday, 5 January 2014
Andrew Zolnai map catalog
Happy New Year! Don't you think that 175 blog posts and almost 150,000 page views over 7.5 years merit a catalog of my maps? This also coincides with my first end-to-end project:
- collect on the desktop
- disseminate and receive feedback via social media
- post as a webmap on private AWS account
Sunday, 19 May 2013
A tale of two cities: web maps new and old
Last I posted on vector online GIS, and that appears to be gaining traction. Mapbox offers through TileMill and OpenStreetMaps editing. These are new an emerging technologies that are exciting, and it contrasts with Esri who offers a slew of tools on the desktop and in arcgis.com. WMS is for example still immature on giscloud.com (though it is OGC compliant now), as are the symbology and labels. They do not offer model builder like Esri or Qgis (thru Sextante). But they do offer a service to process GIS functions online and allow to load data direct from web source, avoiding costly down- & up-loads. Here I compare how I used a 180K vector dataset from NOAA NGDC described previously.
Labels:
ArcGIS Online,
cloud,
ESRI,
for-fee,
for-free,
giscloud.com,
Google,
HTML5,
kML,
OGC,
OpenStreetMap,
webmap
Thursday, 6 December 2012
Maps are forever...
... or they are Man's best friend. I'm a big fan of the British Library, not only because it's next to Kings Cross station I alight when coming to London often (or rarely hop onto the Eurostar at nearby St Pancras to Bruxelles or Paris) - bl.uk has an amazing array of old maps, which they just finished georeferencing through a significant effort in crowd-sourcing (the 21st. c. variant of volunteering).
Saturday, 2 June 2012
More creative Maps
I ran across these interesting web-mapping innovations - three on data consumption (multi-modal maps on steroids) and two on data creation (down to earth to outer space).
Saturday, 31 March 2012
iPad maps
Here is a small selection of mapping tools available on the iPad. Some are from the Appstore, others simply from the web. These are screen shots that I took for those (thanks my readers for how-to tips).
Sunday, 25 March 2012
Roundup of web projects
Is it spring in the air or LinkedIn's new (to me) facility to post projects? Here is a round-up of various projects in the past five years as recently posted on my LinkedIn page:
Saturday, 11 February 2012
More maps R us
Continuing the ongoing (re)discovery of cool maps for the rest of us, here are two I found on Facebook from my friends Christophe Staff in Belgium and Aidos Malybayev in Kazakhstan.
Saturday, 1 October 2011
Your team is your friend
I am so proud of my teams at client sites and in our office! One team achieved in 6 months at one site what many thought would take years - to integrate surface and subsurface exploration and production infrastructure for an oilfield in 3D+time. Another team created just this week a real-time GIS data capture system that reduces to 4 steps what took 10 on paper - and of those only the first one is manual.
Friday, 23 September 2011
"Vectors are your friend"
HTML5 Canvas was a natural extension for giscloud.com: Its distinction is to post vectors on the web, overlaying rasters like any GIS, and with a optional postGIS running in the background. Not only does this speed up drawing maps on the web, it also allows massive amounts - in the millions of points, lines and polygons - to render PDQ (pretty darn quickly) - thus Vectors are your friend - my moderately complex maps benefit from even clean&crisper renderings of polygons as expected and of tiled images especially.
Saturday, 17 September 2011
Be the weatherman for others
Last week I posted dust and wind data germane to Kuwait in my banner map. This week take the same layers and mash them up with another service: Here I took a service from ESRI(France) to post volunteer ride-sharers (covoiturage) to their SIG 2011, and added weather and urban data, just to show how easy it is to augment existing offerings.
Labels:
aggregation,
collaborative,
community,
ESRI,
EU,
NOAA,
social map,
webmap
Saturday, 10 September 2011
Be your own weatherman
Dust storms are what you look out for in Kuwait. The banner map was a very simple way for me to create my own weather map:
- where are the dust clouds?
- what is the wind direction?
- when will Kuwait get one?
Labels:
aggregation,
bathymetry,
ESRI,
Kuwait,
mashup,
NOAA,
weather,
webmap
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)