[Update 5: see its latest reboot on a new community engagement project here
Update 4: Data on ShareGeoOpen is now on successor Edinburgh Datashare
Update 3: see subsequent story with Ordnance Survey and 1SpatialOnline validation
Update 2: see web mashup with later historic data and more on data repositories
Update 1: see companion Post-medieval drainage of the Fens from same source]
The recent release of UK Ordnance Survey OpenData opened the opportunity to post H.C. Darby's data from The Medieval Fenland and The Drainage of the Fens of East Anglia in the eastern UK. And parishes are the geographic unit that remained constant since the Middle Ages.
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Saturday, 17 April 2010
Monday, 12 April 2010
A Tale of two approaches, part III
My previous posts here, here and here are summarised in today' reply to Matt Ball's excellent Spatial Sustain entry, What comes first, model-based design or integrated project workflows?
Friday, 9 April 2010
Friday, 2 April 2010
No such thing as a free lunch, part II
Addendum: Steven Feldman just posted an great summary on this.
Thursday, 1 April 2010
No such thing as a free lunch
To great press and technocrati fanfare, the UK Ordnance Survey freed up its data... somewhat! This was promptly announced on mapperz and Ernest Maples blogs. And commented on as far away as the US west coast by Ed Parsons and Geoff Zeiss currently in America - does location matter?
Wednesday, 24 March 2010
A tale of two approaches, part II
Things have moved since my previous post: even though ESRI doesn't want to be geodesign, that is high on their agenda in their business partner conference this week. And since where 2.0 among many others hail location services as the next big thing, it's no surprise Wired quotes Jack Dangermond as pushing handhelds for onsite design as I imagine it:
Saturday, 20 March 2010
2D or not 2D, part deux
There's a comprehesive move toward fairly generic realtime 3D, beyond the many, many traditional implementations. Satish Pai said at a Schlumberger Forum over five years ago that video gaming consoles would drive 3D visualisation in petroleum. Steve Ballmer recently asked at Microsoft's Global Energy Forum if X-Box might be the next console (below)? Google Earth uses movie industry techniques to speed up visualisation. And military techniques used in seismic visualisation were presented at FindingPetroleum's seminar Advances in Geophysics & Sub-surface Description this week.
Labels:
3D,
4D,
ESRI,
FindingPetroleum,
GEOINT,
GIS,
OpenSpirit,
SafeSoft,
webGIS,
webmap
Saturday, 13 March 2010
Another take on climate change
[ 2021 update: full twitter thread why "plume push" theory may be flawed
2010 update: See follow-on Part II here ]
If the 8.8 magnitude Chilean quake may have shortened days by an infenitisimal amount late last month, it highlights the lesser-know fact that the earth wobbles on it axis, and that mass plate-tectonic movements are the result as well as the cause of earth tremors along plate boundaries below (may need to install Google Earth plug-in as indicated).
If the 8.8 magnitude Chilean quake may have shortened days by an infenitisimal amount late last month, it highlights the lesser-know fact that the earth wobbles on it axis, and that mass plate-tectonic movements are the result as well as the cause of earth tremors along plate boundaries below (may need to install Google Earth plug-in as indicated).
Labels:
BGS,
climate,
earthquake,
sea level,
wobble
Friday, 5 March 2010
Gathering clouds over the horizon...
... intermittent sunshine and showers predicted tomorrow. No this is not a meteo prediction, but a metaphor for opportunities and confusion that cloud computing creates. I see it as a pressure-release valve, where the constant demand to deliver more for less is pushing both sectors, for-profit and not-for-profit.
Sunday, 28 February 2010
The stunning beauty of maps
Current affairs bring such beauty on the web in the form of maps! The exhilerating is what makes the news, and that can be both joyful and sad.
Labels:
data,
infrastructure,
maps,
web
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