Recent web hit statisitics show the power of press releases (PR) in Oilvoice and FindingPetroleum (née Digital Energy Journal) to push traffic to oilelefant.com. The occasion was the new release of a secure trial area - try before you buy - to show on the internet what it will look like on the intranet.
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Monday, 7 June 2010
Sunday, 23 May 2010
Gathering clouds over the horizon, Part IV
Slotting straight into my previous post, ESRI just released ArcGIS Explorer (AGX) online and arcgis.com as the new ArcGIS Online (AGO). I cannot, however, see my old AGO postings on the new arcgis.com, neither will the new AGX online consume it - not even posted as a web mapping service (WMS)!
Saturday, 22 May 2010
Gathering clouds over the horizon, Part III
Eyjafjallajoekull volcanic ash blown southeastward caused air traffic disruption last week over the northern British Isles again. I post the North Atlantic section of NOAA's free web mapping services of global cloud and chemical composition:
Saturday, 15 May 2010
Gathering clouds over the horizon, Part II
I posted earlier an example of a simple Google Map reading a list of Olympic cities - this was part of a list of Google and OpenLayer maps I built over the years on my old website - I also posted a nifty display of plate boundaries in Google Earth here. Following on the discussion of new web mappping (Part I of this post), I recreated both on giscloud.com to see how the two implementations compared.
Saturday, 8 May 2010
UK electoral boundary changes
New UK Ordnance Survey OpenData Bounday Lines released this month, show changes compared with the original public release in April of October 2009 data. Both Electoral Division and Westminster Consituency boundaries are what you see in the BBC News or many other UK election maps on TV or online. Following yesterday's parliamentary and county council election results, one might ask:
Labels:
BBC,
cloud,
free data,
GIS,
OrdnanceSurvey
Saturday, 1 May 2010
Historic Fenlands Mashup
[See updates at bottom, and predecessors Medieval Fenlands GIS and Post-medieval Fenlands GIS]
Here is a mashup on giscloud.com of the geographic history of land cover and surface geology of East Anglia since Domesday based on:
Here is a mashup on giscloud.com of the geographic history of land cover and surface geology of East Anglia since Domesday based on:
Thursday, 29 April 2010
Show me the money
That was my response to Peter Batty's call for comment on his GITA panel this week:
Saturday, 24 April 2010
Post-medieval Fenlands GIS
Let's look at the geographic history of land cover and surface geology of East Anglia after the Civil War , based on Ordnance Survey OpenData and British Geological Survey web mapping services (WMS). My previous posting discussed H.C. Darby's historic & geographic economics of East Anglia Fenlands between the Domesday census and the Civil War.
Thursday, 22 April 2010
Happy Earth Day, in a British roundabout way
A recent twittersation with @rollohome had me pull out these screen shots from Google Maps - it doesn't appear to give proper driving directions around complex British roundabouts - I thought this was a curious counterpoint for Earth Day, as we go round&round...
Saturday, 17 April 2010
Medieval Fenlands GIS
[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.
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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