Categories
Thoughts

Leaving O2 should be so easy to do…

Last week, before the network  “Omni-shambles” that seemed to impact almost everyone on O2 in the past few days, I moved some of my mobile accounts from O2 to geek poster boy network GiffGaff.  When I say move of course I am well aware that GiffGaff is still actually O2, it’s an internal MVNO – Mobile Virtual Network Operator, but it is significantly different in a number of ways…

  1. There is no real customer support other than that provided by other users via forums
  2. There is little direct marketing of the service instead relying on  word of mouth and social network based sharing.
  3. As a result of 1 & 2 the network is amazing value, I pay £10 a month without contract for unlimited internet, texts and 250mins talk time.

If you are interested you can get more details and a free SIM here ( Disclosure – As part of the social network marketing plan I get a £5 kickback if you join !!)

But the real point of this post is not about joining a new network it’s about leaving the old one.  This should be easy, I never sign up to long duration contracts so am usually on a payg plan or at worse a 30 day rolling contract.. So all I need is my PAC code to port my telephone number from one network to the other.

Not wanting  to listen to the pleadings of O2 retentions department, I tried to do this online and so the story starts..

This is no simple form to fill in and O2 won’t do this by email, instead you must take part in a online chat session.

After waiting 5 minutes or so, my online helper Henry comes onto the chat at 8:28 pm

Here is the dialogue..

This is a great way of meeting people is it not, it’s now about 9:10pm and I have a new online friend at O2 called Barry.

I think I might have upset Barry, I guess I will never know such are these brief online friendships I have another new friend, how exciting Timothy..

Timothy what a star.. all done and dusted despite having to give him the same characters from my password three times !!

My conversation with Henry, Barry and Timothy finished at 10:50pm, that’s one hour and twenty two minutes to leave o2.

Now until this week I though that perhaps they are just making things difficult to prevent people from leaving, but actually you know I just think their systems are up to the job.

So ask yourself this… Do you want your mobile network to invest in it’s network and it’s back office systems recognising that’s it really just a utility for moving bits wirelessly or do you want a operator that spends instead huge amounts of  money subsidising handsets, sponsoring music venues or buying people cinema tickets.

Trouble is you don’t really have that choice..

Written and submitted from home (51.425N, 0.331W)

Categories
Thoughts

The future of the map is no map !

Well that’s at least the way it’s gets reported…

Last week I was invited to speak on visualisation and “Big Data” at the Aspen Ideas Festival, and was interviewed by the “tech tonic” team from Reuters TV on the current state of maps online.

Here is the interview..

On the subject of visualisation, my main point is this…

It’s actually still very early in the development of interactive online maps and we are only just beginning to develop the tools to allow mapping to support the creation of a narrative, and then we still need to learn out to use these new tools effectively. A key tool in our new armoury of “neo-cartography” is animation.

Written and submitted from home (51.425N, 0.331W)

Categories
GPS

Maposaurus how did I miss you !

I can’t believe I had not come across this video before, from a 2007 Superbowl advert from Garmin, the Maposaurus !

Happy Friday everyone !!

Written and submitted from the Google Offices, London (51.495N, 0.146W)

Categories
SDI Thoughts

Has the SDI community turned the corner ?

Yesterday I made a presentation at the 13th GSDI Conference in Quebec (thanks to Geoff for his commentary), it was only a flying visit but I left in a more positive frame of mind that I expected.

The high level message of my presentation was, we need to think more about the I in SDI e.g. infrastructure,  that we already have a well adopted information infrastructure we can use called the World Wide Web, to use it Geo people just have to be better web citizens.

For too long the Global Spatial Data Infrastructure community has been dominated by the producers of geospatial data, the Mapping Agencies, Cadastres and the Technology companies that serve their perceived needs. As a result discussions of Spatial Data, quality, standards and policy dominated.

I was pleased to see this observation reflected in a number of the plenary presentations, and the obvious logical extension that more focus needs to be concentrated on the potential users of SDI’s and their needs. This point was made brilliantly clear by Gilberto Câmara director of Brazils National Space Research Institute, INPE.

He introduced four questions any SDI supporter should answer..

  1. How much is your SDI being used to build a modern state ?
  2. How much is your SDI being used to enforce the rule of law ?
  3. How much is your SDI being used to support public accountability ?
  4. Is data from your SDI reaching those that need it ?

Key to answering these questions positively is I think a recognition that the true beneficiaries of a successful SDI, are not other data producers, governments, or public sector bodies, but society as a whole.

Written and submitted from home (51.425N, 0.331W)

Categories
LBS

The half-life of an LBS app..

Is around 5 years ??

Well I would estimate that is the case from the imminent closure of Plazes, one of the earliest Location Sharing applications developed back in 2004.

I used Plazes on and off for a few years starting on my first real smartphone the Nokia N95 and for a while it powered the Where Ed function on this blog. Plazes was acquired by Nokia in 2008 and it’s technology was rolled into the ovi platform, although Plazes.com continued as a stand-alone service.

This week Nokia announced the closure of the service, offering users the ability to download and export their location history. This is an important step and one which Nokia should be commended for, your location data is your data and in the spirit of data liberation you should be able to take it with you wherever you want to go..

So why is plazes closing, my personal view is that location sharing as a discrete service is just not that compelling, your location is a useful piece of contextual information whose real value comes from it’s integration with other personal data.

Knowing I’m currently in Calgary, Alberta is interesting..

Knowing I’m in Calgary, it’s 5pm, I’m flying out to San Francisco at 9pm, it’s raining and there is a Tim Hortons my favourite Coffee Shop on the quickest route based on the current traffic conditions is actually valuable.

Written and submitted from the GeoAlberta Conference (51.059N, 113.979W)

Categories
Thoughts

Parallax on maps

Once upon a time I was a young teaching assistant teaching Aerial Photography Interpretation,  and one of the aspects that I found difficult to demonstrate was Parallax, the displacement of high features such as towers in photographs. You will see this today when looking at some of the images in Google Earth which have not been corrected to remove the resulting building lean.

Now as a result of the technological marvel thats is WebGL you can seen Parallax demonstrated dynamically in Google Maps, just one of the ways online maps are moving beyond the static paradigm of traditional cartography.

Watch the dome of St.Paul’s as the map is scrolled

Written and submitted from home (51.425N, 0.331W)

Categories
Data Policy

NRE App – just wrong !

Today National Rail Enquires have released a free iPhone app for real time train information. Hang-on you may say, I though that app already existed.. well it does !

For the last few years National Rail Enquires (NRE)  have been licensing at some considerable cost it’s information to independent software developers for them to develop their own apps, indeed one of my favourite all time apps is UK Train Times developed by Dave Addey and his team at Agant.

Todays release is clearly a case of channel conflict by a Quasi-Government organisation, and I would suggest anti-competitive.

NRE should not be developing an app and competing with it’s “partners” who have developed a range of apps for the last few years. NRE should just release the data under an Open Gov Licence and let the ecosystem develop !

So much for the release of government data empowering the software industry, my old friends at Ordnance Survey always recognised this was an issue and kept out of their partners space, not developing a mobile OS maps application despite what I might have argued at the time 🙂

Written and submitted from home (51.425N, 0.331W)

Categories
Thoughts

Google Geography Teacher institute coming to Dublin and London..

September 29 Google Map

After successful events in the US two Google Geo Teachers Institutes are to be held on June 13 and 14  in Dublin, and June 20 and 21, 2012 in London. Both events will be held at the local Google office.

The two-day events are free and designed to help teachers get the most from Google’s geography-related products and technologies. Participants receive hands-on experience and learn best practices and tips for using Google EarthGoogle Maps, and Google SketchUp.

If you are interested complete the online application form before April 30, 2012.

Written and submitted from home (51.425N, 0.331W)

 

Categories
Research

Google Research Awards : Two weeks and counting..

The deadline for our next round of Google Research Awards is 11:59pm PDT on April 15, 2012.  The Research Awards are one-year awards structured as unrestricted gifts to universities to support the work of world-class full-time staff members at top universities around the world.

Member of academic staff can apply for Research Awards by submitting a proposal via the Faculty Research Awards program website.

Although the majority of grants go to applications in Computer Science and Software Engineering, Geospatial is increasingly represented,  last year grants were provided to researchers in Mapping/GIS at,

  • Columbia University
  • Princeton University
  • Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
  • ETH Zurich
  • UCL / University of Southampton
  • Institut d’Etudes politiques de Paris
  • McGill University

The last call resulted in the funding of 119 awards for a total of $6 million !

If you have any questions please feel free to get in touch, but I suggest looking at this advice first.

Written and submitted from the Google Offices, London (51.495N, 0.146W)

 

Categories
Thoughts

8bit maps..

The retro computing meme continues to gain momentum, just because you are restricted to 8bit computing, there is no reason you should miss out on using Google Maps, so today a new tile set designed for use by the Nintendo Entertainment System has been released.

 

Happy Memories ? I was more of a Sinclair Spectrum man myself…

Written and submitted from home (51.425N, 0.331W)