Categories
GIS Google Earth

Google Earth inspiration was Star Treks tricorder !!

I flew into Dubai this morning to attend the second Map Middle East Conference, and was knocked over by the presentation of Michael Jones CTO of the Google Earth/Map/Local team. Jones presented the vision for Google’s “geography” applications, which was breathtaking in its scope.

Building on the Google mission to organise the worlds data, Jones presented his mission to geographically organise the world data, that is all data – not just explicit geographical information.

Michael Jones

What stuck me here, more than anything else, was the vision to present the context of geographical information rather than explicit information about locations, representing the sense of place – what does a place feel like, indeed the talk was entitled “A Sense of Place”. Geography here appears to be really important to Google – actually close you eyes and it might have been Jack Dangermond talking.

Indeed Jones cited “Father of GIS” Roger Tomlinson, who in the late 1960’s wrote of the ultimate GIS which would be a computer globe of interactive data, as an inspiration behind the development of Keyhole/Google Earth, another inspiration was Mr Spock’s Tricorder which could tell the science officer all the information he needed to describe his local environment.

With reference to the established GIS community Jones, perhaps mischievously, described Google Earth as the GIS for the 5.999999 billion people of the world’s 6 billion population who don’t know or care was GIS is.

To me it was quite a contrast to the other more traditional GIS vendors presentations, perhaps more than ESRI even, the Google Earth team seem to be driven by a very clear, user focused geographical vision.

Today’s business model for this may not be sustainable, but Google are building a massive user-base which will be difficult to displace, and the often forgotten professional and enterprise versions are gaining momentum in specific industries. When the current business model changes things will really get interesting !

And as many people at the conference mentioned, because of Google Earth, people at last know what we do !

Written and submitted from the Crowne Plazza Hotel, Dubai, using the hotels broadband connection.

Categories
GIS Thoughts

Tim Berners-Lee agrees: our data should be intelligent (not free)

As reported in this weeks Guardian OS Story, Tim Berners-Lee has commented on the OS and the role of Geographic Information in the semantic web.

Contrary to earlier reports, Sir Tim seems NOT to be asking for free access to geospatial data… instead, intelligent, feature based geospatial data, rather than simple mapping should be made more accessible.

Quoting directly from the Guardian…

Berners-Lee said it may be reasonable for OS, the premier state-owned supplier of public sector information, to continue to charge for its high-resolution mapping. But even if licences were required, he added, OS should make its data open to manipulation. “I want to do something with the data, I want to be able to join it with all my other data,” he said. “I want to be able to do Google Maps things to a ridiculous extent, and not limited in the way that Google Maps is.”

This is consistent with the work the OS have been undertaking in semantic referencing systems over the past couple of years, and with the development of intelligent geospatial database products like OS MasterMap.

I’m really proud of the work we are doing in this area, and it is good to see this is recognised by Sir Tim, to find out more this is a good reading list.

Written and submitted from the Holiday Inn Express Portsmouth, using my Vodafone 3G network card.

Categories
GIS

When MasterMap is a Map..

I mentioned a while ago that I was disappointed that few people were really exploiting the information in OS MasterMap to produce different cartographic representations, instead sticking to the OS “house style”.

Well last week the British Cartographic Society awarded its MasterMap “Better Mapping” award to the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, for their new web mapping portal which is based on OS MasterMap data.

RBKC Winning map

The Cartography is the work of Oxford Cartographers Ltd and was praised by the judges as “aesthetically pleasing” not something you hear often when describing web based maps. The application itself is quite slick, and as an ex-resident of Chelsea I was even able to produce a map of my old apartment.