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Wade Roush's Library tagged geo   View Popular

14 May 08

The who, what, and why of Where 2.0 | CNET News.com

  • The ongoing Where 2.0 conference in Burlingame, Calif., maps out the ever-maturing market for geo-enabled Web applications.
22 Apr 08

Fireball

  • Fireball is a location-based mashup designed to find out where your friends are. Instead of creating Yet Another Social Network, forcing you to re-add all your friends (AGAIN), we just tie together the best tools out there (that you probably already use).

    This includes using Twitter (for messaging and your social/attention network), Upcoming (for event and place names) and Fire Eagle (for location queries and updates).

04 Apr 08

mscape - You Are Here.

  • Mediascapes are location-based experiences, games and tours on a handheld device. Here you can download the software, grab the latest mediascapes created by the community and most importantly, learn how simple it is to make your own.
12 Mar 08

Fire Eagle, meet Danger Day

    • A couple days ago, a friend of mine sent me an invite for Fire Eagle, Yahoo! Research Berkley’s nifty closed-Alpha location storage and query engine, and I’ve been hooked ever since. For the rest of you without access, here’s a brief overview of what FireEagle does, straight from the FAQ page:





      Fire Eagle is a site that keeps track of your current location and helps you share it with other sites and services safely. There are hundreds of potential applications.






      Fire Eagle allows you to share your locations with other sites and services safely, through a secure server – you are always in control. You can decide to share your location with any application that can use it, and even choose how much detail to give that application (exact point, neighborhood, city, state, country).





      So, I whipped up a quick Fire Eagle Rubygem to make it easier to deal with Fire Eagle’s API. The next logical step? A twitter bot.




      Fire Eagle, meet Danger Day




      If you’re lucky enough to have an invite to Fire Eagle, here’s how you can use it on Twitter:





      1. Follow Danger Day on Twitter
      2. Sign in to Fire Eagle
      3. Authorize Danger Day with your FireEagle account
      4. Get a mobile token to confirm your authentication with Danger Day
      5. Send a direct message to Danger Day with your token.
      6. u Atlanta, GA
      7. u Belize
      8. u 30022
      9. u 123 Anytown USA
      10. etc
      11. d dangerday u Atlanta, GA
      12. q jnewland
      13. q cjmartin
      14. q plasticbagUK
      15. d dangerday q jnewland



      16. What’s next?




        I’m getting married in a week, so I leave the creation of cooler Fire Eagle apps as an exercise to the reader. Extra bonus points if you use the Fire Eagle Rubygem. If you’ve got a great idea for a Fire Eagle app and don’t have an invite, get in touch with me – I might be able to make that happen.




        PS: If you hack up a Fire Eagle javascript sidebar widget that works on pages served as application/xml (preferably using the brilliant wedje technique) AND embraces the draft geo microformat, I’ll buy you a pony. Seriously. Here’s my location in XML – go to town.

10 Mar 08

GeoPress | GeoRSS :: Geographically Encoded Objects for RSS feeds

  • GeoPress


    <!-- begin content -->


    A location embedding plugin for WordPress and Movable Type


    GeoPress is a WordPress and Movable Type plugin that allows users to quickly and easily embed location information in blog posts. You can then embed a dynamic map, Microformat adr and geo output, and adds GeoRSS to the RSS output.


    You can download GeoPress for Wordpress (zip file) or GeoPress for Movable Type. To install, place the geopress/ directory in the wp-plugins directory of your Wordpress installation.


    Important, when upgrading from GeoPress < 2.3 (2.0,2.1,2.2), then you need to deactivate and reactive the plugin in order to update your database


    Send questions or issues to to geopress@highearthorbit.com


    Developers


    If you want to grab a snapshot of the development versions of GeoPress, the Subversion repository is available at:


    http://svn.georss.org/geopress/


    There is a folder for: geopress_wp, geopress_mt, and geopress_rd (radiant).

24 Oct 07

EveryScape Takes 3D Mapping Indoors on Epicenter

  • So you can virtually stroll up and down city streets. Big whoop. A new startup called EveryScape promises to take that interactivity one step further. Unlike Microsoft and Google's virtual maps, EveryScape will let users explore both the outside and inside of major cities.



    On Tuesday, the company will launch four mapped virtual cities: San Francisco, Boston, New York and Seattle. In addition to giving online tourists the standard street level views, users can also access the insides of restaurants, hotels, stores and many other landmarks while on their virtual tours.



    Turns out, the latter feature isn't that far a leap for EveryScape. Previously known as Mok3, the company has actually been selling mapping technology and services to hotels and resorts for five years. But extending that experience to entire cities is no small endeavor. In that vein, EveryScape's taking a smart approach.



    Visitors to the site are not only encouraged to tour various cities and towns, but also to collaborate and share in the very creation of them, according to an earlier press release. "For example, while 'walking' through Union Square in San Francisco via EveryScape.com, users can window-shop storefronts as well as tour the inside of those stores, see their offerings, and access published reviews and other information," the company said.



    Furthermore, you can also add your own personalized content, including relevant links, reviews, rankings and so on. EveryScape previously said it plans to launch 10 major metropolitan areas by the end of 2007. While those plans may have been a bit ambitious, the company is nevertheless asking users to vote on additional cities and towns to be created. Members of the local communities will then be enlisted to help in the creation of those online experiences.



    CORRECTION: The launch cities we listed this morning were incorrect, according EveryScape. The company has yet to release precise details on which cities will get the mapping treatment. We regret the error.

17 Sep 07

The world on your desktop | Economist.com

  • These virtual globes are being put to an unexpected range of uses. Google Earth was used to co-ordinate relief efforts in New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Tax inspectors in Buenos Aires are using it to see whether people are correctly reporting the size of their properties. An Italian programmer who was using the software noticed odd markings on the ground near his home town which turned out to be a previously unknown Roman villa. Roofers, landscape gardeners and solar-panel installers use the virtual maps to scout for potential customers. Rebecca Moore, a member of the Google Earth team, used the software to galvanise her neighbourhood in the Santa Cruz mountains in opposition to a nearby logging project. And the Amazon Conservation Team, an American charity, equipped 26 indigenous tribes in the Amazon with hand-held global positioning system units and computers running Google Earth, to enable them to assert their legal sovereignty in the face of threats from loggers and miners.



    “It's turning into a map of historical significance,” says John Hanke, head of Google's Earth and Maps division, and another of Keyhole's founders. “It is going to be a map of the world that is more detailed than any map that's ever been created.” He may be understating the technology's importance.


    The world-wired web



    Geobrowsers are a stunningly effective means of visualising the planet. But they are just one part of a broader endeavour, the construction of a “geoweb” that is still in its infancy, much as the world wide web was in the mid-1990s. The web did away with many geographical constraints, enabling people with common interests to communicate, regardless of location. Yet placelessness jettisons some of the most useful features of information, which are now attracting new attention.

Yahoo! MapMixer

  • What is MapMixer?


    The world is a big place. There are thousands of maps out there that provide unique details about any given destination. MapMixer is a new site that combines those maps with Yahoo! Maps to give you a better view of the world.

    It's easy to mix your own map. Upload an image of your map, use our layering tool to align it with Yahoo! Maps and we'll do the rest! Your map will have all the features of Yahoo! Maps (zooming, panning). You can also syndicate it on your own site or blog.
29 Aug 07

Contest aims to reward 'mash-up' entrepreneurs - The Boston Globe

  • ULocate Communications Inc., which raised $11 million earlier this year, yesterday launched a contest for developers who use uLocate's Where platform -- offering cash prizes and meetings with three venture capital firms to the people who create the most innovative mash-ups of location and mobile content.
30 Jul 07

Plazes - Right Plaze, Right People, Right Time

  • The Plazes Tools are the best way of making the most out of your Plazes experience. Plaze yourself from different devices and tie Plazes info into other services you're using.
26 Jul 07

TomTom to buy Tele Atlas - Boston Business Journal:

  • TomTom N.V. said Monday it will offer $2.7 billion in cash, or $29.35 per share, to buy its primary map supplier Tele Atlas N.V.



    TomTom, the world's largest maker of car navigation devices, is headquartered in Holland but operates its U.S. headquarters in Concord, Mass. The firm's the offer price represents a 32 percent premium over Tele Atlas' average closing share price for the three months prior to July 20.

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