Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα Google maps. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων
Εμφάνιση αναρτήσεων με ετικέτα Google maps. Εμφάνιση όλων των αναρτήσεων

Τετάρτη 4 Νοεμβρίου 2015

Google Maps update brings quick stops along your route and gas prices



By Aleks Buczkowski





With the latest update to Google Maps for Android the company finally adds the ability to search for places to stop along your current route. The update which will be roll out over next weeks you’ll be able to search for gas stations, grocery stores, restaurants, and other stops without removing your final destination.

Google added also one more cool feature. It included gas prices when you search for gas stations, allowing you to pick out the cheapest one along your route.

Searching for points of interest along the route is not a new feature to navigation systems but it’s one step closer for Google to rule the navigation apps market.There’s no word on when this feature will come to Google Maps on iOS.

Σάββατο 19 Σεπτεμβρίου 2015

Explore Vintage Photos of New York, Plotted on Google Maps









It’s not uncommon to wonder what a street looked like in centuries past, and if you’re in New York City, finding that out has gotten a whole lot easier. OldNYC is a project which plots historic data from the New York Public Library collection of photographs on top of Google Maps for a rich and revealing look at the city’s changing appearance from the 1870s to the 1970s.

The project predominantly pulls from the work of Percy Loomis Sperr, who documented the massive changes to the city from the late 1920s to the early 1940s. The creators of the project tapped into the library’s Milstein Collection which houses some 80,000 original photographs of New York City.


“The creators of this site associated latitudes and longitudes to the images in the Milstein collection. This process is known as geocoding. Doing this allows the images to be placed at points on a map, which enables new ways of exploring this collection.

They also detected individual photos on the original Milstein scans and extracted them. This reduced the appearance of large borders or multiple small images.”




Πέμπτη 23 Ιουλίου 2015

Google's Waze Crowdsourced Traffic and Navigation App is a Hit, But How Does It Impact Privacy, the Law and Google Maps?




(PRNewswire) — Research and Markets


(http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/2nqmdn/googles_waze) has announced the addition of the "Google's Waze Crowdsourced Traffic and Navigation App is a Hit, But How Does It Impact Privacy, the Lawand Google Maps?" report to their offering.




The ability to quickly assimilate and analyze Big Data is providing new ways for humans to take more control over their on-road experience. One of those ways is Waze, which is now the world's largest crowdsourced traffic and navigation app, with more than million users in countries. Waze users share real-time roadway and traffic information with the Waze network and each other. By connecting drivers to one another, Waze is creating local driving communities that work together to improve road experiences by helping users avoid accidents, sidestep traffic jams, find the best prices on gasoline, avoid traffic tickets, and find deals at local stores.

Waze, which was launched in Israel, as a competitor to Google Maps and Apple Maps, has so much to offer that Google - whose Google Maps application is the leading traffic and navigation app, and the sixth most widely used smartphone app.

However, some of the very capabilities that make Waze the most feature-rich, interactive traffic and navigation app also raise questions about its impacts on privacy, law enforcement, and its coexistence with Google Maps. This report discusses key capabilities and benefits of the Waze app, and analyzes those impacts.

Key Topics Covered:

1. Introduction

2. Crowdsourcing Helped Build Waze's First Maps, and Continues Daily

3. Heavy User Engagement Benefits Waze and its Advertisers

4. How Waze Benefits Google

5. Waze is a Hot Propertybut Faces Serious Challenges and Detractors

For more information visithttp://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/2nqmdn/googles_waze

Media Contact:

Laura Wood, +353-1-481-1716, Email Contact



To view the original version on PR Newswire, visit:http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/googles-waze-crowdsourced-traffic-and-navigation-app-is-a-hit-but-how-does-it-impact-privacy-the-law-and-google-maps-300117864.html

SOURCE Research and Markets
Contact:
Research and Markets
Web: http://www.researchandmarkets.com
Source

Πέμπτη 16 Ιουλίου 2015

Revolutionize Your SAP® BusinessObjects™ Insights by Easily Creating Maps with Google and CMaps Analytics

Webinar: 
Wednesday, August 19th 2015, 9:00pm - 10:00pm



Overview




Join mapping industry leaders – Google for Work, CMaps Analytics and Onix – to learn how applying Location Intelligence to your SAP® BusinessObjects™ data will revolutionize your understanding and usability of that information. Utilizing Google Maps and CMaps, you can create mapping autonomy for any business user within your organization, gain geospatial insights immediately, and enable all employees to make timely, more informed business decisions. While SAP BusinessObjects data has been difficult to map in the past, this webinar will present tools that will allow any business user to create maps anytime and anywhere – in just a matter of minutes.

In this webinar you will learn
  • How mapping your SAP location, proximity and distance data provides actionable insights that will enable you to make better decisions regarding your customers, vendors, assets and more.
  • What tools will enable business users — not just IT folks — to map data in a matter of minutes.
  • How best practices have been implemented and what results have been seen by those using the Google Maps and CMaps solution.

More details

Onix, a premier Google for Work partner and platinum CMaps Analytics partner, is pleased to host this webinar featuring CMaps Analytics and Google Maps for Work.

Speakers

Derek Imes, Geo Account Manager, Onix

Ryan Goodman, CEO, CMaps Analytics

Scott Ciabattari, Strategic Partner Development Manager, Google

Who should attend

Reporting analysts, directors of business intelligence/analytics, directors of business objects, warehouse analysts, directors of technology, SAP BusinessObjects users, SAP ABAP developers, SAP ABAP programmers/analysts, SAP administrators, SAP analysts, SAP Basis administrators, SAP BI analysts, senior directors, and anyone involved in app development, software development, GIS, Centers of Excellence and Business Intelligence Competency Centers.


Τετάρτη 8 Ιουλίου 2015

Travel across the Roman Empire in real time with ORBIS



In a clever bit of technological legerdemain, Stanford University has combined historical research, mapping, and Web technology to bring ancient Roman Empire travel to the Internet. A cross-disciplinary team has created and launched ORBIS: The Stanford Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World. With it, a user can determine how long it will take to travel from any point in the Roman Empire to any other, as well as calculate the cost of transporting goods and people.
This heretofore unnatural union of geographers, technologists, and historians of the ancient world is becoming more and more common under the descriptor of "digital humanities." ORBIS looks to be one of the most effective examples of its promise.
Built by historian and classicist Walter Scheidel and Stanford Libraries' digital humanities specialistElijah Meeks, with the assistance of geographer and Web developer Karl Grossner and GIS analyst Noemi Alvarez, the interactive online atlas is based on a host of data. This includes historical tide information and weather; size, grade, and surface of roads; main cities and ports; land, sea, and river routes; vehicle speed (including ships, ox carts, horse, and walking); and the cost of transport.
The time period the system centers on is about 200 CE, when Roman power was at its highest and the empire's extent was greatest. The atlas is built from 751 sites, most of which are cities and towns, and covers about four million square miles. Two hundred sixty-eight of the sites are ports. The road network mapped on ORBIS includes 52,587 miles of road, including desert tracks and 17,567 miles of rivers and canals.

The dynamic distance cartogram


According to Meeks, the project started when Scheidel happened to see a dynamic distance cartogram of the London tube system. Dynamic distance cartograms distort the layout of their data based on your selection. If you choose one stop, it will show you a map of how close in time expenditure the other stops are, based on information like train connections.
"In building a geographic transportation model of the Roman Empire, you can't just download an API for distance," Meeks told Ars. So once the proposal was approved, the principals had to figure out how to collect that data. For land travel, they were able to use itineraria, Roman accounts of time spent traveling various routes. But for sea voyages, similar information did not really exist. It was in creating a model for the missing information that ORBIS's builders found themselves in the role of pioneers.
They had to write a model for ancient sea travel based on scientific data regarding wind, currents, and weather. Meeks did so using Gephi, the agnostic network analysis and visualization tool. He subsequently imported it into PostGIS, a PostgreSQL open-source database.
Grossner built the user-facing site using ExtJS for the site interface and OpenLayers for the maps.
"As a geographer, my favorite thing about the site," Grossner told Ars, "is that it brings some basic geographic principles, like cost distance and cost surfaces, to an audience that seems genuinely tickled by them. The oddball merging (of the site's textual components with its interactive ones) was done with enough care that the approach can be fairly evaluated as a potentially new wrinkle on an emerging genre of interactive scholarly works."

History as a system

The major ground broken with ORBIS, however, is not technical, per se. It's in the use of technology to approach history as a system instead of a static collection of data.
"When you look at other historical digital projects," said Meeks, such as Pleiades, the crowd-sourced digital atlas of ancient history, "you see sets of rich data layers you can look at on maps, which is great. But with ORBIS we have a model of an historical world system—we can start to talk about how this world functioned."
In only two weeks since its launch, the response to ORBIS has astounded its builders.
"We've gotten feedback from middle school teachers, PhD candidates, undergraduates using it for papers." Respondents have noted that in addition to being a good tool for teaching the history of Rome, it's equally good at teaching geographical concepts. One scholar is using it to determine the cost of information distribution in the ancient world. Another is using it to track the journeys of St. Paul. "It's proving to be a useful tool on various levels, and so popular I'm not even sure our little server is going to be able to handle it."
One of the disappointments for Meeks, however, is the tool that inspired the ORBIS project in the first place.
"A tech friend of mine was laughing at the metrics," Meeks said. "It'll show 50,000 people looking at the maps but only 100 using the interactive distance cartogram." In fact that function is not very intuitive looking. At first (or even second and third) glance a first-time user is not sure what he or she is looking at.
"It shows me that we in the library business have to take UX design seriously."
This is a shame—albeit one likely to be mitigated with subsequent design tweaks—because it is arguably the most valuable aspect of the project.

The season, the city, the cost


Ox cart and boat takes a lot longer than flying.
If Web technologies only made what is in books available online, it would still be important because of how that act democratizes access to information. But when it does something simply impossible within the pages of a book, it gets a great deal more exciting. ORBIS's cartogram is just such a thing. It allows the user to select one main city—Rome, Constantinople, London, or Antioch—and a season, then choose either the fastest routes or the cheapest ones. The map changes dynamically according to those choices, and rearranges the spatial relationships to reflect them.
Suddenly London zooms away from Rome, actually moving off the map—it's nearly impossible to get there during the winter due to Atlantic storms. With another set of choices, Corinth meets Antioch in the center of the map—it's a cheap destination during the summer.
At moments of innovations such as this one, history seems closer and technology more relevant.