Outdoor Route Planning

November 7th, 2008

We’ve just launched some cool stuff at work. So anyone interested in individual hiking routes should check out the Outdoor-Routing-Planner - unfortunately, outdoor routing only works for Germany so far and you have to deal with a German UI, but if that is not stopping you, I highly recommend you check it out and have a go- good fun!

outdooractive Outdoor Routing

In order to not get lost, here are the key steps:

  1. Type in a German place name, e.g. “Berchtesgaden”
  2. Start your route by clicking in the map
  3. Extend your route by clicking in the map again and again…
  4. When you’re happy double-click to end your route
  5. Hit the save button (Speichern) to save your route.
  6. Now you can click on the GPX link to download a GPS Track
  7. Or you can click on the PDF link to download a PDF document, including a map of your route

Being different

Oktober 13th, 2008

 What is he doing

When everyone is doing the same things, solving the same problems, making the same mistakes, why not be different?

Excitement and frustration of Google Maps announcements

Mai 17th, 2008

Screenshot of Official Google Maps API Blog

Love My Maps? I love “your maps” ;-) but besides the excitement of announcements, such as the one about adding editing functionality to the Google Maps API, which was made on the Official Google Maps API Blog this morning, some kind of frustration also comes along with it. Why? How many developers do you think are solving the same problems again and again? We have come to know Google as a company, which does not like to let people know too much about what’s next. Fair enough you may say - maybe you have to stick to these rules for surviving in a market, which is increasingly showing signs and giving rise to speculations about becoming disrupted or changing from a blue ocean to a red ocean or for the Google supertanker. I guess Google really has transformed into a supertanker in the last few years.

By the way, the addition of editing functionality to the Google Maps API was just one of several “new Google Maps things” in the last week. We have now got a Google Map Flash API, new user functions and content to explore and discover the world around and far away ;-) or the new real estate options.

So why is there also frustration besides the excitement? While some people certainly like to “prototype-(p)re-invent” wheels, others specifically DO NOT like to. Especially for smaller businesses, which use Google Maps or Google Maps Enterprise as a tool for making some kind of business idea work, it can be really frustrating to spend time and resources on developments that can literally often go in the bin a few weeks later - when the exact announcement that you were waiting for some weeks ago, is finally made.

For those, who even just intend to use Google Maps as a platform to realise their new mashup idea, planning ahead is extremely difficult. Do you want to spend a few weeks or months developing some fancy new feature, which is not available on Google Maps yet, or not exposed in the API just yet - and then find exactly that feature being added after you have engineered it yourself? If you are still working on it, you may save yourself some night shifts and this might bring at least some excitement besides the frustration that you have just wasted a lot of valuable time on inventing a wheel which is now given away to anyone for free! Or go and risk it - you may become famous in the visionary or technology enthusiasts departments and communities for a few days, and if you are quick and successful in crossing the chasm, you may become even more famous and rich - or you may end up at the bottom of the crevasse - with all the others that vanish in the awesomeness icefall.

I’ll give you an example: Google released a static maps API earlier this year. Then, a little later, Google added support for more marker options and paths on the static maps along with the message that lines can only contain 50 vertice points. Now if you need a hundred? Draw two lines? Should be an OK hack. If you need 1000 - hmm, how about building something yourself. Sophisticated server-side solution? Enough tools out there to do something like that… Or wait until Google decides that lines can be longer now? You decide! Good luck - and be sure to not be frustrated, but excited instead, if things keep changing… you know!

If you want a bit more planning, and you can afford to do without a substantial set of free geodata, then you may answer the question, “must it always be Google Maps?” with a clear “no”! For example, follow the Open Layers Blog and you have a pretty good idea about what will be next - in fact, you can even contribute to make it happen faster!

Excitement and frustration are often very close together and timing is what may decide whether you will smile or get annoyed digesting your daily news. I’ll start my day going out for a run now - awesome nature is waiting for me!

The awesomeness of monkey business

Mai 16th, 2008

Too many choices, too much content is a great brief article, which was recently published on ReadWriteWeb. The article offers a familiar perspective on (I guess) many people’s daily reading slot challenge. It also reminded me of an interesting book about what we all do on the Web these days. It is called The Cult of the Amateur and it offers a thought provoking perspective about the problem of filtering the useful from the not so useful content on the Web. Andrew Keen uses the metaphor of typewriting monkeys, to refer to the majority of content producers, who are responsible for the not so useful content, in which we all struggle to not drown day by day. Read about the infinite monkey theorem and you get a good idea about the message of the book.

Anyway… Sarah, the author of the article I was referring to at the start, points out that the real challenge is to find the useful content and technologies - the next big thing(s) and the next killer app(s) out there… she concludes:

There’s also this little thing called “going outside” that we would like to take part in, too. Hopefully we’ll see the killer web app to filter the noise someday soon to help us do so, but it’s definitely not here yet.

Maybe the next killer app(s) will be one(s), which will motivate and drive us to actually “go outside” and experience the “awesomeness” of all the nature to be explored and discovered on our “real” earth :-) - Otherwise I guess we’ll keep drowning until the magical filter becomes available or we figure out a super-strategy to find the few monkey scripts with lines of wisdom… “I wasted time, and now doth time waste me.” 

Awesome Nature

Patterns in Paris

Mai 7th, 2008

 Pattern

Looking for patterns in the geography of map use and folksonomy map making

Mai 6th, 2008

Today, I read a blog post on folksonomy mapping on the United Maps Blog, which triggered me to think about how the geography of map use may relate to the geography of map making, especially with regard to projects such as Open Street Map. Are there patterns that may suggest that the most popular areas that people look at on Google Maps or Microsoft Virtual Earth are also the areas that are best mapped by folksonomy mappers worldwide?

There is an interesting research paper (pdf) on hotmaps (more commonly known as heat maps these days, I guess) by Danyel Fisher, available from Microsoft Research. The paper provides insights into the geography of map use, for instance, with regard to a tourism context. The areas, in which map tiles are most frequently requested are the “hot” or “heat” areas. These places are often popular tourist attractions.

I thought it would be interesting to overlap these heat maps or hotmaps with maps showing the degree of completion and coverage in the Open Street Map geodata. I haven’t really looked closely, whether someone may have already done this. If so, please let me know. Otherwise, maybe someone is keen for a mashup, maybe as a little research project in a geography or a GIS related course at university? I think it would be interesting to find out if there are distinct patterns. It seems obvious that an overlap will show that the big cities are most popular in terms of map access and also in terms of completion of coverage in Open Street Map. But what other patterns may be found? And how may they be explained?

Live Earth - See what I’m doing!

Mai 1st, 2008

To be honest. I haven’t tried Twitter yet. And I am not even sure why. Maybe I’ll have a closer look at some stage… maybe when it will turn into Live Earth. Sure, we’ve got webcams already. But don’t you think it would be exciting to have them mounted (excuse me) to people. Head mounted webcams already brings up three hits on Google. Of course there would be an option to switch them on and off. In “tourism”, things have proceeded from exploration by a few explorers to travel by a few more to tourism by many more - and from looking to experiencing… Parallels on the Web?!? Don’t you think this will happen with Twitter as well? Maybe YouTube becomes boring one day - because it is old hat - stuff that happened in the past and people are more excited to know what is happening right now. Too much stumbling already for today? How about enjoying someone ski down a fresh powder slope - live - in real time! Just need to upgrade some of those helmet cameras … In addition to real time satellite imagery, the social part of live earth will complete ground-truthing in real-time.

Who will move Google’s cheese?

April 30th, 2008

Today, I am getting 55.000 hits for a “google killer” search using Google. The same search on Microsoft even brings up 64.800 results - wonder if this is a surprise, coincidence or evil. Currently, there is a lot of discussion about the Web, the Web 2.0 and 3.0 and whatever else lies ahead and may become the next big thing. Ever since Spencer Johnson told us that the cheese is moving, and Clayton Christensen explained how disruptive innovations and technologies change the rules of the game, there seems to be a pleasant or not so pleasant anticipation for seeing what or who will make Google’s giant cheese station move. Or is it already gone, since I couldn’t actually find it any more. You can read about some of the potential Google killers here or here or here

After we were already the person of the year 2006, maybe THE Google killer will be us! Why? Because we may rely less and less on Google to find stuff - because we know other places to better meet our special and diverse - or not so diverse information needs. Or we may find better tools to help us solve problems or spend our Online leisure time at other places. I would not be surprised to see some tough battles ahead to defend the huge Planet Google territory. The more fingers in the pies, the more places you need to show excellence.

New travel planning tools to virtually prepare my next trip

April 29th, 2008

In the last few days, I discovered a few neat new tools for planning my next trips.

Now I just need to find out whether I can be bothered sitting in front of my good “old” P4, 1.5 GHz, with not even 1 GB of RAM and torture myself, waiting for all the javascript code to load and parse and eventually allow me to actually DO something… Sometimes I really wonder how it was possible to play all those great graphics computer games on a Commodore 64 almost 20 years ago? Today I have to cross my fingers and hope that my machine will win the performance battle and finally let me draw a line with a few hundred points, without making me start swearing and arguing because it is taking ages for all this to happen. Do I need to adopt and get myself a dual or quad core processor machine that can cope with state-of-the-art requirements of the Web 2.0 world or shall I get some books and a printed map instead. Oh dear I so want my C-64 back!

First time snowboarding

April 13th, 2008

After figuring out whether to fix the bindings regular or goofy, there was nothing to stop him. Getting a feeling for the right balance is the first step to a successful snowboarding career. Secret hint for anyone who wants to have a go - do not wear too many thermals on a warm day! Our friend lost an estimated 3 litres of sweat this day…

Learning to fall

I was really impressed by Aaron’s performance. He said he did water skiing before. Good on ya mate!

First day snowboarding

I don’t know how often he fell over that day, but he always got up again. Good spirit, and that’s how you learn it.

Goofy and regular

Champion performance! Have fun practising on Mount Ruapehu as soon as the season starts!