planetgs.com (75)
www.thegisforum.com (71)
www.spatialsciences.org.au (32)
www.bloglines.com (27)
|
Friday, June 27. 2008
|
Interactive Map of Parkersburg, Iowa Tornado Impact
I'll just quote Journalism.co.uk: "Now this is a good interactive map.
Des Moines Register interactive map
Quote of the Week
[The Center for Spatial Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara is involved in incorporating spatial thinking and analysis into fields of study that range from marine biology to religious studies, and Director Michael Goodchild envisions a future where spatial thinking will be taught in high schools alongside history and algebra.]
"There’s been a democratization of GIS over the past couple of years," Goodchild said. "It’s reached the point where everyone needs to learn it."
- Goodchild quoted in "GIS: Cops Favor New Kind of Plotting" in Miller-McClure Magazine
I'm thinking out loud here:
Does that suggest that "if not for GIS and its democratization" there'd not be interest in teaching spatial thinking in schools? Did we have to get quick and powerful (and "flashy") technologies to "prove" the importance of spatial thinking? Math did ok without computers for quite a long time... and I recall hand-draw "invasion of the life-savers" maps in my population geography class in 1987. Have any other disciplines "needed" computers to "prove their worth?"
Toxic Release Reporting, Environmental Justice and Maps
Researchers at the Children's Environmental Health Initiative reported on study of the Toxics Release Inventory Burden Reduction Rule, a law allowing some polluters to avoid reporting on their toxic releases. CEHI researchers found some communities unfairly burdened:
this study suggests that the TRI Burden Reduction Rule has environmental justice implications. We found that facilities that are eligible for reduced reporting are more likely to be located in neighborhoods where the proportion of minority and low income residents is significantly higher than neighborhoods hosting facilities that are still required report detailed information.
The report was published online on June 26, 2008 by the peer-reviewed journal Environmental Science and Technology. It was funded by a grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. You need a subscription to read the entire report, but the CEHI provides some details including what I looked for, maps.
Alas, I was disappointed with the promised "interactive map" which shows a thematic map of the U.S.' EPA regions. Clicking on a state/regions pops up that regions review document, detailing "the percent minority population, the percent minority population under age 5, and the percent of the population in poverty within a 1, 3, and 5 km buffer around each TRI facility in the U.S."
The findings apparently contradict an EPA study, though it's not cited (odd?):
In contrast to EPA's findings, this study suggests that the TRI Burden Reduction Rule has environmental justice implications.
The implications are stated this way:
This analysis demonstrates that poor and minority communities stand to lose disproportionately more detailed information about chemical releases, leaving them less empowered to advocate for public health or environmental protections in their communities.
This is an important and complex finding. I wish there were clearly ways to explain and illustrate it.
|
Thursday, June 26. 2008
|
Make Your Car a HotSpot
Chrysler's Mopar will offer "Unconnect web" as of August as a dealer-installed accessory. Where there is cell service it will create a mobile hot spot with a 100-foot range. The suggested price for the router is $449, with the monthly access fee being $29. The service is provided by Autonet Mobile, founded in 2005 and provider of the Avis Connect service, a Wi-Fi connection that plugs into a vehicle's cigarette lighter or wall outlet.
I have to believe there are cheaper ways to do this, thought they are not installed in the car. Further, with new handsets becoming computers, is the "conversion" to Wi-Fi needed? Will cars be tailgating one another to gain access to Wi-Fi?
- WSJ
Computerworld offers Map of Best (US) IT Places to Work
The map is Flash-based, but effective. No big surprises: clusters are along the East Coast (lots of medical), Chicago and California.
Coming Soon: NZ Chapter of ASIBA
In short, key players are supportive of plans to stretch the boundaries of the Australian Spatial Information Business Association (ASIBA) to New Zealand. "ASIBA is an industry organisation, formed to condense around 35 former industry groups into one, with four pillars. They are: academics, individual professionals, business and government." Major players are a recent conference and The New Zealand Geospatial Office applauded the formal request.
One reason for the move:
The country police put out an RFP for a national address register. Per Steve Critchlow, executive director of GIS specialist Critchlow:
“They wanted everything and they wanted to impose unlimited liability,” Critchlow says. “Three consortia were formed, we probably all spent around $200,000 working through the Christmas period, then the steering committee pulled the plug on the grounds it was too costly.
There's one other tidbits of note in the article:
...a study that found between A$6 billion and A$12 billion (NZ$7.6 billion and NZ$15.2 billion) was added to Australia’s gross domestic product by spatially enabling Australian government.
- Computerworld




November 23
Make sure and check the terms of these [...]
Briantist about Seen During Geography Awareness Week IV
November 21
Perhaps there should be an on-screen [...]
SMR about Seen During Geography Awareness Week IV
November 20
This is very funny. Google Earth has [...]
Claudio Schapsis about Twitter Geo API Available
November 20
Location on Twitter is not new. There [...]
Kirk Kuykendall about Why I got an e-mail from Wolfram Research
November 19
It's also worth watching Wolfram Alpha. [...]
Adena Schutzberg about Why I got an e-mail from Wolfram Research
November 19
You are correct! [...]
Archie Belaney about Update 5: AT&T Sues Verizon over "Map for That" Map Ads
November 19
If you're advertising 3g coverage is [...]