|
November '09 |
|
||||
| Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat | Sun |
| 1 | ||||||
| 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
| 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 |
| 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 |
| 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 |
| 30 | ||||||
planetgs.com (78)
www.thegisforum.com (75)
www.spatialsciences.org.au (32)
manomano.livejournal.com (31)
|
Wednesday, July 15. 2009
|
First American Takes on the National Cadastre and Risk Management (#ESRIUC)
I had some questions about a few announcements from First American Spatial Solutions on ParcelPoint, its national cadastral database and its new product offering, Risk Analysis Solution for ArcGIS with ESRI, so I was lucky to sit down with Scott Little, Executive VP during the conference.
Continue reading "First American Takes on the National Cadastre and Risk Management (#ESRIUC)"
|
Monday, November 24. 2008
|
Times-Picayune: How New Orleans is Shrinking
One key stat in the first few paragraphs of an article exploring the challenges of managing the shrinking city:
ESRI, a leading market research firm, projects New Orleans will gain only 15,000 residents in the next five years.
The city now has about 300,000 residents, down to about 1/2 its peak population of 627,000 in 1960. Now, here's the part that I didn't know: "About half of the population loss of the past 50 years happened before the levees breached."
|
Friday, October 17. 2008
|
Best Name So Far for iPhone LBS Apps: Carticipate
Carticipate is a free LBS app for finding other with whom to share rides. Only a few weeks old it suffers from the big challenge for LBS: reaching critical mass.
- Huffington Post
|
Friday, August 29. 2008
|
Location of Katrina Deaths Upends Previous Assumptions
The work was done by Knight Ridder and suggests that many of the assumptions about those who died in Katrina are perhaps misplaced.
Knight Ridder took addresses where bodies were recovered from data from Louisiana state officials and and plotted them on maps of Orleans and St. Bernard parishes. Those locations were then compared with census data on income in those neighborhoods. A number of bodies were excluded including those recovered from hospitals and nursing homes, and body collection points.
What does the study show?
- the victims weren’t disproportionately poor
- they also weren’t disproportionately African American
- the elderly were disproportionately impacted though many had cars in the driveway
- Knight Ridder via The Olympian
|
Thursday, August 21. 2008
|
Junk Mail Mashup Reveals Rebuilding in New Orleans
AdAge explains how Greater New Orleans Community Data Center (GNOCDC) is using "junk mail" to help map where the current residents of New Orleans reside. The nonprofit GNOCDC has been working with Valassis Communications' owner of the RedPlum direct-mail operation. Red Plum sends out basically nationwide mailings each month. By luck the company had a 2005 data with which to compare the current state of mailing addresses today. The data is being used to use funds for rebuilding and has saved quite a lot in manual surveys of "who is where."
GNOCDC has linked the data to a Google Map (James Fee and Co worked on this, per a tweet yesterday; I didn't follow up then because he noted a publication called "Adage," of which I'd not heard!). Also of note: Valassis provided much of the data at cost and the historic data and consulting gratis.
Bottom line:
Overall, the Valassis data indicates New Orleans had 146,174 households receiving mail in June 2008, still down 28% from the 203,457 receiving mail in June 2005, two months before the Aug. 29, 2005, hurricane and resulting flood.
via Wired blog
|
Wednesday, June 18. 2008
|
New Orleans Population Resettlement
U.S. News and World Report for June 23 provided a detailed map of the resettlement progress in New Orleans in an article entitled, "The Road Back Home." The map is an "activity" index of areas rebounding from the pre-Hurricane Katrina levels based on utilities, mail service and building permits. The map was created by GCR & Associates and their more detailed analysis of the resettlement can be downloaded from their website (PowerPoint presentation). Neither source stipulates the geographic subdivision but it appears to be at the street block level.





November 24
Great podcast - good point about time [...]
Jeremy Heffner about Podcast: Implications for Twitter's Geolocation API
November 24
Great topic. I wrote a blog post about [...]
Andrew Turner about Apps.gov Prices for Google API: Nearly $1million
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. [...]