Batch Geonews: Remaining Relevant as a GIS Professional, OpenGeo Suite 4.0, 30TB of Imagery in Esri, and much more
Wed, 2013/11/13 – 08:22 — Satri
Here’s the recent geonews in batch mode, covering a too long timespan once again.
On the open source / open data front:
- That’s just incredible to see this that snappy in a browser, Dynamic hill shading in the browser
- Open source software can be popular, over 2,500 participants for the Free CartoDB for Beginners Webinar
- Tyler Mitchell offers a new book, Geospatial Power Tools - Open Source GDAL / OGR Command Line Utilities
- With Google Maps API v2 going dark, Upgrading from Google v2 API? Free yourself and upgrade to OpenStreetMap
- Getting speed, Marble Virtual Globe Graduates OSGeo Incubation
- GRASS GIS 7 is still in development, but you can learn about it in News in GRASS GIS 7
- Open source software update, Boundless Releases OpenGeo Suite 4.0
- Another update, GeoTools 10.1 Released
- Impressive what you can quickly do with open source javascript libraries, Showing GPS tracks in 3D with three.js and d3.js
- MapBox, strong contributors to open source geospatial, hired, amongst many others, the creator of Leaflet and Sean Gillies, they alsoannounced MapBox.js v1.4.0
On the Esri front:
- 30TB of fresh data, Latest DigitalGlobe imagery updates span the globe
- ArcGIS development is getting multiplatform, Introducing the ArcGIS Runtime SDK for Qt and updates, Version 10.2 of ArcGIS Runtime SDKs for iOS and OS X are now available and Announcing the ArcGIS Runtime SDK for Android v10.2 release!
On the Google front:
- New versions of Google Earth don’t happen every day, Google Earth updated to version 7.1.2.2041, mostly a bugfix release
- New features in Google Maps, including virtual trips in full 3D, From where you are to where you want to go
- Another new tool for recording and sharing stories, Tour Builder: Tell your stories with Google Earth
- Related to the recent international surveillance discussions, Brazil Orders Google To Hand Over Street View Data
- An interesting story, Revisiting the UTA Flight 772 memorial in Google Earth
- As usual, New Google Earth Imagery – November 12, 2013
In the everything-else category:
- James is optimistic, Does Ideas4OGC Fix Problems with OGC Standards?, it seems it really helps
- Geoff has a nice summary named James Fee on remaining relevant as a GIS professional
- Not from Google, India gets its own Street View: Wonobo.com
- While Autonomous Cars Will Save Money and Lives, before more driverless cars, we’ll get more driverless trucks, Autonomous Dump Trucks Are Coming To Canada’s Oil Sands and why not, UK Town To Get Driverless ‘Pods’ Mixing With Pedestrians
- Also related, Driverless Cars Are Further Away Than You Think
- What’s great is that we’re also getting closer to Finland’s Algorithm-Driven Public Bus
- In Canada, one of the biggest communications provider is tracking location of all users, no opt-out possible, but it won’t be that simple,Is Bell’s Plan to Monitor and Profile Canadians Legal?
- In the same vein, Seattle PD Mum On Tracking By Its New Wi-Fi Mesh Network, and you can also Connect To Unsecured Bluetooth Car Systems To Monitor Traffic Flow, I did not know that even car tires have RFID tags that can be tracked
- And we mentioned before being tracked in malls, it gets even more serious with Google Starts Tracking Retail Store Visits On Android and iOS
- Nothing really new there for our regular readers, Police Use James-Bond-Style GPS Bullet, and in the US, Court Rules Probable-Cause Warrant Required For GPS Trackers
- Not the first time we see a similar initiative, Oregon Extends Push To Track, Tax Drivers Per Mile, and this one titled Police Tracking License Plates Nationwide for Massive Data Base of Citizen Car Trips
- There’s the usual story on the theme of US Mini-Satellites to Track and Kill Terrorists
- Unsurprisingly, New Job Listings Point to Continued Work on Transit Options in Apple Maps, transit is currently the big absent from Apple Maps, and what might be surprising, Apple Maps Significantly More Popular Than All Other iOS Mapping Apps, Including Google
- VerySpatial shares an entry named The Geography of Twitter
- Two articles on maps and marijuana; Tabulating the Underground Economy, and the DEA’s Pathetic Attempt to Map the Marijuana Trade and Unnecessary Environmental Destruction from Marijuana Cultivation in the United States
- In case you need to know, RapidEye changes name to BlackBridge
- Remote sensing will be more popular than ever, Government and industry to combine for 1150 satellites over next decade (including telecommunications)
In the maps category:
- It has been popular recently, the Digital Attack Map, A Live Map of Ongoing DDoS Attacks
- It happened to Google Maps in 2005, Taiwan Protests Apple Maps That Show Island As Province of China
- In the U.S.? Is there too much arsenic in the soil where you live? Metals, Minerals, Poisons and Maps
- Also for the U.S., Two Detailed Rail Maps and an attempt at Mapping Honesty and Property Crime
- Crime? Police.uk relaunches its crime map
- Let’s learn a bit more, Get to Know a Projection: Lambert Conformal Conic
- The paper edition is $400, you can get the digital version for $20, The Barrington Atlas Comes to the iPad
- A map of the Countries most vulnerable to climate change
- I’m not certain if we shared that link before or not, the excellent series of 40 maps that explain the world
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