Stonehenge panoramas
Following on from my last post, I’ve prepared a couple more panoramas from my Stonehenge photographs. Again, these were prepared using Microsoft ICE and then uploaded to Photosynth. » Continue reading “Stonehenge panoramas”
Following on from my last post, I’ve prepared a couple more panoramas from my Stonehenge photographs. Again, these were prepared using Microsoft ICE and then uploaded to Photosynth. » Continue reading “Stonehenge panoramas”
First there was photography. Then came digital photography. Now, Microsoft have some neat tools for doing amazing things with digital photographs and I’ve combined my love of photography, geeky things and prehistoric archaeology using some of their gadgets. » Continue reading “Photographs and then some!”
Exciting news for UK data this week as the new UK data website, www.data.gov.uk, had its official launch. It’s been in beta for a while but is now fully functional and open for business, providing access to a range of datasets. Importantly, as well as the more traditional download of files in formats such as Comma Seperated Variable (csv) text files, the site promises to provide information in the form of Linked Data. This is a massive advance towards the semantic web with data freely available to be used and reused by all manner of web apps, promising virtually limitless potential; graphed, mapped, and mashed up in a myriad of ways.
This news follows hot on the heels of the consultation document on the future of Ordnance Survey data which promises to make more high quality map resources far more widely available. So in addition to having access to government data such as crime, education and health statistics, we will soon (assuming the consultation goes the way it ought to) have access to basemaps to plot it all on and administrative area boundaries to analyse by.
The Ordnance Survey released their equivalent to Googlemaps called OpenSpace a while back now and I’ve been experimenting with it. I love having access to the high quality maps produced by the OS, other offerings such as Googlemaps and OpenStreetMap are simply not a match for the cartographic output of the OS. Having said this, there is still much room for improvement on the technical side of things: Based on OpenLayers, the OS OpenSpace platform is far from easy to get to grips compared to eg the Googlemaps API with simple tasks such as adding GeoRSS feeds and KML layers proving rather tricky let alone including external base layers. And the help and support is rather poor with few examples and much of the forum activity on the part of the OS team being far from explanatory. But still, as we start to see editing tools capable of working with these Javascript APIs, things should improve; I for one am looking forward to this!