The ultra-hip stroller maker Bugaboo has added a new site showing day trip walks in major cities around the world. Each trip is presented with unique maps created by various artists. (via Quipsologies)
Place Rank and Interestingness
Bill Slawski of SEO by the Sea gives a good overview of a new patent filing by Google for Place Rank and Interestingness, a new system for placing community value on geographic locations.
Web Status Maps
Akamai, a major provider of internet media trafficking, has a Real-Time Web Monitor map. It can show traffic, latency, and attacks. There are also some other interesting data visualizations from a dropdown menu on the page.
Lego Map of the USA
During the World Children’s Festival in Washington DC, Lego asked kids to help build a giant Lego map of the United States. (via BoingBoing)
Breathing Earth
The Breathing Earth map beautifully shows a simulated real-time view of births, deaths, and CO2 emissions across the world. It even sounds like a living organism.
Historical Topographic Maps
Historian Christopher Marshall is heading an effort hosted by Maptech to create a collection of historic USGS topographic maps.
Cartographic Relief Presentation
A new edition of Eduard Imhof’s classic book, Cartographic Relief Presentation, has been published by ESRI Press. It is available June 1st from ESRI Press or Amazon.
Tracking avian flu
A team of researchers from UC-Boulder and Ohio State have made a “supermap” of the avian flu using Google Earth. The map includes genetic and geographic information, allowing researchers to track changes in the genomes of the flu sub-strains. The application was outlined in a publication in the journal Systematic Biology. A short movie is also available.
Greenland melting
Recent evidence of global warming can be seen in the newly disconnected land mass from Greenland, named Warming Island. Here is a map showing the number of days per year that the icesheet melts in Greenland. If Greenland were to fully melt, experts say that would raise the ocean’s water levels by 23 feet.
Alternate NYC Subway Map Design Rejected
Three years ago Eddie Jabbour, of Kick Design, created a beautiful and useful new version of the NYC subway map on his own time. He finally got a meeting with the MTA, which rejected the design. (via Design Observer)
Georeferenced Digital Topoquads
The USGS upgraded their online store to improve the searching of U.S topographic maps and to add the capability of downloading free GeoPDF files (georeferenced PDF maps). Simply search the Google map within the USGS Store - Map Locator & Downloader, select a point on the map, double-click the icon and download your map. If you don’t have the GeoPDF Toolbar for Adobe Acrobat you will need to get it from here.
Sea Level Rise
The USGS released a new set of maps and animations showing the potential effects of sea level rise around the world. (via Light Blue Line)
Map of planned city sensor network
Cambridge, Mass. is planning to implement a sensor network using city lights as data collection points. The CitySense project is being run by researchers from Harvard University and Cambridge-based BBN Technologies.
Happy Birthday, Helvetica
Ryan Bigge explores the history and sociology of helvetica, the famed 20th century modern typeface used on many 20th century maps.
Mashing the Point
On his Vector One blog Jeff Thurston opines whether the now thousands of mashed-up-maps are really useful to anyone (cached version) other than the developers flexing their technological skills.
Sunlight Map
While maps showing the current day and night areas of the world are nothing new, the World Sunlight Map adds the most current satellite cloud data, and you map-geeks can change the projection. (via PC World)
Weather.com Interactive Map
During the Nor’easter that dumped 7 inches of rain on our town (and in my basement) I discovered The Weather Channel’s new beta Interactive Radar Map. Using Microsoft’s Virtual Earth, radar data is transparently overlaid on the map which allows you to zoom in to your exact location. The radar data can even be animated.
NPR Station Locator
NPR’s Beta Station Finder is using Microsoft’s Virtual Earth to show not just local stations, but the actual radio transmitter towers and their signal coverage areas. You can even get a list of stations along a calculated driving route.
War Maps
Army cartographers in Iraq make custom maps on-demand of the ever-changing roads in the war zone (via GeoCarta)
ActiveTrails
For all you hikers, ActiveTrails uses Google Maps to show trails with links to more info. While still a small sampling of trails, the best part is an added “Topo” button on the map that shows USGS topos in the Google Maps interface.
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