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Yahoo! Map Mixer – Overlay Maps With Ease

By GIS, Yahoo Map Mixer


Looking back only two years ago if we wanted to upload a map via the web there would be all sorts of questions of copyright, overlay data, servers and a good few hours in a high end GIS system. Thankfully those days are long gone and uploading maps is getting easier and easier.

Yahoo’s Map Mixer is the latest development and is innovative allowing the placement of map overlays as simple as pointing Yahoo to a image and then adding in two control points. There is no need for a world co-ordinate file or even a working knowledge of GIS and that’s how mapping should be (in our humble opinion).

Once your image is overlaid it can then be embedded in a website or blog – as per below we illustrate our really quickly placed map of the UCL campus:

While our map is not the most geographically accurate in the world it was created in 2 minutes.

It is interesting to note Yahoo’s views on maps:

A word to the wise. These maps are meant to be fun, informational illustrations of places around the world. They may not be accurate, true to scale, factual, or official.

We look forward to using the quote at a future mapping conference 🙂

Take a look at Yahoo’s Map Mixer.

Yahoo! Map Mixer – Overlay Maps With Ease

By GIS, Yahoo Map Mixer


Looking back only two years ago if we wanted to upload a map via the web there would be all sorts of questions of copyright, overlay data, servers and a good few hours in a high end GIS system. Thankfully those days are long gone and uploading maps is getting easier and easier.

Yahoo’s Map Mixer is the latest development and is innovative allowing the placement of map overlays as simple as pointing Yahoo to a image and then adding in two control points. There is no need for a world co-ordinate file or even a working knowledge of GIS and that’s how mapping should be (in our humble opinion).

Once your image is overlaid it can then be embedded in a website or blog – as per below we illustrate our really quickly placed map of the UCL campus:

While our map is not the most geographically accurate in the world it was created in 2 minutes.

It is interesting to note Yahoo’s views on maps:

A word to the wise. These maps are meant to be fun, informational illustrations of places around the world. They may not be accurate, true to scale, factual, or official.

We look forward to using the quote at a future mapping conference 🙂

Take a look at Yahoo’s Map Mixer.

Digital Urban – The Visual City Working Paper

By Papers/Thesis, Publications, Working Papers

We have a new working paper out entitled ‘Digital Urban – The Visual City’, hopefully worth a read…

Nothing in the city is experienced by itself for a city’s perspicacity is the sum of its surroundings. To paraphrase Lynch (1960), at every instant, there is more than we can see and hear. This is the reality of the physical city, and thus in order to replicate the visual experience of the city within digital space, the space itself must convey to the user a sense of place.

This is what we term the “Visual City”, a visually recognisable city built out of the digital equivalent of bricks and mortar, polygons, textures, and most importantly data.

Recently there has been a revolution in the production and distribution of digital artefacts which represent the visual city. Digital city software that was once in the domain of high powered personal computers, research labs and professional software are now in the domain of the public-at-large through both the web and low-end home computing.

These developments have gone hand in hand with the re-emergence of geography and geographic location as a way of tagging information to non-proprietary web-based software such as Google Maps, Google Earth, Microsoft’s Virtual Earth, ESRI’s ArcExplorer, and NASA’s World Wind, amongst others.

The move towards ‘digital earths’ for the distribution of geographic information has, without doubt, opened up a widespread demand for the visualization of our environment where the emphasis is now on the third dimension.

While the third dimension is central to the development of the digital or visual city, this is not the only way the city can be visualized for a number of emerging tools and ‘mashups’ are enabling visual data to be tagged geographically using a cornucopia of multimedia systems.

We explore these social, textual, geographical, and visual technologies throughout this latest working paper.

Download the full working paper (4.9Mb, .pdf)

Digital Urban – The Visual City Working Paper

By Papers/Thesis, Publications, Working Papers

We have a new working paper out entitled ‘Digital Urban – The Visual City’, hopefully worth a read…

Nothing in the city is experienced by itself for a city’s perspicacity is the sum of its surroundings. To paraphrase Lynch (1960), at every instant, there is more than we can see and hear. This is the reality of the physical city, and thus in order to replicate the visual experience of the city within digital space, the space itself must convey to the user a sense of place.

This is what we term the “Visual City”, a visually recognisable city built out of the digital equivalent of bricks and mortar, polygons, textures, and most importantly data.

Recently there has been a revolution in the production and distribution of digital artefacts which represent the visual city. Digital city software that was once in the domain of high powered personal computers, research labs and professional software are now in the domain of the public-at-large through both the web and low-end home computing.

These developments have gone hand in hand with the re-emergence of geography and geographic location as a way of tagging information to non-proprietary web-based software such as Google Maps, Google Earth, Microsoft’s Virtual Earth, ESRI’s ArcExplorer, and NASA’s World Wind, amongst others.

The move towards ‘digital earths’ for the distribution of geographic information has, without doubt, opened up a widespread demand for the visualization of our environment where the emphasis is now on the third dimension.

While the third dimension is central to the development of the digital or visual city, this is not the only way the city can be visualized for a number of emerging tools and ‘mashups’ are enabling visual data to be tagged geographically using a cornucopia of multimedia systems.

We explore these social, textual, geographical, and visual technologies throughout this latest working paper.

Download the full working paper (4.9Mb, .pdf)

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