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Digital Geography – Mediascape

By Augmented Reality, GPS

In our post a few days ago on location aware devices we speculated that next few years will see more and more devices launching with integrated GPS units and with these we expect to see a lot more location aware services.

Location aware services are a very simple concept – all that is required is a GPS reading to load up the relevant media and you have a system that provides information dependent on a users position. With this in mind Hewlett Packard in conjunction with FutureLab have released Mediascape. Mediascape is free software which allows the development of simple location based information applications. The movie below from Hewlett Packard explains the concept:

Mediascape is described as a ‘series of composed of sounds and images placed outside in your local area. To see the images and hear the sounds you need a handheld computer (PDA) and a pair of headphones. An optional GPS unit can automatically trigger the images and sounds in the right places’.

To create a mediascape, you start with a digital map of your local area. Using special, free software, you can attach digital sounds and pictures to places that you choose on the map (see below).

By going outside into the area the map covers, you can experience the mediascape. Using the handheld computer and headphones, you can hear the sounds and see the pictures in the places the author of the mediascape has put them’.

Of interest is the emphasis on education, combining GIS with a PDA and sounds/images prerecorded by a teacher opens up a lot of possibilities for the teaching of geography and history.

You can download the software free of charge and create your own Mediascape.

Further information for teachers can be found from here.

For a lot more info on the teaching of geography using digital means take a look at the Digital Geography Blog.

Let us know if you have used the software for any urban teaching…

Visualising Landscapes – Terragen 2

By Terragen

Although the blog is in general about digital representations of urban areas when you work overlooking a carpark in London town it is sometime nice to look beyond the city and towards landscape visualisation software.


One of the best packages out there is Terragen and its recently released Terragen Technology Preview (Version 2). The above image is the result of following the making your first scene pdf , which we thoroughly recommend as we were left a little lost at first by the new interface and layout. After reading through guide however it all comes together and reveals the potential of the package.

There is also a movie of Terragen 2.0’s output:




For shear eye candy alone Terragen is well worth spending an hour of your time with to the produce some stunning scenes. Render times require patience as the scenes and new lighting are complex, the above image took 1 hour 20 minutes on a 3.2Ghz Processor with 2Gb Ram.

Rank Clocks – Visualising the Growth of Cities

By Nature

Professor Mike Batty CBE – the Director of our lab – published a notable paper in last years November Issue of Nature (444, pp 592-596) examining the growth and decline of cities with data for the top 100 cities in the US urban system for the decades from 1790 to 2000.

Mike has also examined the UK urban system from 1901 to 2001, the World System from 430BCE to 2000, and the Ancient World System from 3700BCE to 1000BCE.

For those new to rank clocks – A rank clock is a device for visualising the changes over time in the ranked order of any set of objects where the ordering is usually from large to small. The size of cities, of firms, the distribution of incomes, and such-like social and economic phenomena display highly ordered distributions. If you rank order these phenomena by size from largest to smallest, the objects follow a power law over much of their size range, or at least follow a log normal distribution which is a power law in the upper tail.

The Editorial of the editions notes that ‘tested on three very different city systems over very different time periods, the clocks show that civilizations and cities rise and fall in size many times and on many scales, ruling out universal rank-size scaling at the micro-level and associated models of growth by proportionate effect. But clocks can track significant changes, such as the rise and fall of Rome and the impact of the Industrial Revolution’.

Seemingly its all about ‘The Long Tail’ – the title of a recent book by Chris Anderson (see our Amazon Shop for details). After sitting down with Mike for a bit of an explanation the result was the following diagram:


People assume that the large cities are dominant but in the event of a long enough tail on the log graph there are enough small cities to be influential.

Mikes paper can be read online if you have a subscription to Nature.

You can also download the Rank Clock software in stripped down form with data for the top 100 cities in the US urban system for the decades from 1790 to 2000.

Rank Clocks – Visualising the Growth of Cities

By Nature

Professor Mike Batty CBE – the Director of our lab – published a notable paper in last years November Issue of Nature (444, pp 592-596) examining the growth and decline of cities with data for the top 100 cities in the US urban system for the decades from 1790 to 2000.

Mike has also examined the UK urban system from 1901 to 2001, the World System from 430BCE to 2000, and the Ancient World System from 3700BCE to 1000BCE.

For those new to rank clocks – A rank clock is a device for visualising the changes over time in the ranked order of any set of objects where the ordering is usually from large to small. The size of cities, of firms, the distribution of incomes, and such-like social and economic phenomena display highly ordered distributions. If you rank order these phenomena by size from largest to smallest, the objects follow a power law over much of their size range, or at least follow a log normal distribution which is a power law in the upper tail.

The Editorial of the editions notes that ‘tested on three very different city systems over very different time periods, the clocks show that civilizations and cities rise and fall in size many times and on many scales, ruling out universal rank-size scaling at the micro-level and associated models of growth by proportionate effect. But clocks can track significant changes, such as the rise and fall of Rome and the impact of the Industrial Revolution’.

Seemingly its all about ‘The Long Tail’ – the title of a recent book by Chris Anderson (see our Amazon Shop for details). After sitting down with Mike for a bit of an explanation the result was the following diagram:


People assume that the large cities are dominant but in the event of a long enough tail on the log graph there are enough small cities to be influential.

Mikes paper can be read online if you have a subscription to Nature.

You can also download the Rank Clock software in stripped down form with data for the top 100 cities in the US urban system for the decades from 1790 to 2000.

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