Corante

Fruitful Seminars

Making Social Tools Ubiquitous

10 Sept 08

Social tools help improve business communications, increase collaboration and nurture innovation, but what do you do if people won't use them? And how do you grow from a pilot to company-wide use?

The Email Problem and How To Solve It

3 Sept 08

Email is becoming a problem, with people sending and receiving hundreds each day. 'No Email Days' don't help, nor do inbox size limits. So just how do you reduce email and improve people's relationship with their inbox?

Google Groups
Subscribe to Fruitful Seminars
Email:
Visit this group
About the Authors

Suw Charman-Anderson

Suw Charman-Anderson

Suw Charman-Anderson is a social software consultant and writer who specialises in the use of blogs and wikis behind the firewall. With a background in journalism, publishing and web design, Suw is now one of the UK's best known bloggers, frequently speaking at conferences and seminars.

She recently launched Kits and Mortar, a blog about planning a green, cat-friendly self-built home. Her personal blog is Chocolate and Vodka, and yes, she's married to Kevin.

Email Suw

Kevin Anderson

Kevin Anderson

Kevin Anderson has been an online journalist since 1996, designing, editing and writing websites for both broadcast and print media. In 1998, he joined the BBC and became their first online journalist based outside of the UK, covering the US for its award winning news website. After coming to the UK in 2005, he developed a blogging strategy for BBC news, helped launch a programme on the BBC's 5Live covering weblogs and podcasts and was on the team that launched the interactive radio programme World Have Your Say on the BBC World Service.

Kevin is now the Blogs Editor for The Guardian, where he is responsible for management, strategy and 'leading by doing' for Guardian Unlimited blogs.

E-mail Kevin.

Member of the Media 2.0 Workgroup
Dark Blogs Case Study
Case Study 01 - A European Pharmaceutical Group
Find out how a large pharma company uses dark blogs (behind the firewall) to gather and disseminate competitive intelligence material.
All content (c) Kevin Anderson and/or Suw Charman
Just Released the 2008 Tribalization of Business study - an in-depth look at how 140+ organizations are managing and measuring online communities

Strange Attractor

« Xtech 2006: Ben Lund - Social Bookmarking For Scientists | Main | Xtech 2006: David Beckett - Semantics Through the Tag »

May 19, 2006

Xtech 2006: Mikel Maron - GeoRSS

Email This Entry

Posted by Suw Charman

90% of information has a spatial component. Needed to agree a format.

Definitive history of RSS
- Syndicus Geographum - ancient Greek treaty for sharing of maps between city states
- blogmapper/rdfmapper - 2002, specifying locations in weblog posts, little map with red dots
- w3c rdfig geo vocabulary - 2003, came up with simple vocab on irc and published a doc, and this is the basis of geocoding RDF and RSS
- geowanking - May 2003, on this discussion list GeoRSS first uttered
- World as a Blog/WorldKit - realtime weblog geo info nabbing tools, World as a Blog looks at geotags in real time then plots them on a map so you can see who's up too late.
- USGS 2004, started their Earthquake Alerts Feed.
- Yahoo! maps supports georss 2005

Lots has happened. Google released GoogleMaps, and shook everyone up with an amazing resource of map data, and released an API. Lots of map-based mash-ups.

OSGeo Foundation, Where 2.0, OpenStreetMap.

Format then only specified points, not lines or polygons. GeoRSS.org. Alternatives were KML used by Google Earth, rich, similar to GML, but too complicated and tied to GoogleEarth so some stuff is more for 3d; GPX, XML interchange format for GPS data, but tied to its applicaton, extensible but not so useful; and GML, Open Geospacial Consortium, and useful for defining spatial geometries, so an XML version of a shape file, but quite complicated spec at over 500 pages, and a bit of confusion on how you use it because it's not a schema its similar to RDF, so provides geometric objects for your own schema.

OGC got involved in GeoRSS because they wanted to help promote GML. So some of GeoRSS is drawn from GML. Two types of GeoRSS: Simple and GML. Simple is a compressed version of GML. Neutral regading feed type, e.g. RSS1.0/RDF, RSS2.0, Atom.

Looking for potential to create a Microformat.

[Now goes into some detail re the spec which I'm not going to try to reproduce].

EC JRC Tsunami Simulator. Subscribed to USGS earthquake feed, ran tsunami model, and dependent on outcome, they would sent out an alter. Also had RSS feed. Produce maps of possible tsunami.

Supported by, or about to be supported by:
- Platial
- Tagzania
- Ning
- Wayfairing, Plazes

Commercial support
- MSFT announced intention
- Yahoo! (Upcoming, Weather, Traffic, Flickr may potentially use it, and Maps API
- Ning
- CadCorp

Google
- OGC member
- MGeoRSS
- Acme GeoRSS
- GeoRSS2KML

And other stuff
- Feed validator
- Wordpress Plugin in the works
- Weblog
- A press release
- Feed icon

Aggregation
- http://placedb.org
- http://www.jeffpalm.com/geo/
- http://fofredux.sourceforge.net/
- http://mapufacture.com/georss/

Mapufacture, create and position a map, select georss feeds and put them together in a map. Then can do keyword searches and location searches. Being able to aggregate them together is very useful. Rails app. E.g. several weather feeds, added to a map and then when you click on the pointer on the map, the content shows up.

Social maps, e.g. places tagged as restaurants in Platial and Tagzania on one simple maps.

Can search, and navigate the map to show the area you're interested in, then it searches the feeds and grabs everything in that location. All search results produce a GeoRSS feed which you can then reuse.

Odds and ends
- mobile device potential, sharing info about where you are
- sensors, could be used for publishing sensor data
- GIS Time Navigation, where you navigate through space and see things happening in time, e.g. a feed of events in Amsterdam which provided you with a calendar and location.
- RSS to GeoRSS converter, taking RSS, geocode place names and produce GeoRSS

Comments (1) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Conferences


COMMENTS

1. Kevin Marks on May 19, 2006 5:55 PM writes...

There is an existing Geo microformat for a single point, which is derived from hCard:
http://microformats.org/wiki/geo
At the Where 2.0 Conference in Sf we have a Microformats BoF organised to discuss a directions microformat:
http://microformats.org/wiki/events/2006-06-13-where-2-bof

Permalink to Comment

POST A COMMENT




Remember Me?



EMAIL THIS ENTRY TO A FRIEND

Email this entry to:

Your email address:

Message (optional):




RELATED ENTRIES
links for 2008-06-30
links for 2008-06-27
links for 2008-06-26
links for 2008-06-25
links for 2008-06-24
links for 2008-06-23
Three days left to sign up
links for 2008-06-20