June 16, 2007

Wired Blogger Chronicles steps to get his mug removed from Google Street View

If you know someone that's been captured by Google's Street View cameras and wants their mug off here's a great thread that chronicles the efforts of a "Wired" blogger to get his shot removed... ironically the same guy (Kevin Bankston) was captured several years ago by A9.. too funny! See Wired Blog at http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/06/want_off_street.html
He notes the following steps in a message sent to him from Google:
To expedite our ability to process your request, please use the following format on your verification form:

  1. Provide your legal name.

  2. Provide your e-mail address.

  3. Provide the street view address of the Street View image you would like removed.

  4. Include the sworn statement: "I declare, under penalty of perjury, that the information in this notification is accurate."

  5. Attach a clear, readable copy of a valid photo ID (e.g. driver's license, national ID card, etc). If you are requesting removal of an image of a location, attach a copy of a document demonstrating your association with that location ( e.g. business card or letterhead).

  6. Please e-mail your completed verification form, along with the necessary attachment, to maps-legal@google.com within 5 days. If you are unable to upload a copy of your photo ID electronically in an e-mail, you may also fax us a copy of your form and photo ID to (650) 887-0389.

The Sony Ericsson W960 - looking good!

Looking to wow your friends with a cool smartphone... forget about the iPhone this bad boy is stacked with features.. Bluetooth, USB connectivity, WiFi, major multi-media capabilities, music player, card scanner, mobile 3D graphics, 128 MB RAM and how about 8GB of memory! Comes bundled with loads of cool apps too (Quiickoffice, PDF+, Vijay Singh golf etc...) Ever seen or tried a Sony Ericsson UIQ device? They are sweet (I have a 950i walkman.. it rocks!) See more details here - http://www.symbianone.com/content/view/4577/108/

June 15, 2007

What a great name for a GIS firm

Just stumbled onto an interesting GIS / Environmental planning firm in Sacramento... See http://www.dangermond.com - what a great name for a company doing GIS!

GIS Dads.. happy father's day and a tip

With this year's ESRI User Conference kicking off this week-end you may have noticed that many dads and moms will be on the road... myself I'll be traveling on Sunday (after breakfast in bed I hope ;0) So a reminder... don't forget about dad - maybe do something special tonight or tomorrow instead. Finally, a father's day tip for you dads and Dads to be... about 12 years ago when I had my first child I was working as a GIS Analyst for an environmental consulting firm - yes indeed I am a GISuser too! With the baby coming I approached my employer and suggested that I'd like to work Monday at night so I could spend some time with my son. They were great enough to agree and it worked out very well for all of us. I did my grunt work one night a week.. alone in the office, radio blaring and being quite productive.. no interruptions from the phone, meetings, etc... just several hours of work. Best of all for several years Monday was my day with my son, usually going downtown for a long walk, hitting the park, going for coffee etc... those Mondays were gold and are still a great memory - I got loads of work done Monday nights too! Happy Father's Day to you Geo Dads!

June 14, 2007

Here's a great map of the bars and restaurants in the San Diego Gaslamp for next week's ESRI UC

Our friends over at GeomorphIS have once again created a very cool map of the restaurants and bars in San Diego's Gaslmap... this is a must have in your pocket next week at the ESRI User Conference. Print this one out and bring it with you... Grab it HERE about 250KB PDF - From Martha... Coolest addition – The Ivy Hotel and it’s rooftop bar Eden! Courtesy of GeomorphIS! - You can find a larger map and some printed tabloid copies at the San Diego Host booth in the Map Gallery. GeomorphIS www.geomorphis.com
You'll likely find me next week at Dick's, the pizza by the slice place across from Dick's (great for late night chow), poolside at the Marriott, the strip club (great grilled tuna - next door to Dick's) and at any vendor bash that's dolling out good food and loads of free beer!

June 13, 2007

A Mashup Advertising Engine to help monetize map mashups - monetize your map and maximize the use of screen real estate

Google has laid the foundation for map mashup development -- more tools, more exposure... etc... Now there's a solution (Beta) to help put more cash in the pockets of developers and map publishers. Those looking to advertise on mashups will find a really cool service that will get their ads served in a user-friendly, based on the geographic location being viewed by the map user.

Recall A Couple of Weeks Back

At Where2.0 and the recent Google Developer Conference Google announced a number of enhancements to their mapping solutions and APIs. Of particular interest was a focus on bringing more attention to mashups and making mashups more widely available to the Google search user base. Case in point... the google mashup editor, mapplets and google gadgets. Google VP Engineering, Jeff Huber noted at Developer Day that Developers are now creating apps in a 10th of the time that was required back in the day! Developers have access to more APIs, simple to use developer tools and web publishing environments. Of interest... the new model of application development includes open source, standards, mashups, and advertising.

Bringing more traffic to your mashup

Mashup Editor -- with this tool creating mashups with Google couldn't be easier. In a few lines of code and one click of a button you can publish your mashups for the world to see. Simply put, more mashups, simple publishing and sharing. Think of it as an online editor for creating your mashup with just a few lines of XML code. Test, deploy, and launch is what people want to do (experimental at this time).

Gadgets -- Recall commscore ranks google’s network as the largest on the web – half a billion users each month! So now we have the google gadgets API… popular, an open model, more than 100k gadgets created to date. Using the gadget page creator users can now put gadgets within their blogger weblog - take a gadget and embed it into your website you see where this is coming from now? Developers who create and author gadgets are inviting more traffic to their mashups. The formula: mashups + gadgets = $. With Gadgets your mashup is now widely available to more users

Mapplets - perhaps most significant to map-mashup developers is the launch of Google Mapplets... think mashups of mashups. Combining the gadgets API with the maps API Google is now enabling exploration and discovery of your content. Imagine combining your mapplets.. like hotel and weather data then toss in a crime data mashup. Enabling mashups of mashups. Once again, this is a great solution designed to bring more traffic and users to your mashup.

But where's the money?

A common question people ask is where is the money in mashups? Well, no doubt many developers are now farming out their services and earning a good living doing so... kudos! Some are also making money by authoring weblogs and writing books. But what about the revenues generated from all those people using your clever mashup map? Obviously many are embedding Google adsense ads within their web pages, however, this currently falls short of maximizing revenues based on traffic and usage. If you've ever panned and zoomed around a mashup map you've likely noticed those familiar google ads being served up on the page. One big problem though... as users zoom and move around the map advertisements don't update. Also, the ads are very often not relevant to the geographic area on the map or the topic of the web page.

A Solution... $$
Now that Google is offering a number of clever ways to increase the number of users of your mashup how to increase revenues for publishers? Lat49 is coming out with a very cool solution for mashup developers and those looking to earn some revenues from their websites and mashups. The Lat49 advertising engine will enable users to easily incorporate the engine's functionality into a mashup (regardless of which API being used - Google maps, Microsoft Live Search, Yahoo! maps, etc...) Developers will have a little creative licensing over where and how the ads appear.. the ads (which can be text, image or both) can positioned in a user-friendly location on the map. Advertisers purchase their ads by geography (more on that later) with ads being served at either local, neighborhood, urban, or a branded level. The ad displayed to a user will depend on the map zoom-level and map center. As a user pans around or zooms in and out the ad(s) will update automatically... kaching $$$! Publishers need only embed a couple of lines of javascript in their app then customize the code accordingly. Revenues will be shared and get this... will be based on the number of ads being served (not simply on click-throughs). Additional revenues will be possible based on ad performance but is apparently not necessary to rake in some green. Obviously with ads updating regularly and changing with the user's map position performance will no doubt be very good compared to the current ad solutions available.
Typical banner ads that you currently would see on a website using a mashup - banner ads don't update or change when the position on the AJAX map changes. Another common practice would be to position Google adwords to surround the map. Map see is from Rentslicer.com


Using the Lat49 solution an ad (text or graphic) can be positioned on the map so it doesn't use up any valuable real estate. Various sizes can be displayed and the ad will change as the map center moves - notice the Lat49 graphic positioned where an ad would be seen.


Lat49 is currently in Beta and developers are encouraged to contact the company to help with the initial testing. More on this can be found at http://www.lat49.com

Thanks to Tiffany and Chloe for giving me a first look at this very cool solution. I'll be really curious to see which mashups take the initiative to jump on this one first!

June 12, 2007

Event of interest - CIGRÉ Canada Conference on Power Systems (Calgary)

Just got the word from NRCAN about this event... The Conference will bring together power systems engineers, decision makers, economists, academics and others with interest in the profession. It is meant to showcase Canadian contributions, as well as to promote CIGRÉ as a strong technical organization, capable of contributing to the Canadian technical expertise and know-how through its study committees and the technical documents they produce as well as its conference proceedings. The 2007 session hosted by AltaLink Management Ltd. and supported by CIGRÉ will be held in Calgary, at the Telus Convention Centre, from August 26 - 28, 2007. For more details, registration and information about the conference please consult our web site at www.cigre.ca

June 11, 2007

Google VP People Operations testifies regarding immigration , the H1B visa situation and Google

Google has recently commented on the current immigration issue and in particular touches on issues regarding the H1B visa. I myself follow this as I was once an H1B visa holder. Google VP, Laszlo Bock  commented "We would encourage Congress to significantly increase the annual cap of 65,000 H-1B visas, to a figure more reflective of the growth rate of our technology-driven economy." He also urged Congress to address the backlog of employment-based green cards for highly skilled workers. The entire text of the communication has been posted at http://64.233.179.110/blog_resources/Laszlo_Bock_immigration_testimony.pdf 

Manchester Cathedral 3D imagery - impressive and now used on new Sony game

Interesting news on CNN today as Sony seems to be in trouble with a church in the UK. Apparently the company has released a game that has players shooting up aliens inside a Cathedral. The church is upset for obvious reasons but what's interesting is that the photo-realistic 3D renderings of the Cathedral may become part of a huge legal matter. CNN seemed to indicate that the church wasn't sure how the 3D renderings were obtained but that the 3D imagery was very similar to what is available on the Cathedral's website. Perhaps the company that developed the imagery was contacted by Sony or ?? It should be noted that indeed an impressive 3D tour is provided when you access the following website - http://www.manchestercathedralonline.co.uk/gallery.html the 3D virtual tour can be seen at http://www.mindwave.co.uk/manchestercathedral/. This technology comes from Mindwave (http://www.mindwave.co.uk/). Of interest, as I write this message Google Earth is making CNN headlines once again as there are now more calls for obscuring sensitive information from Google earth imagery. At the heart of the matter is the recently foiled terrorist attack on JFK airport. Google is boasting that much of the imagery is available via public sources.. so who's task is it to blurr out sensitive areas. Perhaps an even better question is what constitutes a sensitive area? Couldn't this include shopping malls, theatres, schools, public buildings, airports, ports, bus stations....

Be The Connected and with Nokia and Win a Nokia N95 and more

The Nokia N95 (GPS enabled smartphone) may be a bit costly but perhaps you can win one in a new contest from Nokia. Prizes in the lateste give away include this sweet bundle -- Nokia N95 Multimedia Computer, Nokia N800 Internet Tablet , Nokia BH-501 Stereo Bluetooth Headphones , Nokia CK-20W Multimedia Car Kit , Nokia AD-42W Audio Gateway
15 Lucky runners up will receive the choice of:
- a Nokia N95 Multimedia Computer and a pair of Nokia BH-501 Stereo Bluetooth Headphones, or
- a Nokia N800 Internet Tablet with Navigation Kit.
The contest ends at 11:59 pm CT on July 31st, 2007 - see http://www.betheconnected.com/

June 10, 2007

Bring your lizards to san diego and you could win a GPS system

LizardTech wants to see your lizard collection... bring em to San diego to the ESRI UC and you could win some very cool shwag! Gather all the different colored LizardTech lizards you’ve collected over the years and bring them by the LizardTech booth (#601) at ESRI 2007 beginning at 2:00 pm on Wednesday June 20th. Deadline to enter is 12:00 pm on Thursday June 21st. Word on the street has it that LizardTech will also have some very special Lizards this year... only available to special people attending special events! Stay tuned on this one! See contest details at http://www.lizardtech.com/esri2007

tutorial - Converting a Maps API Mashup into a Mapplet

Here's a very handy document for mashup developers. The doc from Pamela Fox of Geo API Team describes in details exactly how to create a mapplet. From the tutorial... Google Mapplets allow developers to create Google Gadgets that can be loaded by Google Maps users onto the main "shared" map along with other Mapplets, enabling the Google Maps user to easily create "mashups of mashups". They're a great way to reach a large audience of users, so most maps developers should consider creating Mapplet versions of their Maps API mashups. With this conversion guide, you should be able to convert your Maps API site into a Mapplet (in 60 minutes or less!).  Grab the doc at

Google Street View fallout keeps coming from nose pickers, protesters etc...

wow, the fallout from Google Street Side maps just keep on coming. This time the Denver Post has a piece reminding readers to smile as they might be on "Google camera" - think candid camera the author notes. The fallout comes from people being caught on film picking their nose, protesting at an abortion clinic, showing their thong, or ??? Should be interesting to see where this one goes although I don't suspect it will disappear any time soon. % Cities have been mapped at the street level so far (work in progress) and no doubt more will be in the pipes - or will there be more? Until then the image editors tasked with blurring out people caught with "their pants down" etc... will be pretty busy - perhaps an application that can identify faces in imagery then automatically provides a pixelation algorithm could be quite useful. Recall Google street view has started with the following cities: San Francisco Bay area, New York, Las Vegas and Miami. On a side note, the 360 degree panoramas come to street view via technology provided by immersive media - see http://immersivemedia.com/ - this technology uses a way cool system of cameras mounted in a circular device that grabbed imagery from all around while it moves down the road - the company will be exhibiting at ESRI UC next week in San Diego booth #717