GIS @ Mills

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Robert Lemon's Email

Dear all,

I enjoyed talking with you all yesterday, I just wanted to pass along a few more bits of info. I was going to pass around the few books I brought but forgot, so I will link them here. I also thought I would give Texas' Geography Dept. and geography in general a plug. We always need more geographers, so I should do some recruiting. If geography sounds somewhat interesting, I would look into it a bit further and would be happy to help. The geography dept. web site at Minnesota (http://www.geog.umn.edu/) does the best job breaking down geography into eight clusters and giving a good description of each. If you find you want to pursue geography for graduate study I highly encourage you to do so and will be happy to answer any questions when looking for the program that would fit your interests the best.

All the best,

Robert


Also, you can find Oakland data here


Texas Geography Program . (Texas has a bit of $$$ for their students, and Austin is a great place to be for a few years.)


Texas Geography graduate courses 07-09




Books:
The Human Mosaic by Terry G. Jordan-Byschov


Space and Place by Yi-Fu_Tuan


Mapping it out by Mark Monmonier



Book on Brasilia for those who would like to know more:
The Modernist City by James Holston

Lorem Ipsum

For those interested, the website Lorem Ipsum (http://www.lipsum.com/) has a nice little history of the use of the text. To give you a sense of the thing:
Lorem Ipsum comes from sections 1.10.32 and 1.10.33 of "de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum" (The Extremes of Good and Evil) by Cicero, written in 45 BC.

Fascinating little bit of reading that.

Project Powerpoint

template available here (ppt new format) or here (ppt old format).

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Two More Maps in the Media

From today's NYT. Future teacher shortages mapped. Another article "Mapping the Cultural Buzz: How Cool Is That?" reports on research (title: "The Geography of Buzz") presented at the recent annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers.

Geocoding on the Web

The service Rebecca introduced us to is at batchgeocode.com. There's a blog about the service at batchgeocode.blogspot.com.

The blog mentions that Google has a geocode service too. It requires a bit more tinkering than batchgeocode, but looks interesting.

Friday, March 13, 2009

Streets as Art

Ben Fry is a computer scientist and visualization expert who developed a wonderful tool called "Processing" for drawing pictures with computers. One project he worked on is called, simply, "All Streets." It's worth a look.