Community indicators are often more powerful when mapped. And interesting data, when mapped, can often tell us something more than any table or graph might.
Now it's getting easier and easier to make maps happen.
Lyle at his new PublicValue blog pointed me to a news article about how widespread and easy mapping tools have become.
The
New York Times ran an article called
With Tools on Web, Amateurs Reshape Mapmaking 27 July 2007. the article begins this way:
On the Web, anyone can be a mapmaker. With the help of simple tools introduced by Internet companies recently, millions of people are trying their hand at cartography, drawing on digital maps and annotating them with text, images, sound and videos. In the process, they are reshaping the world of mapmaking and collectively creating a new kind of atlas that is likely to be both richer and messier than any other.They are also turning the Web into a medium where maps will play a more central role in how information is organized and found.Here are a set of resources that can turn anyone into a mapmaker:
Google Maps: My MapsGoogle Earth (download)Microsoft maps (for Virtual Earth download, click on "3D")Microsoft CollectionsPlatialMotionBasedWhat can you do with maps? Check these links out!
MAPS
Graffiti in Federal Way, Wash.Hydrofoils Around the WorldCheap Eats in New York CityIllinois Yarn StoresBiodiesel Stations in New EnglandTrace Tribute Endurance Horse Ride by April JohnsonGeotagged Photos From Flickr UsersFavorite Places to Eat In Seattle While BoatingTour de France StagesTop 10 Oregon VineyardsDo you have a favorite map to share?