COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Department of Geography - main Departmental seminar series > OpenStreetMap and CycleStreets: collaborative map-making and cartography in the age of the internet
OpenStreetMap and CycleStreets: collaborative map-making and cartography in the age of the internetAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Professor Michael Bravo. The arrival of web-based mapping from Google and others has revolutionised, in the space of only five years, the way many people interact with maps and map data. And the success of projects such as Wikipedia highlight how collation of small amounts of information from large numbers of people – an approach called ‘crowdsourcing’ – can challenge traditional models of data collection and ownership. Bringing these concepts together is OpenStreetMap, a collaborative project to create a free editable map of the world. Well-established enterprises such as the Ordnance Survey are coming under increased pressure from this new model, and large companies such as MapQuest and Microsoft are starting to use and invest in it. Martin Lucas-Smith, Webmaster in the Department, and one of two main developers of the leading UK-wide cycle journey planner website, CycleStreets, will discuss OpenStreetMap, its use within a wide range of systems (from cartography, routing, and even its central role helping deal with the Haiti disaster) and discuss the challenges it poses to traditional forms of cartography and data collection. Slides and resources from this talk are now available at http://www.geog.cam.ac.uk/research/seminars/110224openstreetmap/ This talk is part of the Department of Geography - main Departmental seminar series series. This talk is included in these lists:
Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsHispanic Research Seminars Cambridge American History Events Camtessential GroupOther talksVision Journal Club: feedforward vs back in figure ground segmentation Requirements in Application Development 'Nobody comes with an empty head': enterprise Hindutva and social media in urban India Cerebral organoids: modelling human brain development and tumorigenesis in stem cell derived 3D culture Uncertainty Quantification with Multi-Level and Multi-Index methods Prof Chris Rapley (UCL): Polar Climates Migration in Science 'The Japanese Mingei Movement and the art of Katazome' Graph Legendrians and SL2 local systems Singularities of Hermitian-Yang-Mills connections and the Harder-Narasimhan-Seshadri filtration Cambridge - Corporate Finance Theory Symposium September 2017 - Day 2 Making Refuge: Scripture and Refugee Relief |