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23
Oct 09

Crowdsourcing the Shape of Neighbourhoods – Tom Taylor

This September, I had the pleasure of chairing the inaugral geoweb stream at the AGI GeoCommunity 09 Conference. Over the next few months I will be releasing videos of the best talks here for all to see. First up, is the talented Tom Taylor, who amongst other things is working on Newspaper Club – a service to help people make their own newspapers. I recently had the luck of contributing a little bit (a map) to the incredibly useful Postcode Paper, made as a demo for the recent data.gov.uk experiments.

Postcode Paper

Here, Tom is talking about his use of the Flickr alpha shapes and how crowdsourced data can be used to create the shape of neighbourhoods:

[To see more geo related wondery, come along to #Geomob on November 19th.]

Tom Taylor – Crowdsourcing the Shape of Neighbourhoods from Christopher Osborne on Vimeo.

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20
Oct 09

Cracking the Postcode

Postcodes have become the new bugbear of the UK opendata campaigners, its something everything knows and uses as their default spatial reference to home or work. As such, its the reference that is essential to make many location enabled websites work, we almost unconciously look to enter our postcode in a little searchbox when we see a map.

I really, really don’t want to see a massive debate rage in the comments about “ooh, it should be free”, yes we all agree, but it won’t happen. The Postcode Address File is a commercial asset to the Royal Mail, who are a quasi-private company, its their IP and funnily enough they ain’t going to give it away for free.

Ernest the Troll

Ernest Marples is Down

Ernest Marples, was a valiant effort but as someone put it, was a “blatant trolling exercise” on the Royal Mail. Raising the flag, saying we’re making your copyrighted data freely available for good purposes, come and get us if you want a veritable hurricane of bad publicity.

Predictably, the Royal Mail responded with legal threats and poor old Ernest was exiled to Monaco. In the even more predictable furore that followed, we had the futile petition to the Prime Minister, and an awful lot of ‘outraged of Oxford’ posts on the OSM and data.gov.uk mailing lists.

We Need a Practical Solution

Putting together something that’s usable and won’t get you sued seems like a top priorty to me. It turns out a Masters in GIS was useful after all. The Office of National Statistics aggregates the UK’s census and national statistics to a hierarchical spatial referencing system called Output Areas, like this one which includes my postcode:

My Neighbourhood Output Area

From conversations with people from the ONS, this is free from copyright, confirmed here:

Boundaries for Output Areas (OAs), Lower Layer Super Output Areas (LSOAs), Middle Layer Super Output Areas (MSOAs) and Travel to Work Areas (TTWAs) are available free of charge to all users.

The supply of boundaries for all other geographies requires recipients to be licensed for use of OS Boundary-Line™ before we are able to supply them.

ONS Website, 20th October 2009

Output Areas are free of Ordnance Survey contamination and available to all without licence. Win. You can request a copy here.

What about Postcodes?

The ONS also make available postcode to Output Area lookup files, correct as of 2004. Free of copyright. Big win:

Conditions of Supply
There are no restrictions on the use of the information contained on this CD.

“OA to higher areas lookup readme file final.doc” – OA to Higher Area & Postcode to OA Lookup Files (Mar 2004)

What does this mean?

We can reference any postcode, free of copyright, to a local area. While it doesn’t georefence to an exact street, it does reference to an area that is perfectly usable for websites such as PlanningAlerts.com and JobCentreProPlus.com. The ONS states that each OA corresponds to about 125 households, and there are 175,434 OAs in England. Another example:

Output Area Example

What’s Next?

We had a good hacking session and I expect @simonw will be releasing something very useful, very soon. So, free postcodes for all then.

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29
Sep 09

Coming out of the closet at GeoCommunity

Amongst the many, many highs of last week’s AGI GeoCommunity conference came a personal low:

Being outed as a paleotard by Gary Gale.

You swine!

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22
Sep 09

OpenStreetMap Takes to the Skies Above Stratford

OSM Flight - Stratford Theatre

OSM Flight - Stratford Theatre

When we are not talking about bus stops and transport mapping, at Ito World we are usually editing OpenStreetMap or planning how to take the glorious OSM to even greater heights.

While talking at the Society of Cartographer’s summer conference, we heard from UKMap; a new dataset for certain areas of the UK created entirely from scratch, and designed to rival the OS’ MasterMap in detail. Its market, and the reason for its creation, is those who are fed up with the Ordnance Survey’s onerous licensing regime. Critically, those who pay to use UKMap data are not bound by Derived Data, the practice where the OS claims copyright over any data you create.

Although we currently licence some proprietary mapping data, our future is an open data future. We are constantly working with the OSM community to improve the coverage and richness of OpenStreetMap data.

What was of interest though, was the process for creating the UKMap dataset. It provided some real insight into what we do well in OpenStreetMap and what we can do better. UKMap is created in two stages: tracing aerial imagery and then paper and pencil surveying on the ground.

In this day and age I was expecting to hear of fleets of trucks with GPS units, or hundreds of surveyors armed with tablet PCs and customised mapping software. But no! Tracing over aerial photography and then a follow up ground survey, with people on the ground annotating paper maps which are then scanned in and digitised.

Sound familiar? Well, that’s how we’ve been building OSM of late, tracing aerial imagery and ground surveys, usually with a GPS.

We have long had aerial imagery to trace over, thanks to our chums at Yahoo!, but the arrival of Mike‘s fantastic Walking Papers has given us the most powerful addition to the OSM stack. Choose the area you will be mapping, print your Walking Paper, draw on the map adding details, scan and upload the image, and thanks to Mike’s technical wizardry the annotated Walking Paper is then available for you to trace and digitise online.

Walking Paper What I Made

Annotated Walking Paper for Tottenham

Before, we relied on GPS tracks to give us roads and paths, but it is a steep learning curve for those not already familiar with geogeek technology. Now, its as simple as scribbling on some paper while walking and tracing over the top. Listening to the UKMap talk it was very interesting to learn that the Walking Papers approach, was found to be much more efficient and just as accurate as surveying with a tablet PC. Importantly, the fact that UKMap have created a commercial mapping product with the same approach as OSM, validates our methods.

What are we lacking? High resolution aerial imagery. The aerial photography we have is getting old now and is not very detailed. We need higher resolution, and more recent aerial photography to improve OpenStreetMap. To kick things off, at Ito World we have sponsored OpenStreetMap’s first aerial photography flight. We sent up the intrepid John Robert Peterson, armed with a camera to photograph Stratford-Upon-Avon from the skies. We are organising an OSM mapping party at the AGI Geocommunity conference today to follow up with some ground surveying.

You can see the results here. Using MapWarper, created by the effervescent Chippy, you can reference the images to groundpoints and rectify the imagery. This is by no means perfect, but it is a first step into new territory for OSM. We need better aerial imagery and the cost is steadily decreasing, and there are many local authorities who already have the data. Indeed, Surrey Heath and Devon are working to make their aerial photography available to OpenStreetMap.

OSM Tiled Aerial Photography for Stratford

OSM Tiled Aerial Photography for Stratford

We hope this is the start of many Local Authorities and organisations to make data available to OSM, we will do the hard work such as image cutting, tiling and hosting for you. Make it available and help make a better open mapping dataset of your area. If you are at GeoCommunity and interested in donating some aerial imagery or any other data to OSM come and speak to me (I am chairing the Geoweb stream). Or drop me a line and I will point you in the right direction.

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23
Apr 09

#Geomob at the AGI – Call for Geoweb Papers

 

The AGI conference is the biggest independent Geographic Information conference in the UK.  This year #Geomob has been brought on board to organise the Geoweb stream. In 2008, the 2 day residential conference based in Stratford upon Avon attracted over 600 delegates who participated in more than 50 workshops, presentations and debates.

I have been working very hard behind the scenes to bring in Web2.0 and neogeography content.  To kick things off, I am extremely pleased to say that Andrew Turner, author of the O’Reilly “Introduction to Neogeography” and CTO of GeoCommons.com, will be giving the geoweb keynote at the conference. Andrew is focused on collaboration and user-generated content around location and time. He is actively involved in open-data projects such as OpenStreetMap and VoteReport , as well as open-source projects like Mapstraction and GeoPress.

So, feel like sharing a stage with the godfather of neogeography? The AGI call for papers is open for another fortnight and I want as much geoweb content as possible, get your paper or workshop proposal in here: http://bit.ly/42sg9g

Steven Feldman, AGI GeoCommunity Chair said “It is very exciting that we will have a full Geoweb stream within what is already a diverse and captivating conference enabling hundreds of policy makers and geo-professionals in public sector, utilities, and retail to learn more about how these new, nimble approaches can transform the application of location within their organisations and enable new services. I believe that combining a mini Where 2.0 with the UK’s largest mainstream GI conference is a significant step for the GeoCommunity and represents a great benefit for all involved.”

There is an event page at #geomob: http://gmdlondon.ning.com/xn/detail/2456365:Event:3626

Keep your eyes peeled for updates, and if we land some sponsorship I might be able to offer some reduced rate day passes to #geomob members.

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