Tag Archive for 'tech'

WordCamp New York

OK I guess this officially makes me a WordPress fanboy but I am really psyched!

I’ll be attending WordCamp New York Sunday October 5th :)

WordCamp NY I'm Attending

WordPress runs this website.

feed Yahoo! Search: WordCamp
  • WordCamp 2007 |
    WordCamp. WordCamp San Francisco 2007 is over, but this site is an archive of what happend. … WordCamp is a 2-day conference for WordPress users and. […]
  • WordCamp San Francisco |
    Live: Wordcamp 2009 by Andrew Mager … WordCamp SF 2009 highlights By Jason Menayan. WordCampSF 2009 - The WordPress Community …
  • WordCamp Portland ” September 19-20, 2009 at WebTrends |
    I’m excited to announce a couple more speakers for WordCamp Portland. … Time to ramp up our efforts to secure sponsors for this years 2 day WordCamp. […]

RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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Location Scouting Using Your BlackBerry / IPhone / SmartPhone

I recently purchased a BlackBerry Pearl 8130 (”Pearl” would seem to denote the small pearl-like trackball located on the face of the device used for navigation) (photos).

Regarding the purchase of the BlackBerry itself, it’s not like I needed to throw more moolah at yet another gadget for my kit, but the offer was too good to refuse:

  • As a long-time Verizon Wireless customer, I was due for a phone upgrade, consisting of a $100 credit (…and 2 year renewal of my contract…)
  • There were also two separate $50 rebates available on this particular phone at the time
  • The list price of the phone was $249 = minus $100 credit minus $100 in rebates = a $50 BlackBerry - how could I refuse?
  • What initially inspired me to consider going with a BlackBerry or other smartphone was an experience I had last winter location scouting with the producer I was working with at the time, we were driving around Brooklyn and Queens, visiting some location candidates we had both already researched in our offices but still needing other options; this particular producer was the proud owner of an Apple IPhone, so, as we drove, carefully concentrating on vehicular traffic as is reccommended in conditions likely to be encountered somewhere like New York City, she was able to use a combination of features included in her IPhone i.e. GPS, high-speed internet access / Google Search / Google Maps and of course, the phone itself to make appointment requests or other calls as needed.

    As I drove, she would search on Google and Google Maps for the business category listings (we happenned to be looking for auto parts stores and flower shops at the time…) and local business listings which would typically include the business name / address / phone number; then, using that info and Google Maps we could drive directly there. If we got lost or turned around - GPS to the rescue! :-)

    I estimate location scouting this way saved us at least a day in research *not* driving around “aimlessly” as might have been required using “old-school” location research and location scouting methods. Yellow Pages? what are Yellow Pages? ;-)

    Oh, yeah - the IPhone also contained an IPod which we were able to play thru my truck’s stereo, which was nice - I have my own IPod but it was on the blink at the time - subsequently it was replaced by Apple (for free :-) as it turned out it was defective…

    In any case, it was at that point I decided to start looking at acquiring a smartphone - the IPhone was really nice, with its large display screen, Apple ingenuity and features - but it also cost about $500 at the time plus + / - $100 for the service each month, so I would have been looking at the (arguably steep) *cost of the IPhone at that time and the additional cost of the additional service to my existing Verizon cellphone service of about the same amount (the IPhone service is only available thru AT&T Wireless or cancelling Verizon contract (which would include a stiff penalty of several hundred dollars…), so… I started looking at the BlackBerry - which has a splendid reputation of its own and in fact was “the” pioneer in smartphone technology.

    *In case you have been living in a cave lately, Apple recently announced the IPhone G3 at a much reduced cost for the equipment. Reportedly, the service is more expensive, so over time you end up paying more? …but then again maybe that’s easier for people to whom it matters - spreading out the expense of maybe a little more each month but over a long period and without having had to plop down a lot to get onboard …and inconsequential for still others?

    I am very pleased with my BlackBerry! There are LOTS of mobile applications available due to BlackBerry’s popularity, including many…

  • Google applications for mobile, i.e. Gmail (including Mail / Google Apps), Google Maps (which includes ** My Location), Search, Calendar, GOOG-411 (voice-technology 411 service) and other useful FREE applications.
  • Yahoo has its own mobile application that bundles a number of similar features and is in fact very elelgant, but I have had intermittent problems with it crashing my phone (requiring a soft reset fix by removing the phone battery and turning the phone back on…)
  • Of course, there are many BlackBerry native applications included in the phone from the time you first turn the thing on…
  • You can search for other BlackBerry Apps
  • **My Location is NOT GPS - its positioning technology relies on cell towers to determine your position - generally, for the purpose of getting “un-lost” I find it quite adequate - and it is FREE - GPS service thru Verizon is a separate, paid service ($9.99 / month I think…), but I have my own separate GPS unit I can use if I need to provide exact coordinates of a location.

    Verizon’s unlimited personal Blackberry email / web data service that I subscribe to is $29.99 in addition to my regular voice plan, (its corporate plan, which is required if you work for a company that uses BlackBerry’s Enterprise Server is $44.99 / month. The extra $30 / month is a little stiff to a penny-pincher like me, but it is unlimited internet / email and several factors make it a wash. What follows are considerations you may want to make for yourself:

  • A while back I ditched my landline phone and ported the number to my Verizon Wireless service. The additional line costs me $9.99 per month as opposed to the $40-$50 / month I was paying for the landline - hey, the new line even included a free cel phone :-)
    Note: the possible down-sides to relying solely on cellular telephony are:

  • limited 911 emergency service capabilities
  • no landline for receiving faxes - but I use an electronic fax service - which costs $16.95 / month - working on eliminating this expense…
  • no landline for processing credit card merchant transactions using a merchant terminal - I solved this by using PayPal’s online payment processing; fees are competitive with my old conventional merchant account and no additional equipment (i.e. terminal, printer) to own / clutter my desk / wear out…
  • your mileage may vary depending on your business model / personal needs…
  • The BlackBerry does SO many things well, it will be a while (if ever) that I upgrade my laptop computer - I basically don’t need the laptop for mobile internet / email anymore… The laptop is currently needed for tasks particular to location scouting and other business chores for applications such as PhotoShop / Word / Excel, etc and a large, fast hard drive for working with images and other data is needed, but the laptop I currently own should be good for all this for a while.
  • Umm, oh, yeah, the BlackBerry is also a camera phone, but I personally have never been crazy about the image quality of camera phone photos - I much prefer my trusty, rusty Leica D-Lux3 ;-)

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    Cameras That Phone Home

    Reuters: Lost cameras “phone home” to catch thieves | Fri Jun 6, 2008 12:27pm EDT

    By Franklin Paul

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - “Alison DeLauzon thought the snapshots and home videos of her infant son were gone for good when she lost her digital camera while on vacation in Florida.

    Then a funny thing happened: her camera “phoned home.”

    read the rest

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    links for 2008-06-05

    Brown Turtleneck Sweater
    Brown Turtleneck Sweater
    RockIt NY
    RockIt NY
    Right Arm Productions
    Right Arm Productions
    Ride Creative
    Ride Creative
    PUSH - Creative and Media Productions
    PUSH - Creative and Media Productions
    Proper Production
    Proper Production | Locations Props Production
    pix producers, inc.
    pix producers, inc.
    PHOTOGROUP
    PHOTOGROUP - A Full Service Production Company
    PBNY Productions
    PBNY Productions
    Parlay Productions
    Parlay Productions
    oxen productions
    oxen productions
    NYDK Productions
    NYDK Productions
    www.nlpproductions.com
    www.nlpproductions.com
    mission photo production
    mission photo production | mary pratt | complete photo production services locally and around the world
    Frances Manzi Productions, Inc.
    Frances Manzi Productions, Inc.
    llproductioncasting.com
    llproductioncasting.com
    KinoKamera
    KinoKamera
    Leah Mara Productions
    Leah Mara Productions
    Kranky Produktions
    Kranky Produktions
    inna khavinson productions
    inna khavinson productions
    JW Digital
    JW Digital
    Tyler Pappas
    Tyler Pappas
    jbp
    Jessica Brown Productions
    Industry Productions
    Industry Productions
    INTRODUCING INDUSTRIAL COLOR
    INTRODUCING INDUSTRIAL COLOR
    GreenpointStudios.com
    GreenpointStudios.com
    Foundation World Inc.
    Foundation World Inc.
    Focus Rental LLC - Focus Photo Equipment Rental New York NYC - Miami
    Focus Rental LLC - Focus Photo Equipment Rental New York NYC - Miami
    MirjamEvers.com
    MirjamEvers.com
    Envy Works, Inc.
    Envy Works, Inc.
    Ennis Inc
    Ennis Inc
    Mark Edward Inc. - Fashion Stylists, Makeup Artists and Production Services
    Mark Edward Inc. - Fashion Stylists, Makeup Artists and Production Services
    Captureforce
    Captureforce // digital capture // digital tech service // digital photo assistant // NY NYC New York
    Resource 411
    Resource 411
    Branching Out Productions
    Branching Out Productions
    Turks and Caicos Productions
    Turks and Caicos Productions
    cindiblairproductions.com
    cindiblairproductions.com
    BEDNARK.STUDIO
    BEDNARK.STUDIO
    a76production.com
    a76production.com
    ajproductionsny, inc.
    ajproductionsny, inc.
    Martha Lazar Casting
    Martha Lazar Casting
    Location Shoot, location scout, house available for movies, Location house rental, filming
    Location Shoot, location scout, house available for movies, Location house rental, filming
    Welcome to NAMIB FILMS
    Welcome to NAMIB FILMS


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    SEO for Artists

    …via Idiot’s Guide to Blogging:

    SEO for Artists: Tips to Help your Art Rank Higher in Search Engine Results

    Collection of posts focusing on selling art online from Empty Easel

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    WriteToMyBlog

    WriteToMyBlog

    “WriteToMyBlog is a free web based word processor for your blog. Create post entries for your blog from right here, completely free, no membership required; can post to multiple blogs simultaneously, manage your posts; works with all major blog programs and is easy-peasy!”

    go there

    Doesn’t have a whole lot to do directly with location scouting, but looks incredibly useful as a writing tool.

    If you are a busy location scout but also like blogging about what you do, sometimes it gets tedious stopping in the middle of whatever you are working on to navigate to your blog / logging in / navigating to the admin panel / navigating to the editor / only then writing / editing / publishing that little gem of wisdom you hoped “would only take a minute…” ;-)

    What’s “different” about the WriteToMyBlog application is it’s web-based, as opposed to being software you have to install and run locally or a browser addon, therefore relieving one’s self the annoyance of additional desktop clutter and memory / CPU usage.

    I could take or leave the built-in TinyMCE editor, one thing I actually really like about WordPress’s post / page editor is the plain-text / code editor - it’s just the extra 2-3 clicks then waiting for my server to load everything up to get to it when I am in a hurry that gets frustrating sometimes.

    So here goes my first post using WriteToMyBlog…

    Post-blog-posting analysis:

    And then, sometimes, we don’t always “see the forest for the trees” - umm, I just bookmarked the “new post page” at nyc.locationscout.us …duh…

    …now back to our regularly-scheduled programming…

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    links for 2008-04-26


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    Wifi on NJ Transit

    @tangerinetoad sez, “It appears that NJ Transit has WiFi on board? Tweeting off something called “NJTransit WiFi“. Go figure. Commute improved 100% about 2 hours ago from twhirl

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    Flickr Geotagging Bookmarklet / loc.alize.us

  • Flickr Geotagging Bookmarklet / loc.alize.us | Get the bookmarklet here.
  • Aemkei at Sumaato Blog writes:

    Localize Bookmarklet - Map Your Flickr Photos! | Overview

    “I just spent some time to create a slim bookmarklet that enables mapping, geocoding and geotagging directly in your Flickr photo page. It works with all common browsers without the need for any extension.”

    read more

    This bookmarklet worked great for me, you save it to your Bookmarks (Firefox) or Favorites (Internet Explorer), log in to your Flickr page and a photo you would like to geotag. Click the bookmark and let the magic begin!

    The bookmarklet adds the code to your Flickr page to create a url at Google Maps and a link on your Flickr page to the map.

    Here is a photo set I tagged using the bookmarklet. Very kewl!

    Helpful for a location scout using Flickr to assemble an album of location photos and there is a need to indicate the geographic location of the photos.

    Sumaato also created loc.alize.us, a Google Maps mashup.

    Above is a loc.alize.us page for me.


    localize.us

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map

    update 4/21/2008 | added maps | original timestamp: December 22, 2006 at 9:23


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    Bloglines Post

    location scouting resources and a del.icio.us social bookmarking primer

    By locationscout (me)

    Location scouts, location managers and interested parties in the film, tv, video and photo production industries are encouraged to check out and perhaps participate in and contribute to the online film production community via some of the following websites and forums (in no particular order):

    locationtalk

    google groups:

    alt.tv.commercials

    rec.arts.movies.production

    rec.video.production

    flickr/locationscouting

    zimbio- location scouting (I started this group)

    ma.gnolia/locationscout (I started this group)

    locationscout linkit (I started this group)

    wheresspot- website (Paid-subscription service)

    The preceding is an excerpt from a post I made on another location scouting blog.”

    read the rest

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map

      updates

    • 4/21/2006 | added map / feed
    • last timestamp February 14, 2008 at 4:12 pm
    • original timestamp: June 10, 2006 at 4:24 pm

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    Online File Storage for Location Scouts?

    The jury is (and may always be) out on the best solutions for digital file archiving and backup. What follows are some thoughts about same and some solutions I have been exposed to:

    Here’s the scenario- as a location scout, I deal with A LOT of photos- individually they are not unusually large files, but between scouting jobs and photos that people send me of their property, I look at and have to deal with organizing a heapo’ pictures on just about a daily basis! Not only that, in the location scouting biz, information is money so there have to be ways to access this visual information quickly(as well as the contact info and notes about each- but more on that later…).

    The first place any photos go when I aquire them is a remote 160 GB Firewire (or IEEE 1394) hard drive pretty much dedicated to archiving location photos, shortly after which, especially if the photos were made for an in-progress location scouting job, they get uploaded to my Locamundo account for immediate use in an online location album and archived for permanent reference.

    Call me paranoid ;-) but what if:

  • my hard drive crashes?
  • locamundo crashes? (the photos get compressed on locamundo too and I have prefer to have “original photos”). Also I could lose my internet connection temporarily (its happenned more than once and could occur on the Locamundo end or my ISP’s end (network problems, severe weather/ power outage) in any case, its annoying and does nothing to help me help my client solve their problems, which we are more often than not trying to do on a tight deadline.
  • I have many of my files backed up locally on yet another local harddrive partition, but all these files on the same machine take up a lot of hardrive space. The cost is not such a problem in and of itself, harddrives get cheaper every day; however, all these files lying around in partitions on the same local harddrive(s) do nothing to help speed along more mundane tasks such as searching for files, whether they be related to location scouting scouting or not and really increase the time it takes for my anti-virus program to do its daily scan of my system. I defragment my hardrives regularly to help keep them speedy and healthy and lots of files make that go much slower as well.

    Purchasing additional removable drives might be the way to go.

    In “the real world”, the fact is, once my files are uploaded and keyworded on Locamundo, I may not ever need to touch them again, or if I do it is likely to be a long time before I do, but the fact remains that I cant just delete them.

    Enter online storage solutions.

    Right now I am trying out MediaMax Streamload. Streamload is the name of a Windows program ditributed by MediaMax which runs locally(on my computer) as a service and provides a secure network link to my private file storage account on MediaMax’s server. At this writing, MediaMax provides a free 25GB account, upgradable to provide more storage space. Then next upgrade level is 100GB for $4.95 per month, which is very affordable and which I might move up to as soon as I figure out why Streamload is hanging when I try to access the local folders where my files are located. I like the online solutions, they do backups on their end as well.

    But…like I said, I gotta lotta files, it could be a matter of organizing them differently so the Streamload application doesnt cease to respond. Compared to local drives, an internet connection, from dialup all the way up to heavy-duty broadband connections are pretty lightweight. You can cram just so much info in a data pipe at time. It’s always something…

    Update: After opening a free Media Max account and downloading and running the Streamload Beta, when I used it to find my files to upload, the program hung and had to be forced closed. Kinda defeated the purpose of using proprietary software whose stated purpose was to facilitate uploading large numbers of files simply and quickly. When I needed to do a restart my entire system hung. I rebooted to safe mode and to try and uninstall Streamload that way but its uninstaller would not work in safe mode. I had noticed that Streamload was running as a Windows Service so I disabled it there, rebooted normally and uninstalled Streamload. Summarily, it didnt seem to play well with my system, your mileage may vary.

    Hmm, maybe there are some Bittorrent solutions out there? In addition to bittorrents typically taking a LONG time (this is my experience- again, your mileage may vary), they rely on a pool of people sharing a file to pass the pieces to each other and the Bittorrent app takes up recources while it is working- I dont wanna share my files with others and sometime I have to have a lot of programs open on my computer that I need to be running full steam- I sure dont need bog-downs and crashes trying to make a deadline! Still, gotta look into that a little more

    CD’s/DVD’s you say? Been there, done that. Takes forever, ties up computer resources and the media (the cd’s/ dvd’s) data deteriorates over time. I have two crates of cd’s that I have used to back up files over the years and everytime I put one in the cd drive, if it is more than a year or two old, there is a good chance it is unreadable- corrupted. I have cd’s going on ten years old, I probably have a lot of files I may never again have access to. File recovery is VERY time consuming or VERY expensive. Remember Zip Disks and floppies? What a laugh!

    IDE, Firewire and USB Harddrives have become very affordable so, as I mentioned above, this is a road I have followed as recently as the past year or so. Traditional IDE hardrives of very good quality can be bought very cheaply and the prices seem to continue to drop. Cases and USB/Firewire interfaces amke these drives removable and portable. These drives are fast. May be time to buy some new hardware.

    I welcome feedback about all this so, for now, I am going to leave comments open for this post, something I rarely do, as I just dont have time (you see me trying to buy just a little time doing backups here don’cha?) to put into housecleaning blog spam. Akismet, do your thing! We’ll see how it goes…

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map

      updates:

    • 4/21/2008 update | added map / feeds / general cleanup | previous timestamp: March 5, 2008 at 8:13 pm
    • Note: Post updated Sat March 5th, 2008.
    • Note: Post updated Sat Feb 17th, 2007.

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    links for 2008-04-19


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    My Post Map(s)

    Thanks in no small part to Andrew Turner of Mapufacture and GeoPress, here is a map of all the geotagged posts on nyc.locationscout.us.

    feed nyc.locationscout.us :: Mapufacture
  • There is also a postmap for rrhobbs.us, my work blog.
  • Thanks, Andrew!

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    links for 2008-04-12


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    Wired: Crowdsourcing

    Wired 14.06: The Rise of Crowdsourcing

    “Remember outsourcing? Sending jobs to India and China is so 2003. The new pool of cheap labor: everyday people using their spare cycles to create content, solve problems, even do corporate R and D.”

    read the rest

    Technology and business models are changing daily… one has to play their best game and make wise, sometimes complicated choices to be successful in the world of commercial photography. Ability to adapt, change be flexible and think on one’s feet is a prerequisite in the world of selling imagery for profit… not that that is anything new.

    Changes in commercial photography (as well as film, tv and video ) markets directly affect the production (including location services) industries. Articles such as this help provide insight as to marketing and planning for location scouts / location managers as well.

    feed Wired Top Stories

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map

    update 4/11/08: added map, feed, general cleanup | original timestamp: May 30, 2006 @ 09:03


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    Links for April 2nd

    These are my del.icio.us links for April 2nd:


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    Geotagging Accessories For Digital SLR Cameras

    MapRoom | Solmeta DP-GPS N1

    “Over at the Geotagging Flickr group, Michael Kirk has posted a review of still another geotagging accessory for a digital SLR camera, Solmeta’s DP-GPS N1, which works with high-end Nikon and compatible digital SLRs (i.e., D200 and up, Fuji S5 — anything with the 10-pin data port), embedding geographical coordinates directly into the images’ EXIF data. (The similar DP-GPS C1 is compatible with more cameras and seems to be a traditional GPS data logger, adding the coordinates later via software.)”

    read the rest

    Honestly, I personally don’t use full-blown Digital SLR’s for location scouting - My Leica D-Lux 3 works great! Be interesting to see if this can work with the D-Lux3.

    This could definitely have potential for use creating Q-spheres, tho…

    feed The Map Room
    • The Web Goes Local | Friday, 3 July 2009, 9:47 am
      Clive Thompson’s piece on location services makes a point I was planning on making in a future piece, damn him, as he looks at how location services. […]
    • New Digital Elevation Model Covers 99 Percent of the Earth | Wednesday, 1 July 2009, 8:43 pm
      A new digital terrain map for the planet is now available. Based on imagery from the Japanese ASTER instrument on NASA’s Terra satellite, the new g. […]
    • Derrick Story on Geotagging | Monday, 29 June 2009, 10:09 pm
      A couple of articles by Derrick Story about geotagging went up on Macworld’s website back in April: one that looks at four automatic methods of geot. […]

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    Mapufacture

    What is Mapufacture?

    Mapufacture provides up-to-date, personalized geographically relevant information. Find interesting feeds from blogs, photos, weather, friends, and activities. Build maps of the places you care about. Share these maps and use them on the go. Search for interesting things around the world.”

    What’s going on here?

    “Welcome to the Mapufacture help center. Where do you want to go today? No, really, do you want to go to New York, or perhaps Abu Dhabi, or even Wellington. Wherever you live, or want to go, Mapufacture can help you find out what’s interesting.”

    So you register for a Mapufacture account and start adding RSS feeds (preferably, specifically and ideally, geotagged feeds - voila! there they are on the map!

    What does any of this have to with location scouting you might ask? - well, you could use Mapufacture to manage a location scouting project, such as perhaps setting up a Wordpress site or a site using another CMS to manage your list(s) of locations (make a post for each location(?) to generate the feed - you should geotag each post (GeoPress Plugin could work well for this) or simply add the longitude / latitude or the GPS data for each location - btw Flickr photos can be be geotagged.

    Once you have created your map, you can embed it on your site OR (this is fun) use the KML file url Mapufacture generates for your map and plug it into a Google Maps search. If you have a Google Maps account you can also get weather and traffic reports as well as use many other valuable Google Maps tools.

    So now you have a relatively easy way to present a map with placemarks containing all the locations and data you want to share with the rest of the production team and / or clients about each location and all the locations as a group, perhaps with regard to where each is located in relation to each other (logistics)… Many calendar resources provide feeds as well so could be utilized for scheduling too :-).

    feed mapufacture blog
    • Mapufacture acquired by FortiusOne | Monday, 4 August 2008, 8:20 am
      We are incredibly thrilled to share the news that FortiusOne is acquiring Mapufacture. You can read more about the news at HighEarthOrbit, the Fortius. […]
    • PocketMaps - paper maps of dynamic data | Wednesday, 30 July 2008, 4:36 pm
      At Mapufacture, we have been continually pushing out the boundaries of the GeoWeb and exploring new territory. Linking together complex geospatial dat. […]
    • Business Week covers Disaster Maps | Monday, 7 July 2008, 10:20 am
      This morning, Business Week published an article, Making Maps Work When Disaster Strikes: GeoCommons, OpenStreetMap, and Mapufacture are three online. […]

    My First Mapufacture Map


    My Mapufacture Map

  • Mapufacture elsewhere on this website
  • Mapufacture on the web
  • geotagging elsewhere on this website
  • geotagging on the web

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    NYC Film Office Pages Links

    Here are links to the more-often used pages on the New York City Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre, Broadcast and Television website. On these pages is lots of info (as well as live forms and instructions) that you need when dealing with MOFTB and New York City film and photo permits

  • NYC MOFTB Permit Forms
  • NYC.gov - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre & Broadcasting - Permits Guidelines for Parks Photography
  • ! Please also read: Information Every Film Production Coming to New York City Needs
  • Still Photography

  • NYC.gov - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre & Broadcasting - Permits Parks Permit Page
  • NYC.gov - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre & Broadcasting - Permits Still Permit Instructions
  • NYC.gov - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre & Broadcasting - Photo Permits
  • NYC MOFTB Still Photo Permit- stillpermit.pdf
  • NYC.gov - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre & Broadcasting - Permits Still Permit Instructions
  • Film and Video

  • NYC MOFTB Film Permit Form
  • NYC MOFTB Film Permit Form Instructions
  • NYC MOFTB Film Permit Insurance Requirements
  • NYC MOFTB Schedule A Sample- vtu_sample.pdf
  • NYC MOFTB Schedule A Sample- mult_locations.pdf
  • NYC MOFTB Schedule A Sample- holding_parking.pdf
  • NYC MOFTB Schedule A Sample- driving_shots.pdf
  • Schedule A

  • NYC.gov - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre & Broadcasting - Permits Schedule A Instructions
  • NYC.gov - Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre & Broadcasting - Permits Schedule A
  • NYC MOFTB Schedule A Form
  • NYC MOFTB Drop/Add Form
  • ! Please also read: Information Every Film Production Coming to New York City Needs
  • Other film offices and related content on nyc.locationscout.us
  • RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    del.icio.us :: TagMasher

    …yet another adventure in deploying lightweight do-it-yourself (DIY) tech solutions inna location scoutin’ bidness.

    The title says it all. I was looking for a way to aggregate (collect) bookmarks (…favorites…posts) on del.icio.us that are most relevant to location scouting.

    Conventional wisdom would seem to dictate that a search of tags such as “location scout” would be in order.

  • There are several del.icio.us-specific peculiarities that make this a more complicated task than it might seem on the surface: Because of the way del.icio.us handles tags, multiple word phrases (i.e. location scout) must be joined together so there are no spaces between the words, otherwise “location” and “scout” become two different tags. Obviously there are a number of ways to accomplish this; I decided that:
    1. locationscout
    2. location+scout
    3. location-scout” and
    4. location_scout
    5. …were likely to be the most popular syntaxes.

  • Also the mashup I found to aggregate the bookmarks has a 4-tag limit (more about this shortly), so, given the parameters, the syntaxes above dovetailed into the plan pretty smoothly.

    Tag searching using the del.icio.us website interface is limited to just one tag. I needed to find a way to search del.icio.us using multiple tags at once.

    Enter Yahoo Pipes. Pipes is a recent “whatsit?” (to me, anyway ;-) …all I know is it will “do stuff” using various web2.0 features such as accessing and interfacing with various API’s, databases and such and that there has been a good deal of chatter in the tech circles lately about Pipes. It does look a little like Ning, but I haven’t had a chance to play with Pipes at all other than this little side-project. (BTW some people think I am a bit of a techy, but it’s not true; real techies are always able to see that I am just someone who knows enough to be annoying and dangerous- just ask my web host ;-)

    In a nutshell, “someone” (one Derek Van Vliet, actually…) figured out how search del.icio.us using 4 tags simultaneously as well as aggregating the results. The results are effective because they consist of posts that only had to use at least *one* of the tags as opposed to a heavily filtered list including only posts having to use all the tags, the former seeming to be the default of many database searches. Yet, still, the Pipe seemed to handle filtering out “noise” results such as “boy scout” or “store location”, etc. very well. :-)

  • del.icio.us Tag Masher - 4 Tags Pipe
  • …which I renamed slightly to reflect the manner in which I am using the pipe, which is ok because all this kind of stuff in this neck of cyberspace is pretty open-source and in fact experimentation is generally encouraged.

    Once I ran the Pipe and had my results (a web page exportable as an rss xml feed, of course :-) like any good web2.0 app should…)

    I took the feed link and made a Feedburner feed. I like Feedburner because there are so many additional features available that can be used on raw rss feeds. If you have worked with Feedburner much at all, you’ll know what I am talking about.

  • del.icio.us :: TagMasher :: locationscout :: location+scout :: location-scout :: location_scout Feedburner Feed
  • While I was setting up the Feedburner feed, I set up a SpringWidget, which is the box below and which is used to display the feed here on this website.

    What? of course, these are all free web services. (Altho, not provided by me)

    Update I also used the tags “locationscouting“, “location+scouting“, “location-scouting” and “location_scouting” on del.icio.us Tag Masher - 4 Tags Pipe.

  • del.icio.us Tag Masher - 4 Tags with tags locationscouting, location+scouting, location-scouting, location_scouting (Derek van Vliet’s original)
  • del.icio.us Tag Masher - 4 Tags with tags locationscouting, location+scouting, location-scouting, location_scouting (my clone)

  • Feedburner Feed made from Derek’s Pipe w/ tags applied:

    Yahoo Feed of my clone:

    feed del.icio.us Tag Masher - 4 Tags - location scout

    Cloned del.icio.us Tag Masher - 4 Tags with tags locationscouting, location+scouting, location-scouting, location_scouting Grazr Widget

    Grazr
  • Update 3/21/08 | I cloned it! I felt a lot less intimidated by THE PIPE ;-) this time out so I just went in there with a hammer and a wrench ;-) … removed (from this post) …SpringWidget, added (to this post) …original Pipe note(s), my clone / feed URL, added map | original timestamp: April 07, 2007 @ 14:29
  • RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


    Sphere: Related Content

    GeoURL + Other Mapping Stuff

    If you are a location scout and you dont know nuthin’ ’bout maps, well then, you aint… well let’s just say you should!

    It hardly seems accidental or coincidental that most location scouts and location managers (as well as many directors, photographers, dp’s, producers and pa’s) seem to have at least just a little bit of that “techy gene” that gravitates them towards stuff like maps, organized data, gadgets, electronics, etc, etc… in any case, maps is useful stuff!

    I mean, isn’t it pretty much assumed that you are real good at finding stuff? Aren’t you the “go-to” person to get your crew to and from a location as expeditiously and safely as possibly?

    You might be a location scout if… ;-)

  • Do you own a GPS? (I do)
  • …how’bout a really good compass? (that too)
  • Do you spend an inordinate amount of time on Google Maps?
  • ...ponder ways to geotag your location scouting photos? …gotta luv FlickrMaphere’s mine
  • …I rest my case…

    …but I digress…

  • Title: The GeoURL ICBM Address Server
  • Webspace: GeoUrl
  • Description: “GeoURL is a location-to-URL reverse directory. This will allow you to find URLs by their proximity to a given location. Find your neighbor’s blog, perhaps, or the web page of the restaurants near you. GeoURL is listing 2,159,636 sites.”
  • Add your site (also see below)
  • Location Resources (pretty good list of online mapping links)
  • GeoURL (yummy GeoURL chicklet for this website)
  • GeoUrl Page for this website
  • I was very surprised to find there was not a Wikipedia page for GeoURL. Short of writing it myself, in the meantime, I have created a request for a GeoURL page to be added to Wikipedia

    Basically, what happens is (using a very useful helper if you need it) you add the supplied metatags to the head (truncated for illustration) section of your homepage*

    *this is admittedly somewhat “techy” stuff here… if you don’t already know, then it is up to you to be motivated enough to read and learn for yourself - read: don’t even think about writing me asking for “internet lessons”

    If you view the source of my home page you will see the following metatags:

    meta name=”ICBM” content=”40.86335, -74.16205″ / (truncated for illustration) (hint: see anything looks just an itty bitty teeny weeny bit like latitude and longitude?)
    meta name=”DC.title” content=”nyc.locationscout.us” / (truncated for illustration) DC.title

    Voila! - that is how GeoURL indexes your website :-)

    If you look on the results page for a GeoURL lookup of this website, you will see quite a bit of useful info:

    “last updated 2008-03-21T11:34:54, created 2006-08-29T00:06:04.
    atom | rss | Google Maps | MultiMap | Mapquest

    …and you will see all the other indexed websites geographically near this website as well. Neat, huh?

    read more

  • One of my other sites, rrhobbs.info, uses a tool called Wikimap that uses GeoURL as well…
  • geotagging content on nyc.locationscout.us (related)
  • Geo (Microformat) (Wikipedia, related)
  • hmm, GeoTwitterous looks interesting (…via Mashable (thx)…
  • I cloned the GeoTwitter Pipe

  • nyc.locationscout.us Mapufacture Map

    Map Room Blog

    “A blog about maps by Jonathan Crowe, The Map Room covers everything from map collecting to the latest in geospatial technology.”

    read more

    feed The Map Room
    • The Web Goes Local | Friday, 3 July 2009, 9:47 am
      Clive Thompson’s piece on location services makes a point I was planning on making in a future piece, damn him, as he looks at how location services. […]
    • New Digital Elevation Model Covers 99 Percent of the Earth | Wednesday, 1 July 2009, 8:43 pm
      A new digital terrain map for the planet is now available. Based on imagery from the Japanese ASTER instrument on NASA’s Terra satellite, the new g. […]
    • Derrick Story on Geotagging | Monday, 29 June 2009, 10:09 pm
      A couple of articles by Derrick Story about geotagging went up on Macworld’s website back in April: one that looks at four automatic methods of geot. […]
    feed The Map Room Directory
    • Ball State GIS Research and Map Collection | Friday, 26 June 2009, 12:12 pm
      The GIS Research and Map Collection (GRMC) is an integrated GIS lab and traditional map collection located on the second floor of Bracken Library. The. […]
    • GIS Web Maps | Friday, 26 June 2009, 12:11 pm
      Blogging on the current state of GIS & Web mapping applications out on the Interwebs.
    • Geographicus Antique Map Blog | Friday, 26 June 2009, 12:09 pm
      On antique maps and the rare map trade.

    The map below uses GeoPress, which has been mentioned elsewhere on this site.

    feed GeoURL Log
    • Changed server | Wednesday, 30 January 2008, 4:34 am
      Whoops. Earlier this month server that was running the geourl.org webserver started having hick-ups (also known as crashing daily). It would reboot pr. […]
    • GeoURL Reloaded | Saturday, 24 November 2007, 3:31 pm
      Whoot! Excuse the mess, we’re rebuilding. I’ve finally taken some time to clean up the code, optimize some slow paths, implement some new features. Th. […]
    • GeoURL meets Google Maps | Monday, 13 June 2005, 10:28 pm
      Leigh Dodds made a super neat GeoURL to Google Maps converter using the RSS feeds. Thanks Leigh, that’s awesome! :-) Thanks for the suggestions for th. […]

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


    Sphere: Related Content

    AICP Estimating Form at NYPG

    NYPG (New York Production Guide) is designed to match the AICP (Association of Independent Commercial Producers) bid/estimate categories and general workflow.

  • Download the AICP Bid/Estimate Form at NYPG
  • nyc.locationscout.us / R. Richard Hobbs listing at NYPG
  • other NYPG content on nyc.locationscout.us
  • RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    Sprout

    Sprout

    “Create Living Content. Sprout is a quick and easy way for beginner and pro users to create living content including, websites, banners, videos, music, photos, RSS feeds, calendars and more. Make your own in five minutes.”

    read more


    This is fun - I can definitely see photoblogging uses as well as other possibilities…

  • BTW this Sprout features a real location house in north Jersey, in “the zone#40737. Contact us for more info.
  • This house was also featured here
  • feed Sprout: Blog
    • The SF Sprout Social Media Summit (Watch Live 9:30AM PDT) | Monday, 29 June 2009, 11:01 pm
      What is the Sprout Social Media Summit? A half-day social media summit that brings together the social media thought leaders from the top agencies, br. […]
    • Sprout 2.2 Product Release Notes | Monday, 29 June 2009, 2:41 pm
      Approximately once a month, we release new features, improvements and fixes to our products. Every release has a version number and this was release 2. […]
    • Our Twitter stock just went up, invest now. | Wednesday, 24 June 2009, 6:07 pm
      Looking back at my first tweet as a Sprout employee, Sproutbuilder: #SWAT Summit was great. A lot of exciting fervor around the companies who build ap. […]

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    Location Scout Linkit

    short version:

    location scout linkit (locationscout.ning.com):

    New York City and Northeast US Film Offices

    misc location scouting and film production resources

    long(er) version:

    I “started an app” (well, actually I “cloned” Amy’s Robot: Linkit) on ning.com, which is a Web 2.0 /php/html/ajax (with rails in the wings) mashup (which probably means nothing to you)…

    But I digress: whats very kewl about ning.com is you get to mashup their mashups! …and you dont have to be a programmer to achieve some considerable productivity in the process~ even kewler is, if you *do* know anything about writing code, the source for all their applications (”apps”) is available right on the site in true open-source fashion. More info here (if you’re the technically inclined type).

    It took me about an hour to create locationscout linkit, it’s just links to most of the film offices and some of the production resources I call on fairly regularly, but since locationscout linkit is based on social bookmarking, folksonomy and tags (in the old days I think it was called “collaboration” ;-) I hope others will contribute their own bits of location scouting information so we can all become more productive.

    My Network Creator Profile on Ning

    My Developer Profile on Ning

    related content on this site about Locationscout Linkit

    updated 3/13/08 added related content / feed / ning profiles
    original timestamp: May 27, 2006 @ 17:58

    -RH


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    Wireless SD Card

    LifeHacker: Stuff We Like | Add Wireless Sync To Your Camera with Eye-Fi | …via Gizmodo

    “The Eye-Fi secure digital memory card adds Wi-Fi to any camera and supports automatic wireless uploading to your computer as well as tons of different web-based photo sites, from Flickr and Facebook to Picasa and the open source Gallery2.”

    read more

    This may be old news to early adapters (the LifeHacker article above is dated 11/1/2007) but it is news to me!

  • Eye-Fi officially announced release of its Eye-Fi Card October 30, 2007.
  • News of gadgets like this make location scouts (like moi ;-) salivate!

    …or at least seriously consider if the product has practical uses and whether it is worth the $99 price tag (or the hassle to return it?) to find out?

    (Wikipedia - Secure Digital Card):

    Secure Digital (SD) is a flash (non-volatile) memory card format developed by Matsushita, SanDisk and Toshiba for use in portable devices, including digital cameras, handheld computers, PDAs, mobile phones and GPS units, as well as the Nintendo Wii video game console. SD card capacities range from 8 MB to 32 GB as of 2008, although sizes less than 128 megabytes are rarely sold in stores.”

    read more

    What is unique about the Eye-Fi Card is that in addition to the storage media, it contains a wi-fi transmitter!

    Manufacturer’s tech specs and requirements:

    Technical Specifications -

  • Wi-Fi Security: Static WEP 40/104/128, WPA-PSK, WPA2-PSK
  • Range: 90+ feet outdoors and 45+ feet indoors
  • Storage Capacity: 2.0GB (1GB is defined as 10^9 Bytes)
  • Power: advanced power management optimizes use of camera power
  • Card Dimensions: SD standard 32mm x 24mm x 2.1mm
  • Card Weight: 0.1oz.
  • Requirements -

  • Eye-Fi Card requires Internet connection to set-up and WiFi network for wireless transfers
  • Eye-Fi Card works with virtually all digital cameras accepting SD memory cards
  • Eye-Fi Card works with 802.11g, 802.11b and backwards-compatible 802.11n wireless networks
  • Eye-Fi software runs on Windows XP, Windows Vista, Mac OS X (10.3, 10.4 and 10.5)
  • Eye-Fi software works with Internet Explorer 6 and 7 (Windows only), Firefox 2.0 (Windows and OS X) and Safari 3 ( OS X 10.4 -10.5)
  • read more

    Related:

  • Secunia 3/4/2008 Eye-Fi Multiple Security Vulnerabilities
  • feed Eye-Fi
    • User Profile: Dave @ Woot! | Thursday, 2 July 2009, 8:00 am
      We love hearing about how you use your Eye-Fi card. Our new User Profiles allow you to share your Eye-Fi story with us. If you’d like to be showcase. […]
    • 5 tips to showcase your photography | Tuesday, 30 June 2009, 8:00 am
      Have you thought about using your photos as a means of improving your buying power? Wondering how the pros do it? These 5 tips will show you how to he. […]
    • User Profile: Kyle Rivas, impressing 2,700 people at graduation | Thursday, 25 June 2009, 8:00 am
      We love hearing about how you use your Eye-Fi card. Our new User Profiles allow you to share your Eye-Fi story with us. If you’d like to be showcase. […]

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    Studio Daily

    Studio Daily

    “The Resource for Film, HD, digital production and post news, tools, tutorials, reviews and case studies. Home of Studio Monthly and Film & Video Magazine. | Studio Daily

    About Studio Daily:

    Studiodaily.com is a new portal site dedicated to helping film and video pros evolve in their crafts and jobs through access to information on tools, workflow, technique and collaboration. You’ll find hands-on reviews, tutorials, interviews with creatives and step-by-step case studies in the beta version launched in mid-October.

    Designed as a convenient front end to the Access Intelligence titles, Film & Video, Studio/monthly, HD/Studio and DI/Studio – the site provides news five days a week and will soon evolve to offer video, rich media tutorials, ecommerce, and web-exclusive content.”

    Studio Daily includes sub (web) sites Film&Video, Studio Monthly and HD Studio. Studio Daily also publishes a Blog.

    feed The Resource for Film, HD, digital production and post news, tools, tutorials, reviews and case studies. Home of Studio Monthly and Film & Video Magazine. | Studio Daily

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    We’re All Out of Polaroid

    CNN Money | Polaroid shutters the Polaroid | February 8 2008: 5:22 PM EST | …via Engadget | Polaroid no longer does Polaroids

    The photography company long known for its self-developing film cameras moves to focus on printers and digital technology.

    “BOSTON (AP) — Polaroid is dropping the technology it pioneered long before digital photography rendered instant film obsolete to all but a few nostalgia buffs.”

    The times they are a changin’… when I was a photo assistant we would drag CASES of Polaroid Instant Film all over the country - Shooting Polaroids was a part of the work day - the wait for the photo to develop, the smell… you could make the the little metal case into a picture frame… it all seems so “quaint”, like a typewriter or fax machine - Even the name sort of starts to sound like some over the hill retro b-movie horror flick character or something? LOL!

    Heck I worked on ad shoots for Polaroid! LOL

  • Polaroid Corporation Website
  • Polaroid on Google Images
  • some Polaroid instant cameras on Wikipedia
  • Polaroid Corporation Wikipedia Page
  • Google Alerts - Polaroid

    Eva Lake: posters and polaroids 4 Jul 2009, 4:30 pm

    Of course the most important Polaroid from the collection of Randy Moe is the one above, whom we knew as Jim Jim. But the other portraits are a fabulous treasure trove I would like to curate into an exhibition if I had the means.
    Eva Lake - http://evalake.blogspot.com/

    Source: Google Alerts - Polaroid Google Alerts - Polaroid | Eva

    Polaroid Fashion & Other Awesomeness: Running away. 4 Jul 2009, 4:30 pm

    I ran away, and went on vacation, so it's been quite impossible for me to update with anything. But I have new polaroids and a new bruise on my leg, so things should be start working themselves out soon. Posted by Virginia Wolfe at 8:53
    Polaroid Fashion & Other Awesomeness - http://polaroidfashionists.blogspot.com/

    Source: Google Alerts - Polaroid Google Alerts - Polaroid | Virginia Wolfe

    Hiss and Hearse » Blog Archive » Artist Interview: L.A. 4 Jul 2009, 4:30 pm

    After stumbling across Chloe Aftel's gorgeous photography portfolio, I was immediately drawn to her surreal digital and Polaroid fashion imagery. I wrote her to tell her how amazing she was, and a meeting was arranged one afternoon at
    Hiss and Hearse - http://www.hissandhearse.com/

    Source: Google Alerts - Polaroid Google Alerts - Polaroid | Kristin!

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    Windows Live Writer

    It’s true what they say and now I’ll say it some more - Windows Live Writer is very  kewl (if you use Windows ;-) . (Try this if you are looking for an offline blog editor for your Mac)

    Windows Live Writer is an offline blog editor - it really is just "best of show" and about 100x better than the native post editor built into Wordpress, my web publishing platform of choice.

    …some reasons why I like Windows Live Writer:

    1. WLW is fast - it runs off my computer’s cpu and not my ISP’s server bandwidth
    2. no need to be online while editing
    3. elegant interface
    4. WLW breaks links at the end of linked words / phrases automatically - I wish I could get Gmail to do that
    5. large development and support community which translates into lots of plugins and extra features
    6. WLW is FREE ;-)
    7. unlike a lot of M$ gigs, WLW seems to play by the same rules and plays well with the rest of "the gang"

    Thank you I’ll get off my soapbox now and get back to the regular location scouting programming.

    Related Posts


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    Outtasite Geocoder

  • WorldKit Geocoder
  • more toys (brainoff.com)
  • …via MetaFilter
  • Mikel Maron is the author of the WorldKit Geocoder and Brainoff - “Building Digital Technology for Our Planet

    Excerpted links from Brainoff sidebar:

  • GeoRSS
  • Mapstraction
  • Mapufacture
  • OpenStreetMap
  • WaterWiki
  • World as a Blog
  • worldKit
  • The map at the bottom of this post (via GeoPress Plugin) relies heavily on GeoRSS and Mapstraction.

    We location scouts love this kinda stuff :-) (helps a lot to know where you are going and even more importantly - how to get back there ;-)

    feed Brain Off
  • related content: location scouting
  • …related content: geocoding
  • …related content: geotagging
  • …related content: maps
  • RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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    Go to MIT For Free

    …via Weblog Tools Collection via bavatuesdays

    MIT OpenCourseWare

    “OCW is a free publication of course materials used at MIT.

  • Get lecture notes, problem sets, labs and more.
  • Watch lecture videos and demonstrations.
  • Study a wide variety of subjects.
  • Tour | History | FAQs

    OCW is not an MIT education.

  • OCW does not grant degrees or certificates.
  • OCW does not provide access to MIT faculty.
  • Materials may not reflect entire content of the course.”
  • using WordPress…amazing…

    RH | GeoURL | NAC | Plazes | Dipity | outside.in | Mapufacture | Post Map


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