The history of maps in 1,400 words

Monday, September 05, 2005 (19:22 UTC)

Directions Magazine has a great big-picture article, Spatial Information Management (SIM) - Then, Now, Next, which provides a potted history of GIS that puts the current technological rapids in context. Among the gems:

First, information technology always evolves toward the way that people think and act. Location is a fundamental part of the way we think and act.

I too have wondered why it took so long for web information to finally start reorganizing itself along geographic lines. I suspect the URL, and the location-free dimension it inhabits, is soon going to be thoroughly linked to coordinate pairs, not least by Google Earth/Maps and the swarm of social mapping applications that it is breeding.

I learned a lot from this article.

Permalink | Del.icio.us | Connotea

Comments

Yes, this was good reading. On a related note, see the story on my Blog about "Business Opportunities and Google Earth" dated August 30th, 2005.

Posted by: Frank Taylor at 23:58 UTC, September 05, 2005

Post a comment





Remember Me?


(you may use HTML tags for style, and also <a>)

Note: After your comment has been submitted, you may need to reload the page before it becomes visible.

Search Ogle Earth:
Ogle Earth brings you news about virtual globes, with a special focus on Google Earth. By Stefan Geens. Email me. Last tracked here:
Get updates via email:

NeoGeo Jobs

Ogle Earth: Recent posts

Archives