Mapufacture
One of the projects demonstrated by Andy Turner at BarCamp Grand Rapids was Mapufacture. Developed by Andy, with Guilhem Vellut and Mikel Maron, the site functions as an RSS aggregator with a difference. As well as pulling in the latest content from feeds, it also extracts GeoRSS data from those feeds and plots the results on a google map. You can read an announcement here.
Mapufacture is one of a number of apps that are demonstrating one of the key ways that I hope the web is going to move on from the ‘Web 2.0′ phenomenon, showing how open data can begin to be leveraged using tools designed for average users. Open APIs are all well and good, but it’s only as their potential is opened up to non-traditional users that I think we’ll really begin to see the potential.
The first generation of mashups, created by coders, usually for coders, are an important testing ground and serve to show people the power of open data. But once it becomes easy for people to realise their own ideas of how to combine data we suddenly have a much larger population of innovators.
Aside from Ning—which, with its emphasis on “apps,” may appear a bit heavier than most people think they need—there aren’t many examples in the wild that do more than aggregate RSS in various ways and/or plot data on maps. But the more advanced tools can’t be far off, can they?
Selected (belated, extended) Saturday Links
about 1 year ago - Comments Off
The past two weeks haven’t really left time to compile my selected links, though there have been many. A few days at SxSWi (on which more, later) followed by travelling with the family and the inevitable work backlog moved blogging way down the priority list. So here’s a mammoth selection to get me caught up. More >
Auto Center and Zoom with YM4R
about 3 years ago - 2 comments
When I blogged last month about abstracting mapping with YM4R I commented: What I’ve not yet discovered (and may not be implemented) is a way to automatically center and zoom a map. It would be very nice to be able to add a batch of points to a map and have the plugin automatically work More >
Flickr geotagging
about 4 years ago - 1 comment
Back from Greenbelt last night, I spent some time this morning trying out flickr‘s new support for ‘geotagging’ by placing all my photos on a map. The interface is nice and hopefully as the API is updated and more uses for the geodata emerge, more and more users will geotag their photos. I’m imagining a More >
BarCamp Grand Rapids 2
about 4 years ago - 1 comment
This weekend was the inaugural BarCamp Grand Rapids. I was only able to make it for the day on Saturday, missing the previous evening’s introductions, talks, and trip to Grand Rapids Brewing Company, but it was good to be able to attend, and even better to have it just a short bike ride away. It More >
Comments are closed.
about 4 years ago
What about tools like MeeboMe + WordPress? Embedding an IM widget in your blog sidebar by drag-n-drop (if you’re a user of the WordPress.com service) seems accessible to non-techies, and it represents an interesting mashup of sorts. Since MeeboMe is based on Jabber/XMPP, it seems meets the “open data/API” requirements. Or am I misunderstanding what types of tools you’re looking for post-Web 2.0?
about 4 years ago
Yeah, meebo looks like a pretty good service and a good indication of what’s possible, but I’m more looking for much more generalised ways to build things. Ways to take two or more almost arbitrary pieces of content and produce a new thing of your choice (restricted by the nature of the data, naturally) from them.