Posts Tagged ‘MapGiving’

Free Natural Earth Vector Data

Natural Earth Logo

We are extremely happy about yesterday’s launch of the new Natural Earth data set.  Natural Earth is a public domain map dataset available at 1:10m, 1:50m, and 1:110m scales.  The site is now fully available for downloading of all data.

The idea was to create tightly integrated vector and raster data, to make it much easier to make a variety of visually pleasing, well-crafted maps with cartography or GIS software.  Started by Nathaniel Kelso of the Washington Post, and Tom Patterson of the U.S. National Park Service Natural Earth is a NACIS and MapGiving co-branded product with assistance from the University of Wisconsin-Madison cartography lab, Florida State University, and others including Springer Cartographics (we designed the logo and did the design and development of the website). (more…)


NACIS Meeting 2008/MapGiving

NACIS 2008
Last week I was in Missoula, Montana at the annual NACIS Meeting.  The meeting is one of my favorite events of the year, bringing together so many cartographers in one place.  Every year I look forward to seeing the awesome people that are a part of this organization, and it always feels like “old home week.”

The meeting is a 3 day event, with the first day dedicated to “Practical Cartography Day” which showcased software demos and presentations about the processes of actually creating maps.  For the 2009 meeting in Sacramento, I will be coordinating the PCD session along with Neil Allen of Allan Cartography.  The sessions on days 2 and 3 are papers and presentations with typically a more theoretical approach, with lots of interesting topics.

This year I went a day early to participate in the MapGiving event, a 12-hour map-a-thon where 2 teams produced maps pro-bono for the Hank Aaron State Trail in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.  I was the captain of the team producing the interactive version of the map, along with Jim Meacham (Univ. or Oregon InfoGraphics Lab), Jeremy White (Blueshirt.com and a grad student at the Univ. of Wisconsin), and Nat Case (Hedberg Maps). (more…)