It's Easter and I find myself aggregating geonews for you - don't you see how much I love you ;-) Expect less news this week since I'll be participating to the FOSS4G-NA conference. So here's the latest geonews in batch mode.
In the open source and open data front:
In the miscellaneous category:
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The Landsat 5 mission is officially suspended after 28 years, we mentioned its recent problems
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Kurt shares four entries on vertical datums
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APB shares an Esri Developer Summit 2012 RoundUp
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APB also shares an entry named Doctor’s Offices and Access to primary health care - Esri Map Story
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The GEB mentions GraphEarth, a 25$ tool to generate charts for Google Earth
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Several blogs participated to the raw data vs API discussion
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This infographic will inform you on the current state of MapQuest, MapQuest also have a new section to explore U.S. National Parks
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WebMapSolutions offers two entries whether we should retire the term GIS - my take is that GIS is useful since it refers to something specific and unique
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Somewhat related, Very Spatial shares entry on the new GIS end-user: "These users know how to navigate and interact with consumer maps and expect all their interactions with spatial technology to be this simple. They don’t, in any way, want to “see” GIS or have to learn a new vocabulary of terms like vectors, georeference, buffer, and shapefile." No pain no gain?
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APB mentions a U.S. Congressman Introduces “Map It Once, Use it Many Times Act”
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O'Reilly shares an entry on the do's and don'ts of geo marketing
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Spatial Sustain has an informative entry named Let the Drone Mapping Race Begin
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Unsurprisingly, Slashdot discusses a story named Many Police Departments Engage in Warrantless Cell Phone Tracking
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The recent Direction Mag articles I found interesting:
In the maps category:
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