Archive for February, 2009

Feb 19 2009

TV cycling coverage is dead

Published by perrygeo under Uncategorized

Real-time spatial application developers take note…

I’ve been following the Tour of California this week (looking forward to the Solvang Time Trial this Friday) and have been disappointed with the TV coverage on Versus. Its not that the coverage is bad, its just that long-distance endurance sports don’t lend themselves to the traditional 2 announcers and 1 camera format. There are multiple groups of riders and so much spatial information to keep track of if one really wants to understand the dynamics of a cycling event.

Maybe I’ve just been spoiled by the Amgen Tour Tracker. It is a crowning example of a spatially-aware real-time web application.

It provides two cameras of live coverage, live commentary with interviews, chat, summary updates, gps tracking of riders shown on both an elevation profile and a yahoo-based aerial map, “gps+” location prediction, race standings, time checks, etc. Far more information than any TV coverage without resorting to information overload.

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Feb 12 2009

Stimulus watch

Published by perrygeo under Uncategorized

Last time I posted on this blog, Hillary and Obama were still battling it out for the Democratic nomination. Now Barack Obama is our president with an uphill battle to save the economy. So yeah, it’s been a while. I haven’t been doing too much innovative Geo-related stuff lately, hence the lack of blog posts. I’ll try to pick up the pace a bit, even if I have to resort to fluff pieces like this one…

Well, it looks like the economic stimulus bill is going to pass. The bill doesn’t actually specify the projects that will be funded; the money will be allocated to cities and some federal grant agencies. The mayors have already proposed thousands of “shovel-ready” projects that might get a green light depending on how much funding the city gets.

There’s a great site, stimuluswatch.org, that allows the public to review these proposals. Good to know where our tax dollars are headed!

There are several GIS proposals ranging from projects with specific, well-defined (and measurable) objectives to the nebulous “Give us $500,000 to upgrade our cities’ GIS program”. It will be interesting to see which ones pan out, which ones produce results and which ones are just a pure waste of taxpayer dollars.

P.S. If you’d like to see where most of my time and energy is going these days, it’s training for the US National Cup mountain bike race series. My cycling exploits are available for all who are inclined to read them.

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