Book Review: Mapping Hacks

Author: DrPatPublished: Jul 06, 2005 at 3:07 pm 3 comments

I'm an avowed fan of O'Reilly's Hacks books, and familiar with the theme: software links and code-sets to help you get the most out of a particular computer application. Usually much of the excitement and imagery is mental, and you need some visualization skills to "see" what will result before you actually try a hack.

For that reason, I was totally unprepared for the sheer beauty of Mapping Hacks, which provides "tips and tools for electronic cartography." To start with, the book, written by Schuyler Erle, Rich Gibson, and Jo Walsh, is sumptuously illustrated. Hundreds of full-color photos and maps are scattered throughout the pages.

What hasn't changed is the organization; like other Hacks manuals, Mapping Hacks is a collection of mostly stand-alone explorations into cartography, the visual telling of compelling stories about the where of things. Every story has a place, the authors explain in the introduction, and cartography combined with geography is the means for effectively communicating that tale.

Then there are the hacks themselves. Even someone who has never considered a map as anything other than a nuisance to refold on a road trip will find something here to delight. We have hacks for mapping our lives, our neighborhood, our world, for mapping on the Web, with gadgets, and on your desktop. Sections also cover hacks for discovering names and places online, building the geospatial web, and mapping with other people.

You may not think you're into mapping, but consider Hack #7: "Will the Kids Barf?" This builds on a previous hack (#5, "The Road Less Traveled By in MapQuest") to calculate the queasiness factor of a curvy road. You'll know before you take off on that road trip whether to pack the Dramamine or not!

Or look at Hack #18, "Why You Can't Watch Broadcast TV." This walks you through the process of calculating the "viewshed" (the areas on a map which are not in a broadcast "shadow") for any spot in the U.S., using the U.S.G.S. digital elevations models available for free. To create viewshed maps for other areas, the authors refer us to Hacks #64 and #74, and a piece of software called GRASS, which can accept GPS input for several wonderful applications.

In "Mapping Your World," Hack #22 will amuse your kids as they begin their map explorations. Titled "Digging to China," this hack outputs PostScript images that plot the opposite point on the globe from a chosen starting point. Iif you dug through the center of the Earth from San Francisco, in the illustrated example, you'd have a hole full of water—the opposite point is in the middle of the South Pacific. This section also has marvelous hacks for playing with different map projections, plotting great-circle routes on various projections (cylindrical? think about it), and rendering topographic maps into landscape images, among others. You can even map other planets!

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Article Author: DrPat

DrPat is the blog signature used by an old coot who hoards books, dances Argentine Tango, cooks a mean venison chili, and is happy to be along for the sag while my spouse does a marathon bicycle ride. …

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  • 1 - Drew from Zhrodague

    Jul 11, 2005 at 7:59 pm

    It's a neat book, with lots of interesting stuff in there! Of course, I'm a little biased, but I have learned quite a bit while reading it.

  • 2 - gala

    Aug 16, 2005 at 9:39 am

    does anyone know if there is an actual word for the opposite point on the globe for where you are. I'd imagine it might be called an anti-something but I cant figure out where to find it.
    If you know please email me at gandolina@hotmail.com
    thanks

  • 3 - Aaman

    Aug 16, 2005 at 9:40 am

    anti-podal or anti-podean

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