Walk of the Dog

 abstract, gps, map  Comments Off
Jun 062011
 

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This map is not a gps drawing of the owners track walking the dog, but the track of where the dog walked (mostly ran).



 Walk of the Dog



I attached my gps enabled phone to the dogs collar (highly protected, insulated) and let him loose until finished walk.

Loved the idea of a record of where he went drawn. go to the google map and really see the zoom of where he went, ok I know its just green. 



 Walk of the Dog



Reminds me of Claude Heaths drawings from blind folded. 

http://goo.gl/maps/ISNt



dog4 Walk of the Dog dog3 Walk of the Dog

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May 092011
 

Atlas of the Habitual

FInding himself in a new town, with a new job, Tim Clark started tracking his location on August 24, 2010, and ended 200 days later on March 13, 2011. Every time he stepped out, he turned on his GPS logger, and then would tag that trip with information about what it was for or what happened. Atlas of the Habitual is the result.

Technology allows us to see information in a way we never could before. Atlas of the Habitual is about creating data out of the everyday, the hyper-digitizing of your life.

This atlas is a catalog of my experiences over 200 days. It is a realistic self portrait of my everyday habits and developing routine, piecing together my life action by action, map by map.

While the maps show the travel patterns of a man show most people don't know, it's fascinating in the Feltron Report sort of way.

The most interesting part is the little stories behind the maps. Clack has made 60 maps so far, using simple breakdowns based on time, events, or his tagging. There are for example maps for the weekend, when the Chilean miners were rescued, and when he went on dates.

Here's a map for Unpleasantries:

The times I was the most miserable. Includes the time I got pulled over and received a speeding ticket, saw a dead deer fall off the back of a pickup truck, got frustrated for driving past a hiking trailhead several times, running my car into a snowbank, driving 40 miles on a tire donut because I hit an eight foot ladder in Albany NY, and having to walk my bike because it either broke in some way

Then my favorite: Dirty Underwear.

Laundry is time-consuming and expensive. Total distance on map: 39.80 miles.

[Atlas of the Habitual via infosthetics]

Apr 122011
 

Do you have a photograph of a place in Derby? Then upload it to here http://mappingderby.com/, have it geotagged, printed and added to this brilliant, low-fi, photographic map of derby.

DSCF0038 300x225 Mapping Derby

' FORMAT needs your help to Map Derby. Throughout FORMAT Festival we will be asking Derby visitors and residents to photograph the city streets under the theme of ‘Right Here, Right Now’. Each photograph will be uploaded and geo-tagged to create a unique map of the city. Give us your thoughts, memories and inspirations of the city.
There will be a growing installation in The Royal Insurance Buildings, 2 The Strand, Derby where a 3D map of the city will grow day by day.' http://mappingderby.com/

DSCF0043 1024x768 Mapping Derby

Ok, its not completely low fi they use a lovely printer called a poga printer that uses paper that has the ink inside it so no need to replace cartridges, apparently £8.99 for about 70 sheets (I realise I sound like I just discovered apps for the first time). But I love the pins and pictures relating to that area on a lovely a3 enalrging, hockney-joiner, A-to-Z photocopies that arent quite as smooth as google street view but I think adds to its charm and beauty with the handmade approach.

DSCF0036 1024x768 Mapping Derby

I also love that pins go off the map into unchartered terrains and only the photographs are the evidence of it. It is wierd for an exhibition to be on woodchip wallpaper I must admit and i suppose the only thing I didnt like was that the map had gaps because of the walls, couldnt orientate myself, not that i'm that familiar with Derby, but maybe i'm being picky. They have tried to adapt a space to present this project and the online digital geo-tagged images on a google map are great.

Format Festival was excellent too, with collaborations on projects with Magnum.

http://www.formatfestival.com/

Related posts:

  1. Chaumont Graphic Design Festival
  2. Mapping Modernism
  3. Mapping Genes

Feb 222011
 

Comob is a digital arts project that explores the potential for collaborative mapping with GPS technology. Comob was developed as a research tool to explore social and spatial relationships between people in motion.

comobhand Collaborative GPS Visualisation App

'The relationships between people and spaces elicits a variety of responses, including intimacy, irritation, and exhilaration. We are interested in an awareness of where other people are and how that affects our experience of place. This workshop will look at how those relationships can be mapped, as live and moving visualisations'

Comob is an application developed for iPhones that explores collaborative mapping with GPS technology. The software allows members of a shared group to see each other’s position and movements in real time on their mobile phones.

You can download a free iPhone app ‘Comob net’ from the app store with more information on the project available at http://www.theportable.tv/contemporarycartographies. Wheres the Android app?

http://www.comob.org.uk/

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Oct 152010
 

Can you picture it! Well google are probably well on their way developing it, but I want to share more doodles and ideas on this blog more.

universal translator

Won't it be brilliant to use this as an app on your phone, or automatically detect a langauge from a sender then automatically translate it to the language you understand in their reciever. It cant be far away from development.

There is voice to text search app from google on my android htc, i'm sure there is text to voice that I hear students playing with on the mac with it. I can appreciate it probably takes a lot of servers to manage with the global population wanting to converse and communicate in their own lanaguage to other businessmen.

If you take the shannon and weaver communication model diagram of 1949 was... the noise in the middle would be the server translating and detecting idioms (uk an example would be: dog and bone, or up north: put wood in 'oil) and dialects.

Example:

English Voice to English text - server translate text (like at this site on toolbar) - Japanese Text to Japanese Voice

I admit the text to voice convertor might be limited in its translation of tone of the message from intonation of speech and inflection that comes from the rubato of spoken word. Maybe in time it can measure the pace, the raise in volume, the length of pauses, irony, but for now the nearest we can get to word for word meaning would be excellent.

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Related posts:

  1. Visually Identifying Zombies
  2. Imagine Visual Thinking
  3. Wireless Brain Mapping thoughts