Posts tagged: opendata

Win an O’Survey football shirt in our football grounds quiz

By , 3, May, 2013 8:00 am

There’s a twist to our usual ‘just for fun’ map extract quiz today as we celebrate the 2012-13 Premier League Champions. We have a 2012-13 season Manchester United football shirt personalised with O’Survey on the back to give away.

Wondering why we have an O’Survey Manchester United shirt? The club has used one of our OS OpenData products, OS VectorMap District on their website. They have released a video guide to Manchester and changed the colour of the mapping to match their kit colours. You can see the guide on their website if you are a member, or check the image below if not. As a thank you for using our data, they personalised a shirt for us – and we’d like to give it away to a football and mapping fan!

OS VectorMap District being used on the Manchester United website

All you need to do is take a look at the map extracts below, featuring our OS MasterMap products,  and tell us:

  • the eight football clubs; and
  • the link between them.

Continue reading 'Win an O’Survey football shirt in our football grounds quiz'»

At the BETT Show

By , 19, January, 2011 5:30 pm

The Education and OS OpenSpace teams were in London last week for this year’s BETT Show. In excess of 20,000 visitors descended on Olympia to discover the latest uses of technology for teaching and education.

digimap

At the BETT Show

We were there to demonstrate a number of educational mapping tools. Centre stage was Digimap for Schools, the web service that provides access to Ordnance Survey mapping for every classroom in the country. There was also a lot of interest in OS OpenSpace, with its Web-Map Builder, and all the freely available mapping data that is now downloadable from OS OpenData.

Continue reading 'At the BETT Show'»

Wessex Archaeology – mapping the past

By , 14, July, 2010 10:50 am

You might have read my blog on Wessex Archaeology’s finds at our new head office, describing the Bronze Age Farm that was once on our Southampton site…while chatting with the team, based on the outskirts of Salisbury, I discovered just how much they rely on our data, both on paper and in numerous electronic formats. Talking to Paul Cripps, Geomatics Manager at Wessex Archaeology (WA), I discover that their mapping interests run from historic mapping to OS OpenData and a whole range in between.

 

Much of WA’s work is spatial, finding out how things relate to each other. From historic buildings to excavations to the marine environment, mapping is fundamental to everything WA do. But they don’t just use it as a backdrop, they add information about their excavations and finds too and attach that to their mapping. I was surprised to find that the historic mapping is not only needed to understand change through time but to ensure the accurate interpretation of aerial photography amongst other things; it is not always easy to work out what is shown in an aerial photograph alone and the feature may not be shown on more modern maps, a second world war bunker on a disused airfield can look very similar to a Roman fort from the air!

 

 

 

 

Paul explained to me how surveying techniques have changed over the years, “OS Net changed the way WA worked. We’ve gone from using measuring tapes to mark out the locations of digs, to using total stations (tied in to trig points) to using differential GPS units (which had to be set up 4-5 hours before work could start). SmartNet uses the mobile phone network and it only takes 5-10 minutes for us to start surveying and we capture 95% of all work with our Leica SmartNet devices. We still use total stations to survey areas where 3D recording is needed, such as buildings and structures, skeletons in graves and so on, but trenches and all basic features can be accurately captured using SmartNet.

 

“A lot of people wonder what we’re recording all the time, but initial digging on a site only covers a percentage of the area and you need to accurately map these locations. Basic info can be added onto the GPS unit as you work, then we process it in AutoCad or ArcGIS, attach our full database records to the surveyed features, add modern and historic mapping and have all the information we need in one spatial environment.”

 

WA have six SmartNet systems and want to invest in more as being able to do everything on site makes life much faster and efficient. Rather than a survey team driving around the country and setting surveys up, now the GPS systems are so simple that archaeologists can do the majority of work themselves after some basic training. This leaves WA’s survey specialists to work on training and standards (and still do some surveying too!).

 

There are some great examples of WA surveying on their website and loads more pictures of them in action on Flickr too.

Images produced by kind permission of Wessex Archaeology showing range of surveying techniques. More information can be found on Flickr.

OS VectorMap District arrives in OS OpenData

By , 19, May, 2010 2:29 pm

By now you some of you will have started to play with the latest addition to OS OpenDataOS VectorMap District. We’re very keen to know what you make of it, what’s good and what could be done better. It is an Alpha release and is the first product we’ve produced using some new generalisation software so please be forgiving with it! We will be making changes and improvements based on your feedback so it really is worth letting us know what you think, either here on the blog, as you did in my last OS OpenData post, by emailing or by tweeting us at @ordnancesurvey.

Richard and Rob from the product team have made this short video to talk in a little more detail about the product, how we think it could be used, and why we wanted to make it freely available through OS OpenData.

It’s now also almost 7 weeks since OS OpenData was launched to much excitement both here at Ordnance Survey and in the outside world. I read lots of blogs (including this excellent post from Steven Feldman) and tweets at the time, some from people asking whether it was all really an April Fool’s joke. Well you can all let out a collective sigh of relief because OS OpenData is real and is here to stay. And once the launch day jitters were sorted it’s been a great first few weeks, with a flood of data being downloaded, viewed and ordered.

Its early days but there have already been some mash-ups and apps created. Here are a selection:

· Ordnance Survey & data.gov.uk mash-ups

· Using Code Point Open in OpenStreetMap

· Comparing OpenStreetMap with Meridian 2

· Getting Code Point Open into Google Earth

· EDINA Unlock places API

· emapsite custom delivery service

So, it’s been a good start and now it’s over to you. What are you using OS OpenData for?

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