Posts tagged with ‘google’:

USF students mapping San Francisco

We’re deep into the design phase of the University of San Francisco site; our heads are full of the words and images we’ve been looking at with our committee and a larger,  unofficial group of students and staff. 

One of the parts of the job that’s been really fulfilling for us is following the work being done in David Silver’s Digital Media Production class— it’s great to see all the exciting stuff they’re doing with Flickr, Google Maps, Twitter, blogs, and the intersections among all those media.

Something I’ve been working on for a while— ever since hearing about the class’s Google Maps assignment— is a map that would incorporate all the individual students’ Google Maps of San Francisco.  If done right, this will result in a USF-driven map of the city, with students’ words and pictures populating a dynamic map that would give prospects a true students’ eye view of what’s happening.

So today I have a proof of concept!  I’m using a Web app called MapChannels to integrate Google Map feeds; it’s a little unsatisfying to rely on a third party for this, as I’m sure it’s something Donald could code in a few hours, but he’s doing more important stuff, so it’s MapChannels for now.

I’ve used Twitter to locate the students’ maps, and one by one I’m adding them to this master map.  This definitely feels like a beta, but it’s still pretty cool:

San Francisco, mapped by USF students

An observation about art and commerce

You know you have the most well known Web brand in the world when you can make this your home page for a day:

Google home page, January 28

IPv6

I don’t know much about IPv6, but this post on the official Google blog has a pretty great “update” postscript.  And this post is pretty interesting too.

See, Tonya?  Blogging is really not that hard.