Making Sense of Census Data With Google Earth
mikemuch writes "Imran Haque has developed a mashup of Google Earth with data from the U.S. Census Bureau, called gCensus. The app uses the XML format known as KML (Keyhole Markup Language), which can create shapes and colors on the maps displayed by GE. Haque had to build custom code libraries (which he's made available as open source) that could generate KML for the project. He also had to extract the relevant data from the highly counter-intuitive Census Bureau files and store them in a database that could handle geographic data. gCensus lets you do stuff like create colorful overlays on maps showing population ages, race, and family size distributions."
Imagine what applications you cook up with this .....
Perhaps there's a way to fuse the presentation possibilities with Gapminder?
The Census Bureau has meticulously documented its data files--in a 635 page PDF file.
Wow, now thats a file format.
Libertarian Leaning Political Discussion Forum.
The Census is equally important as voting. Special interest groups representing minority organizations work closely with state and local governments when they draw up political districts. What an awesome tool to hold those officials accountable and give other groups a voice - open access for everyone.
I hope, when they die, cartoon characters have to answer for their sins.
I'd like to see maps of the disparities between exit-poll and actual vote tally numbers, one map per election. This will make it possible, and not just "possible": once someone has putatively done the work, it'll be easy to check, because the raw data are available from trustworthy sources (cue cynicism in 3) so anyone can redo the map to check for distortions.
This makes whole classes of questions easier for mere mortals to answer, and simultaneously makes their answers easier for mere mortals to understand. It's huge.
As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
When I go to work, I don't make something meant to absorb butter and gravy.
You might, if you worked in Idaho.- Give a man a fire and he's warm for a day, but set him on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life.