Great Open Source Map Tools For Web Developers
snydeq writes "InfoWorld's Peter Wayner surveys the rich ecosystem of free maps, free data, and free libraries that give developers excellent alternatives to Google Maps. 'The options are expanding quickly as companies are building their own databases for holding geographical data, their own rendering tools for building maps, and their own software for embedding the maps in websites. ... Working with these tools can be a bit more complex than working with a big provider like Google. Some of these companies make JavaScript tools for displaying the maps, and others just deliver the raw tiles that the browsers use to assemble the maps. Working with the code means making decisions about how you want to assemble the pieces — now within your control. You can stick with one simple library or combine someone else's library with tiles you produce yourself.'"
While I do appreciate some competition and relying only on google to provide map service might backfire some day, there is no way you can get by simply not using it.
You can use any map on your page, you still have to go to google maps and set up/edit a profile (for brick and mortar business). So I either use google or have to set up 2 different systems. There may be other uses of course, but for simple "How to find us" pages, google is hard to beat.
On the other hand I try to keep an open mind for new ideas.
Print version here: http://www.infoworld.com/print/198012
My dog is constipated.
The newest camera / smartphones have GPS chips to geotag pictures so they can be overlaid on maps. For GPS-less cameras:
EXIFtool
GPSbabel
Have a GPS device turned on and logging tracks, take pictures, use the tools to add geotags to pictures.
The good news is that once the competition has a complete map too, their tool can be just as useful as Google maps. Then it's just a matter of who makes the nicest UI and who can generate a map on your screen the quickest.
It's quite unlike Google itself, where their search engine seems to generate more and better results than other search engines (I admit, I might be biased).
So, I can foresee some competition for Google Maps soon. And that is good news.
You should have modded yourself offtopic.
You should have modded yourself offtopic.
You can't mod and post on the same article, which is a pretty good policy.
I still don't see any map libraries for non-web applications.
A few months ago I developed a mobile in QT, and haven't found any library to easily show a map in on screen.
I haven't found one for QT for desktop either, or any of the other common widget libraries. While embeding a browsers works, it's definitely not a tidy solution, nor a pleasant on to program.
You should have modded yourself offtopic.
You can't mod and post on the same article, which is a pretty good policy.
Except if you post as AC, which GGP probably should have done.
Then we could even see a +1 insightful comment on frosty piss by an AC...
Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
You cannot mod your own A.C. comment unless post the comment from a computer you have never used and from an IP address you have never signed in from.
I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.