Ordnance Survey Releases Mapping Tools
rHBa writes The BBC reports that the UK mapping organization Ordnance Survey has added 4 new products to its open data portfolio: OS Local, Names, Rivers and Roads. Perhaps the most interesting of the free data sets is OS Local which provides a base map to identify "hotspots" such as property pricing, insurance risk, and crime. The OS are not creating a new Google Maps-style service of their own but rather are providing their data for use by other third-party apps and online tools. They expect developers and designers to use the data to enhance their own products and improve the information people can access via the web.
Here is the web browser based mapping service:
http://www.ordnancesurvey.co.u...
I mean, sure you can order the data sets to use in your own application also, but claiming that they do not provide a mapping viewer of their own kinda misses the mark
Wherever You Go, There You Are
"The boy who cried wolf" was also a warning, not an instruction manual.
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
So Slashdot shouldn't post anything about new product or data releases ever because it's product placement?
It's not like Slashdot is shilling for some ultra-rich company in this case that's just trying to make a quick buck off the user base here. Ordnance Survey is the UK government's official mapping agency - it's a government department, not a private company.
More governmental data being release to the public is a good thing, as it's a continued expansion of transparency and freedom to access data that the tax payer pays to produce in the first place. Open access to data is a big deal in the tech world right now, and it's exactly the sort of thing a tech site like Slashdot should cover as a result - this isn't a story about the latest iWhatever.
Google coverage of my area won't be older than google maps itself!
Finally, I can see past my own childhood!
W-what do you mean they never updated it... again? Oh. Okay.
There is a disagreement between OS and Google on what Google's licensing terms mean. Currently this has prevented the use of OS map layers on google (though they are used on Streetmap and bing. So I think it unlikely that google maps will use this soon.
I have no idea who is right about the interpretation of the terms of service, but it is preventing google's use of open sources OD maps