Geographic data
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Geographic data is about much more than electronic pictures of maps.
The geographic data that describes our world allows for city planning, flood prediction and relief, emergency service routing, environmental assessments, wind pattern monitoring and many other applications.
Geographic data is processed with Geographic information system (GIS) software which can, as one aspect of its functioning, produce maps.
In the United States, geographic data collected by central government is made available free of copyright for no more than the cost of distribution. The United States Census Bureau's TIGER Mapsurfer provides a web service and also offers data free for download. TIGER allows you to build a geocoding facility with which to spatially locate addresses. Given the ability to geocode street addresses and other features, one can create a lot of interesting spatial analysis, location-based service, political campaigning apps and localised search services.
In the EU there is a proposed European Union directive to establish shared standards between the different countries, accompanied by free web viewing of rendered map data, and an as yet unspecified license framework for geographic data.
[edit] See also
- INSPIRE working group home page, describing geographic data policy for the EU.
- modifying the INSPIRE Directive - analysis of licensing and distribution wording.
- TIGER Mapsurfer
- The US Geological Survey home page
- The US Census Bureau home page
- The UK Ordnance Survey home page
- The GEO Data Portal home page (lots of geographic data for free)
- US City Facts and Information