May 23rd, 2010
We’re thrilled to announce that CoSstar Group, the leading provider of commercial real estate research and information services, has implemented Urban Mapping’s hosted mapping services. In record time, CoStar leveraged Mapfluence to incorporate public transportation data into their web-based platform. The rapid development time and ease of implementation are further evidence that hosted mapping services are here to stay.
In the screen shot below, CoStar used Bing Maps for a base map API and Mapfluence elegantly renders cartographically-pleasing transit lines, stations and detailed attributes on a map for the Washington DC area. Urban Mapping’s mass transit data is available for fixed rail (subway, commuter, light, long haul) across North America and several European countries. The difficulty in creating a visually satisfying solution that can be created algorithmically cannot be overstated–rail systems are unique and each one has its own quirks. We’ve done a great deal of tweaking to best represent rail maps in the way that locals expect them to look–an even more refined version is in the works and will be available very soon.

In addition to visually delineating transit lines/stations on a map, CoStar incorporates UMI’s mass transit data into the property search function. As the screen shot below indicates, a subscriber can create a transit-based time or distance constraint. This allows for would-be tenants to search for available property that is (say) only within a five minute walk of a commuter rail station.

In this property profile view, the individual listing is annotated with proximity to nearby public transportation and airport info. Our Mass Transit Proximity API easily allows customers to code property listings (or any location) with proximity to train stations.

Tags: bing, customers, mapfluence, maps, mass transit
Posted in newsworthy | 1 Comment »
January 26th, 2009

Over the past months we’ve made a significant investment in the Graphserver project and we’re thrilled to announce we’ve reached a major milestone. Sure, it’s self-serving, but not in a selfish way. At UMI, we focus on our strengths–normalizing, maintaining and distributing high value data sets. We develop applications insofar as they help to deliver/serve data, but as for writing software–yuck–issues abound. But offering transit data without the ability to perform routing? That’s a bad idea! So we pursued a FOSS path. The community can do a better job with software, and now that we’ve made the engine scale, resource-efficient and oh so robust, it’s in a very good place for commercial (or other) use. And that’s exactly what we’re prepared to do (that news coming another day).
In GPS (aka, PND, PNAV, nav, turn-by-turn) land, multimodal is perceived as a holy grail–permitting a user to route in any combination of transit (bus/train) drive and walk opens up new opportunities for mobile devices–smartphones, GPS devices, ultra-portable laptops and other emerging categories. By ensuring the data is accurate, hardware manufacturers, publishers, hackers and anybody else can ‘give it a go.’ Oh, and with (sometimes) freely-available GTFS transit data, you can run your own instance of graphserver and not even be concerned if/when Google will release an API for Transit!
[Note: Of the 70 or so systems for which Google receives data from transit agencies, only 18 make it publically-available. Some parties go far out of their way to obtain this data and make it available to the public.]
- The official news
Tags: data, graphserver, maps, multimodal, transit routing
Posted in newsworthy | No Comments »
November 9th, 2007
Rafe Needleman’s Webware offers a concise overview of UMI’s neighborhood database product.
Tags: geodata, geospatial, gis, maps, neighborhood database, neighborhoods, neogeoghraphy, panamap, pressworthy
Posted in in the news | No Comments »
September 17th, 2007
This morning at the TechCrunch40 Conference Urban Mapping announced its latest customer–we’re thrilled to count Microsoft among the portals that utilize UMI’s products. Now may every man, woman and child find their way through congested and urban areas!

Tags: api, customer, geodata, local search, maps, neighborhood database, portals, pressworthy
Posted in newsworthy | No Comments »
June 28th, 2007
UMI’s Ian White will speak at GeoWeb 2007 in Vancouver, British Columbia, July 23-27, 2007. His talk, Web-based GIS or GIS-based Web?, will address how neogeographers have changed consumption habits of spatial data.
Tags: conferences, geodata, geospatial, gis, local search, maps, neogeoghraphy, pressworthy
Posted in events | No Comments »
May 16th, 2007
Surprise! Yahoo! Maps is going inhouse with its own map server. This is after 5+ years with Telcontar, aka deCarta. Some new changes out today and apparently more in the works.
Thanks, Adena.
Tags: dds, decarta, geodata, gis, local search, mapas, maps, spatial
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
May 7th, 2007
UMI has long argued that a significant piece of the value in using online maps & directions stems from the transitive property of interactive media–to some degree, the experience can come off the page and become portable.This means users are endowed with an artifact that represents the digital, but can engage with it in a tactile world. It would be easy to digress and pontificate on post-realism via Walter Benjamin or Jean Baudrillard, but Umibot lacks that memory implant, so have no fear…
The idea of maps & directions are to get from one point to another point. They are meant to be didactic and support wayfinding activities. That much is clear. It then follows that many users would print maps/directions and take them on the trip–other options may include a ‘send to phone’ feature, mobile browsing for directions, use of a GPS device or transcribing/summarizing directions by hand.
If a user prints a map and uses it for wayfinding, it becomes an invaluable artifact during the course of that journey–it may be referenced multiple times and the ‘eyeball quality’ is undoubtedly high (who has heard of a casual direction-follower?). So this begs the question…why are printed map/direction pages missing the obvious–highly-targeted and relevant advertising? A review of print-ready directions from Google, Yahoo!, Live Local, MapQuest, Ask and MSN reveal some interesting things.
This summary table highlights some key questions that may be obvious, but warrant consideration:
Most importantly, does advertising make sense on a printed map? This is valuable real estate that currently looks like a greenfield site.

NOTE: Images below have been cropped and resized to fit this blog, so page lengths may not make sense, but they are–print them yourself to see!
Google A
Google B
Live Local
Yahoo! A
Yahoo! B

Yahoo! C

Ask
MapQuest

MSN Streets & Directions
Tags: ask, askcity, directions, driving, google, information architecture, interaction design, local search, maps, musings, routing, visualization, yahoo
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
May 3rd, 2007
Umibot feels that many readers won’t bat an eyelid over this, but my master feels strongly, so I must be a good slave and report…
The original idea was to have a Top Ten list, but frankly there aren’t many moves worthy of the Power Move moniker, so we will instead post them when we think of them.
Our favorite is AskCity’s draw-your-own-polygon and search within. There’s no hiding the fact that this take some serious geo-skillz to implement. To hell with ZIPs (or neighborhoods for that matter)–draw your own boundary!
This screen grab shows an area being drawn near UMI’s offices. As it is late morning, we are always hunting for new lunch spots in this half-industrial/half developed part of town.

This grab shows results–presto!

Tags: askcity, asklocal, geodata, geospatial, gis, IAC, local search, map api, maps, musings
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
April 18th, 2007
OK, not amazingly interesting, but a presentation from Yahoo! on local search coined a new term–RoBo: “research online, buy offline.”
Is this any more useful than Rev Mod (revenue model)?
Tags: conferences, geo, intelligence, location, maps
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
March 9th, 2007

Ian White will present at the third annual O’Reilly Where 2.0 Conference in San Jose, California, May 29-30, 2007. His talk is entitled “How Open is Open?”
Tags: conferences, data policy, geodata, geospatial, gis, maps, reilly, web2.0, where2.0
Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »