Come on, Irene

| 08.25.11

The hurricane tracker we designed for MSNBC a few years ago has been pressed back into service, with Hurricane Irene barreling up the East Coast with 115mph winds lashing the sea just east of Fort Lauderdale: The crazy thing (for me, an ex-New Yorker) is that it looks like they might actually get some pretty...

The World by National Geographic is live

| 08.18.11

The World, Stamen’s first iPad app and our first project with the National Geographic Society, is available for download from Apple’s app store today. Yeah! The heart of the app is a globe of (you guessed it) the world, with overlays of National Geographic’s unmistakable cartography available for the different parts of the earth. Each...

Photos from the MoMA show

| 07.20.11

Aaron went to the opening of Talk to Me at MoMA last night, and sent back some lovely photosynths autostitches and photos of the event. I’ve been back here in San Francisco working on the exhibition website and other things so wasn’t able to attend the opening, but I’m looking forward to seeing it when...

Prisons in California, crime in the Mission, and Dots on the pavement: now with embed

| 07.20.11

There are three basic parts to working with online representations of urban civic data in Dotspotting: coallating the data, manipulating it, and then sharing and publishing it. Up until now we’ve been focused on the first two, which makes sense: obviously you need to be able to gather and work with the data before you...

Eric Fischer’s photos on Flickr

| 07.20.11

One of the great things about Eric Fischer’s map experiments on Flickr is that he actually takes the time to geolocate everything. So if he’s making, say, a map of where people tweet vs where they upload photos in Montreal, the photo will tell you that it was taken in Montreal. Or if it’s he’s...

MoMA’s Talk to Me Exhibit goes live today

| 07.19.11

We’re pleased to be featured in a second design exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, Talk To Me, curated by Paola Antonelli and opening to the press tonight. Our team have two pieces in the exhibit: prettymaps, the open data yellow-and-green smorgasbord that we accounced last year, and Walking Papers,...

Map Equals Yes

| 07.07.11

Most online maps are designed to help you get around in a car. This generally means displaying: roads, businesses, buildings, on-ramps, parks, oceans and traffic congestion. Nothing wrong with that! Designers get handed a tool kit that has as many tools as a good swiss army knife, and the maps reflect these tools. Millions of...

Dotspotting’s Toner Cartography available for download

| 06.29.11

One of the central tenets of the Knight News Challenge grant for Citytracking was that the work would happen in public, and that we’d make the work public as we go. The project has been downloadable on GitHub for some time now, and will continue to be so, and we’re announcing today the availability of...

Dotspotting.org is live

| 06.17.11

Dotspotting.org is officially live with some new features and swanky new cartography. Cross-posted on PBS Idea Lab The project has been in a partially-completed stage for a few months now, and I’ve blogged about the project before. We’ve got a few new things to announce: The url is now http://dotspotting.org; no more of this stamen...

MTC Travel Time maps are live

| 06.03.11

The OneBayArea Travel Map that we worked on with the good people at MIG, Inc is live athttp://maps.onebayarea.org/, and shows you approximately how far you can get from any point in the Bay Area by car, public transit, bike, or on foot, at particular times of the day. You can filter your view by the...