Web Mapping Illustrated: Using Open Source GIS Toolkits

Web Mapping Illustrated: Using Open Source GIS Toolkits

by TylerMitchell (Author)

Synopsis

With the help of the Internet and accompanying tools, creating and publishing on-line maps has become easier and rich with options. A city guide web site can use maps to show the location of restaurants, museums, and art venues. A business can post a map for reaching its offices. The state government can present a map showing average income by area. Developers who want to publish maps on the web often discover that commercial tools cost too much and hunting down the free tools scattered across Internet can use up too much of your time and resources. Web Mapping Illustrated shows you how to create maps, even interactive maps, with free tools, including MapServer, OpenEV, GDAL/OGR, and PostGIS. It also explains how to find, collect, understand, use, and share mapping data, both over the traditional Web and using OGC-standard services like WFS and WMS. Mapping is a growing field that goes beyond collecting and analyzing GIS data. Web Mapping Illustrated shows how to combine free geographic data, GPS, and data management tools into one resource for your mapping information needs so you don't have to lose your way while searching for it. Remember the fun you had exploring the world with maps? Experience the fun again with Web Mapping Illustrated . This book will take you on a direct route to creating valuable maps.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 368
Edition: 1
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Published: 17 Jun 2005

ISBN 10: 0596008651
ISBN 13: 9780596008659

Media Reviews
Map geeks will delight in this catalogue of appealing ideas and projects. The rest of us will be educated and impressed. - Gavin Inglis, news@UK, September 2005
Author Bio
Tyler is a geographer - at heart and at work - and has a BA in Geography from Lakehead University. He is GIS Service Manager for a forestry consulting company in British Columbia, Canada. His work and interests include geospatial and tabular data management, analysis, manipulation and visualisation - you know, maps! He focuses on using the latest Open Source GIS tools including MapServer and PostGIS and uses these together to enable web-based mapping and data management at low cost with unrivalled capabilities. You might catch him speaking at various conferences or supporting these tools through numerous mailing lists.