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Mike and Shawn giving a talk at Etech.
Maps from Scratch: Online Maps from the ground up by Mike Migurski and Shawn Allen.
The lessons are outlined here:
http://mapsfromscratch.com/notes.html
Mike's amazing faumaxion maps:
http://teczno.com/faumaxion-II/
Mike also showed how to georeference an image. Here's a sample he did with some old Oakland maps:
http://teczno.com/old-oakland/
Other useful links provided at the talk:
A map in the museum encourages you to place a pin on your city. I tried but there were already plenty of Knoxville-area pins on the map.
28. Albishorn-Bikerennen von Hausen am Albis im Zick-Zack aufs Albishorn, am Mittwochabend, 25. August 2021.
Foto Martin Platter
For this piece I used the journey that it takes my family to travel from our house in MD, to our shore house in NJ. I mapped out the routes that are possible and then used the lines and turns to create abstracted shapes out of the metals.
This is a picture from my recent hike up the 14,110 foot Pikes Peak outside of Colorado Springs. The hike to the summit via Barr Trail is 12.5 miles long with 7,500 feet of elevation gain. You can read more about my hike at the link.
I wanted to hike on some of these trails around the old youth hostel but I think the hike out by the old farm did me in, especially the gorge.
blazed from heat and black goats and coral
bad mermaid hair, sunburn, the works
bliss also
(Penghu, Taiwan)
After a day in Lake Manyara National Park, we settled into a lodge in Karatu. Next day hubby and I set off across Ngorongoro Conservation area for to look for wildebeest, or perhaps even enter Serengeti National Park to have a look. It was a full day, as we had to be all the way there and back to squeek through the gate by 6:00 pm if we didn't want to spend the night with the animals...
Tanzania 2010
map of Valencia, Spain, textiles, buttons
What happens when the journey is over? Will we continue to wonder, or return home forever? Do collected maps become useful resources for the future or commemorative decoration?
“For some people, I think this experience will be a one-time thing that they look back on from time to time, but for me it feels like a natural next step in a journey that will continue for a very long time.” ~Travel Blog, Barcelona, January 29, 2007
The graphic shows exchanges of electricity in the Nordic countries in 1996. The Nordic countries have a long tradition of cross-border cooperation in providing an efficient and reliable power supply. The main reason for these exchanges has been that each of these countries has a different mix of power generation facilities. In the later years, from around 1997, the cooperation has changed from being an oligopoly structure with dominant state-owned enterprises to a competitive marked.
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This photo has been graciously provided to be used in the GRID-Arendal resources library by: Philippe Rekacewicz