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“I don’t care what’s right or wrong I won’t try to understand. Let the devil take tomorrow. Tonight I need a friend, yesterday is dead and gone and tomorrow’s out of sight. It’s so sad to be alone, help me make it through the night.”🎶.
Featuring
➡️ Blog: suegeelidecuir.com/2018/04/04/through-the-night
➡️ Raindale Easter Table gift for LOR Easter Egg Hunt.
➡️ RJD Pride House.
➡️ FB: StyleItUpSL
More credits
Flower Lamps: Raindale Littlevale Gacha at Illuminate.
Livingroom set: Raindale Maylett set.
Chair: +Half-Deer+ Silk and Pearls.
Tree: Zerkalo Golden Shade.
Thanks for the support!
a 3d animation of the Flickr photography of Buichaille Etive Mor in Glencoe, one of the most photographed mountains in Scotland.
Demonstrated today at the Society Of Cartographers Summer School 2014.
The camera flies through the four most common locations that people take photos from - in turn, "the white house", "the Kings Hotel", the head of Glen Etive, and "the tree" - and gives a rough idea of the composition from each location.
Done using Flickr API, QGIS and Blender. Overlay is copyright OpenStreetMap and its contributors (used the OpenLayers plugin and the OCM terrain layer).
Elevation model is from Ordnance Survey Open Terrain 50, Crown Copyright and Database rights 2014.
Note: the elevation exaggeration is not exact. The camera is nominally 20mm focal distance but I've yet to find a way to make the vertical exaggeration correct.
Trying out the latest QGIS version 2.12.0 Lyon.
Label positioning was done using data-defined quadrants, and manually assigning a quadrant to each label. There are new options to allow layers to discourage labels on other layers from overlapping them. I found them to be a vast improvement, but I opted for a semi-manual approach. Still, a LOT easier than manually moving labels around.
Rather than using the OpenLayers plugin, I used the QuickMapServices plugin. This has the advantage of having more basemap options, and it works better with the Print Composer Exports.
It also lets you tweak things like blend modes and contrast - the basemap here is a modified version of Cartodb Positron, attempting to make a more readable version of the Dark Matter basemap. (Settings; exlusion blend, Brightness -111, Contrast 1.88)
One new feature used was global variables for expressions. I set up a standard copyright tag for OpenStreetMap, and was able to set up a label and add this attribution with a couple of clicks. Nice :)
This was created using GTOPO30, the OpenStreet map from OpenLayers, the standard QGIS 2.4 & QGIS2Threejs
c/o Nicholas Duggan TÜV Süd PMSS
Blender and QGIS, using data copyright OpenStreetmap contributors, elevation data Crown Copyright and Database Rights 2014
Used QGIS OpenLayers plugin with OCM Landscape layer.
This is a still from an interactive map created using Geoserver and OpenLayers. The cartography was applied using Styled Layer Descriptors (SLDs) which is an XML schema specified by the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) for describing the appearance of map layers.
The product used is OS VectorMap Local and this map was created to demonstrate the flexibility of using the vector dataset. The building heights are not accurate but have been extruded to add an element of depth and reality.
Example of using QGIS, Blender and OpenCycleMap to produce an image of a 3d map. Using data copyright OpenStreetMap and its contributors under the ODBL. Uses terrain data from Ordnance Survey OpenTerrain50, crown copyright and database rights.
In QGIS, I added two layers
[1] an OpenCycleMap layer using OpenLayers plugin,
[2] an OS Terrain 50 raster.
The terrain raster was made into a heightmap using black-white from the current extent, clip to min/max.
Each layer was saved as a Geotiff. This was done using "File-Save as Image", rather than with the Print Composer. If I used the Print Composer, the OSM layer extents did not match what was shown on the print composer, so the two images didn't align properly :(
In Blender, added a plane mesh (smooth shading) and applied a simple subdivision surface of about 9 times. Used the displace tool using the heightmap and a strength of 0.2, and added the OpenCycleMap raster as an image texture. Textures both set to "clip" sampling.
Plane surface uses Toon BSDF, with smoothing and size adjusted.
Set camera focal length to wideangle (10mm). World background set to Black, Ambient Occlusion set to .09 to dial down the shadows. Added an orange emission plane out of view to add some warmth to the scene.
I found that this doesn't work too well with smaller areas (e.g. a mountain) due to the low resolution (50m) of the OS Terrain open data - the terrain gets noticably "lumpy". However, using Saga GIS and the low pass output from the resampling filter, it's possible to smooth the terrain and remove the low-res artifacts.
Rendered using the Cycles renderer.
These are screenshots of a set of interactive maps about unemployment in California's 58 counties. The maps were developed using GeoDjango and OpenLayers for a demonstration application at the NICAR 2010 conference in Phoenix.
The map on the left colors in each county on a spectrum between yellow and red, with the areas with the highest percentage of unemployment people closest to red. The map on the right displays a bubble for each county, which is increased in size based on the total number of unemployment people in the county.
The code for the application is free and open-source. You can find it hosted on Github.
based on overflight images by Stewart Long.
View this map online in OpenLayers here: maps.grassrootsmapping.org/chandeleur-may8-plane/
and in Google Earth with this KML: maps.grassrootsmapping.org/chandeleur-may8-plane.kml
Read more and follow our effort at grassrootsmapping.org
Volunteer to help map at :
grassrootsmapping.org/volunteer/
Donate to help us pay for helium, gas, equipment, etc. at:
Complete data is available at: grassrootsmapping.org/gulf-oil-spill
This work is dedicated to the Public Domain.
Due to restrictions of the Flickr licensing system, this work is marked with a Creative Commons Attribution License. Please disregard that license. You may feel free to attribute authorship to me, though.
Also, please consider letting Flickr know that the community would like Public Domain as an automatic licensing option.
Even though OpenLayers allows users to customize map control images, many maps stick with the default, which can detract from the custom feel of map-centric websites. MapBox is publishing a set of controls as well as the source vector files needed to create new controls: github.com/tmcw/openlayers_themes/tree/master/dark_src/
video fly-through of a 3d relief map.
Preparation using QGIS, animation and render in Blender, video stitched with ffmpeg.
Used the QGIS OpenLayers plugin and the OCM Landscape layer for the draped raster, OpenTerrain 50 for the DEM.
Used Blender Cycles renderer with small sample size (hence the graininess)
copyright OpenStreetMap and its contributors, DEM is OS OpenTerrain 50 crown copright and database rights,
The Isle of Eigg rendered using Blender. Used QGIS to generate the relief map and heightmaps.
The relief map used the OpenLayers plugin (using the OpenCycleMap as the tile source).
Uses data copyright OpenStreetMap and its contributors. Elevation data from OS Open Terrain 50, Crown Copyright and Database Rights.
I see that setting the focal distance for a wide aperture in Blender is every bit as hard as focusing with a camera at f/1.4 ;)
This is what I'm doing currently at work - GIS stuff for the library so that when people go to search for a book, they'll have a good idea of where it is in the stacks. This is a map of one of the support areas (the one I work in, no less), since we don't have any call-number locations entered.
Local OpenLayers app overlaying an early version of the OSM Urban Atlas simulation style sheet on a standard OSM mapnik render.
The following layers have not been added to the UA sheet: roads, railways, (schools, hospitals, university), differentiation of residential areas by building density. Some OSM landuse classes have not yet been added to the appropriate UA layer (most obviously allotments).
View full map online at maps.grassrootsmapping.org/may-9-chandeleur-balloon/
This trip was led by Stewart Long and the balloon aerial imagery was also stitched by him.
Read more and follow our effort at grassrootsmapping.org
Volunteer to help map at :
grassrootsmapping.org/volunteer/
Donate to help us pay for helium, gas, equipment, etc. at:
Complete data is available at: grassrootsmapping.org/gulf-oil-spill
This work is dedicated to the Public Domain.
Due to restrictions of the Flickr licensing system, this work is marked with a Creative Commons Attribution License. Please disregard that license. You may feel free to attribute authorship to me, though.
Also, please consider letting Flickr know that the community would like Public Domain as an automatic licensing option.
Generated using Mapnik, this galactic map is of the Eve-Online (an MMORPG) galaxy. It will soon be available for online browsing using OpenLayers. Red colored dots represent dangerous solar systems, while blue systems are very 'safe'.
This mash-up on the White House web site was created to demonstrate the diverse comments coming in from individuals around the world in response to President Obama's recent trip to Africa.
This project involved Twitter, Google Maps, and OpenLayer maps API integration.
For those who are comfortable doing their map stitching in Photoshop, but for whom the GDAL tools for creating an online version of that map (a tileset) are a bit overwhelming, it does work to just take your Photoshop map and upload it to Knitter: cartagen.org/maps
Here's an example:
cartagen.org/maps/lima-morflex-nrg
then i pressed Export in the upper right corner, and it generated a GeoTiff (a geo-tagged Tiff), a TMS tile service, and an OpenLayers viewer:
cartagen.org/tms/lima-morflex-nrg/openlayers.html
This makes sense because Knitter is built on GDAL -- however, it can be a much easier interface for creating all the export formats.
It's also just a great way to share your maps online -- sometimes if you send a link around to a gigantic TIFF file you made in Photoshop, it crashes peoples' browsers when they try to open it... yikes.
OpenLayers workshop on Friday, led by Tim, with help fom most OpenLayers developers from the conference.
Old-school screenshot of the little field station I threw together, to avoid using the X11 disaster that is xastir.
It consists of:
* openlayers, an all-javascript open source slippy map (ie a google maps clone, but much much more)
* map tiles of California and Nevada rendered from the OpenStreetMap dataset
* hillshading/relief tiles in alpha-channel PNGs, for overlay on the street map, derived from the SRTM data.
* a web browser and apache (due to browsers' stupid rules about security when it comes to file:/// urls)
* a hand-crafted port of sox to record audio to stdout on OS X
* a hacked multimon to take 8bit mono audio samples on stdin and demodulate them to TNC2 format on stdout
* a perl script that takes TNC2 on stdin and updates a KML file for a given call sign
* gpsd, running against local Garmin GPS
* a perl script to update a KML based on gpsd samples
(The hillshading is not rendered at the zoom level pictured, hence the transparent broken image icons!)
This layer pulls road data from Open Street Map to show on the map. Managing News does this using OpenLayers in Drupal.