[aprssig] USA map sources
Stephen H. Smith
wa8lmf2 at aol.com
Mon Mar 14 14:55:17 EST 2005
vk4tec at tech-software.net wrote:
>Hi,
>
>We do not do much advanced mapping down under, but I am keen to know what
>all this talk is
>about mapservers, troposervers ?
>
>
>
"Troposervers"???? Don't have the faintest idea what you are referring
to.
As far as "mapservers" go, you aren't being specific enough. You aren't
specifiying in what context.
Are you refrerring to the "PMap Server" for UI-View?
If so, this is a software add-in to UI-View that allows a commercial
CD-ROM mapping product (Undertow Software's Precision Mapping ) to used
instead of fixed maps in UI-View. You get a continuously scrollable
view of ALL of North American that can be zoomed from a
continental-sized view, through state and county level, all the down to
street level showing just a few blocks across anywhere in the USA or
Canada. UI-View treats all of this as a "single map".
Are you referring to the "Tiger Maps" produced by the U.S. Census Bureau
or the topo maps produced by the U.S. Geologic Survey?
The government-compiled data on these maps is in the public domain, and
is available for free off U.S. government web sites. (This situation in
the U.S. is in sharp contrast with the situation in most other countries
where private companies and users pay sizable fees and royalties for the
use of public data.)
However the data is not in forms directly usable by most programs. It
often requires considerable manipulation and conversion to be usable.
[WinAPRS and Xastir can use this kind of data after downloading huge
files from the Internet.]
The public-domain Tiger data and USGS terrain relief data ("DEMs" -
Digital Elevation Models) are also the starting source used by many
commercial maps and CD-ROM mapping products such as Delorme Street
Atlas, TopoUSA, Street Finder,, etc and websites like MapQuest. These
publishers repackage the raw government data into user-friendly
ready-to-use products and often overlay the basic street data with
other information such as the locations of motels, restaurants, shops,
gas stations, etc acquired from business directory services. Because
the source data is available for free only in the U.S., these
inexpensive (USD $40-$50) street-level-resolution CD-ROM products
normally only cover the U.S. (Recently, some such as DeLorme Streeet
Atlas, MS Streets & Trips, and Undertow Software's Precision Mapping
have started including Canada as well.)
Several private companies such as GDT (Geographic Data Technology)
take the public domain road data bases, correct them using aerial
photos, satellite images, etc, . and then sell or lease the "improved"
version to map publishers. Microsoft (MapPoint, Streets&Trips and the
Expedia website) and Undertow Software (Precision Mapping) are just two
of the publishers that use the GDT enhanced data base.
Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
Home Page: http://wa8lmf.com
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