Thanks!
Folks, I really enjoyed the presentations today and I look forward to reading some fine papers on Monday. Thanks for taking this class so seriously over the last eight weeks, and have a good rest-of-the-summer (such as it is). Cheers,
GREG
Weblog for the UW-Madison SLIS summer GIS and information agencies course run by Greg Downey. Members may post something new.
Folks, I really enjoyed the presentations today and I look forward to reading some fine papers on Monday. Thanks for taking this class so seriously over the last eight weeks, and have a good rest-of-the-summer (such as it is). Cheers,
As a Connecticut native, I have spent the evening glued to the television watching the primary results. Unfortunately, I have had no luck finding a map that shows the breakdown of the election by town. Has anyone seen anything? If so, could you please post it? I am suffering from severe election map withdrawl.
If our maps for the class project don't turn out quite right, we can always convert them into art! Here's a map of neighborhood outlines in Chicago, but they are arranged in order by Alderman district numbers, rather than in spatial order. I thought it was interesting to see shapes taken partially, but not entirely out of context.
I chose the educational system map as the one I think it's important for libraries to know. The presence of a university or college in a particular area would likely influence the local library holdings, and also help them to better understand their patron population. Futhermore, the local library could be called upon to offer materials that are lacking in public and private school libraries, or even act as a school library if the local school doesn't have one.
I had a very difficult time deciding which map to choose as one library professionals should know because, as someone else also stated, patrons want all kinds of information, and because much of the focus of this atlas is historical, and don't always reflect the current issues people want information on.