POPULARITY
In this episode of the Business of Laravel podcast, host Matt Stauffer interviews Michele and Mathias Hansen, the founders of Geocodio, a SaaS that provides hassle-free geocoding, built with Laravel. They discuss their motivation for creating the service, born from their own need for reliable geocoding data, and explore the challenges and benefits of working together as a couple, including how their roles have evolved as the company has grown. They also highlight the importance of listening to user feedback and customer input throughout the development process and share their experiences in hiring and building a remote team.Matt Stauffer Twitter Tighten Website Michele Hansen Twitter Mathias Hansen TwitterGeocodio WebsiteMichele's book - Deploy Empathy -----Editing and transcription sponsored by Tighten.
This episode features an interview with Tom Holderness, the CTO of Addresscloud. Tom shares insights into his non-traditional journey from academia to entrepreneurship. He discusses his background in geography and geographic information science, highlighting his work in building the next generation of mapping technology. Stay tuned to gain wisdom and insight into the innovative work happening at Addresscloud. [00:02:26] Geographic data and heatwaves. [00:03:42] Hub of innovation and collaboration. [00:08:41] Geocoding advancements in mapping. [00:11:27] Address Cloud for Insurance Innovation. [00:16:08] Climate change and insurance risks. [00:19:45] Thatch roofs and insurance premiums. [00:23:09] Geospatial data analysis advancements. [00:26:38] Opening geospatial data access. [00:30:24] Addressing in Home Deliveries. [00:33:59] Interdisciplinary working in academia. https://www.linkedin.com/in/tomas-holderness-18106047/details/experience/
what3words, a unique geocoding system that represents any location on our planet, divided into 3 x 3 meter grid, and identified by three words.
what3words, a unique geocoding system that represents any location on our planet, divided into 3 x 3 meter grid, and identified by three words.
Ed Freyfogle is the Co-founder of OpenCage. The OpenCage Geocoding API provides worldwide, reverse (latitude/longitude to text) and forward (text to latitude/longitude) geocoding based on open data via a REST API.Scaling DevTools is the podcast that investigates how DevTools go from zero to one. Created by Jack Bridger, founder of BitReach. BitReach helps DevTool companies reach more developers. In scaling DevTools, Jack explores how startups sell to developers, build tools and become successful.What we cover Introduction to OpenCage Transparency is key Competition and learning Developer mind tricks Bootstrapping OpenCage Playing the long game Measuring conversion Enthusiasts Where to hear from Ed Twitter: @freyfogle https://opencagedata.com/ http://freyfogle.com/ Geomob podcast: https://thegeomob.com/podcast Where to hear from us Twitter: @JackSBridger https://blog.bitreach.io Newsletter: https://www.bitreach.io/
The digital screens in the car are the latest battleground in the battle for the driver's attention. The main competitor? The mobile phone. Each time you choose to connect your smartphone to your car's infotainment system using CarPlay or Android Auto, the mobile phone wins. The car's digital surfaces are reduced to dumb screens that mirror the phone's apps and use the phone's processing power. Your usage data and analytics are no longer accessible to the car maker, putting them at a significant disadvantage.So, can car makers, famously still on the software learning curve, compete with the Apples and Googles of the world - companies that build software for a living - in this software-led automotive world?In this episode of the AI in Automotive Podcast, we are hosting Alex Barth, VP of Automotive and Mobility at Mapbox. Mapbox is a mapping and location cloud platform that offers the building blocks; the SDKs and APIs to power navigation. Their new product, Mapbox Dash, helps car manufacturers create brand-specific in-car digital experiences anchored to navigation, and generate subscription revenue. Alex shares some amazing insights on how automotive manufacturers can use the power of AI to deliver compelling in-vehicle digital experiences.
In episode 12 of the Let's Connect! Podcast, Ed Freyfogle, Head of Product at OpenCage, joins host Ken Briodagh to talk about Location Tracking and Geocoding in open data networks for IoT.Ed Freyfogle is Head of product for OpenCage. Prior to OpenCage, Ed was co-founder of Lokku, the company that spun out OpenCage. He started his career in the early days of the internet as the first developer at yahoo.de. He has an MBA from MIT, a degree in engineering from Duke University, and was a Fulbright Scholar in Weimar, Germany. Connect with Ed on Twitter and LinkedIn and listen to his GeoMob podcast!OpenCage provides a geocoding API used by many IoT service providers at high volume (millions of queries per day) to convert device location (longitude, latitude) into useful location information. And they do it using open data from OpenStreetmap. OpenCage started in 2013 as a project within Lokku, a company with a long history of using and supporting OpenStreetMap. They implemented the first ever commercial use of OpenStreetMap (all the way back in the internet dark ages of 2006!), and were one of the first companies to use OpenStreetMap maps instead of Google maps. In May 2015 Lokku was acquired by Mitula Group. The OpenCage project was spun out into an independent brand, and has run independently ever since. Follow OpenCage on Twitter!Time Stamps0:00 Show Introduction 1:04 Ed Freyfogle Introduction1:30 What is Geocoding?2:28 OpenStreetMap, or Google Maps: What's the Difference?5:18 How Much Will it Cost?6:50 Security and Privacy in Open Location Data: Is it Good Enough? 9:00 Remote Locations, Away from Roads 10:35 Location tracking at Sea, and on Rails13:00 Data Protection and the Unintended Consequences Law13:30 Location Services Standards Organizations14:55 Final Thoughts
En este episodio charlamos sobre qué son y para qué sirven los congresos académicos, recordando cómo eran antes de la pandemia. Y presentamos cómo se desarrolló el DH2020, el congreso mundial de Humanidades Digitales, de forma… digital. También les contamos sobre dos congresos a los que hemos asistido nosotros mismos. Apóyanos en Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/randomaccesshistory Síguenos en twitter: https://twitter.com/@podcastRAH https://twitter.com/@josegeeklml https://twitter.com/@elvizrojas Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/podcastrah/ Y Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/podcastRAH/ Para leer o ver: La ponencia de Elvis en el Encuentro de Estudiantes. Lo que fuimos a hacer al Congreso Colombiano de Historia: https://youtu.be/mq4ZR-uaB78 La ponencia sobre Memes: https://hcommons.org/deposits/item/hc:31697/ Beyond Digitization: https://hcommons.org/deposits/item/hc:31773/ Reassembling Elephants: https://hcommons.org/deposits/item/hc:31759/ Encoding Working Lives: https://hcommons.org/deposits/item/hc:31747/ Integrating Historical Maps and Documents through Geocoding https://hcommons.org/deposits/item/hc:31739/ Música de Sergio Tovar: https://soundcloud.com/sergiotovar Editado por José Nicolás Jaramillo.
Did you know that the oldest map of the world fits in the palm of your hand? The Babylonian Map of the World is the oldest map we know of and it’s believed to be from around 600 BC. Since then, mankind has been working on mapping the world, but three millennia later we still haven’t finished the job. In a career spanning almost 40 years, MapsPeople CEO and Founder, Michael Gram has spent the last 20 of these at the forefront of making the switch from printed maps to maps as a service.
Jake and Michael discuss all the latest Laravel releases, tutorials, and happenings in the community.
The MapScaping Podcast - GIS, Geospatial, Remote Sensing, earth observation and digital geography
Geocoding provides a way of translating between machine and human languages when we communicate location. Machines collect and process location data in terms of latitude and longitude but humans have a much richer vocabulary in terms of describing a location. So we need something that allows us to be able to translate between these two languages, this is where geocoding comes in.
In the first hour, Chris & Lisa welcome Lisa J. Oliver, President & CEO of The Cooperative Bank of Cape Cod "The COOP" to the show! They discuss a variety of topics including the importance of developing a relationship with your bank and the impact of aggregating your services. Lisa from AMR shares her personal experience in working with The COOP, and how they listened to her "story" in determining the best solution for her family. Lisa talks about the expansion of their footprint, ATM's, technology, Geo-coding, artificial intelligence, & their Charitable Foundation! www.thecooperativebankofcapecod.com. #TheCoop #relationshipbanking #ATM #charitablefoundation
Women in Business: Inspirational Stories of Women Entrepreneurs
Michele Hansen is the Co-Founder of Geocodio. Michele and her husband created a software-as-a-service (SaaS) company that provides geocoding services. Michele has started many businesses and products over the years with friends and her husband. Her family has helped her throughout her entrepreneurial journey and start her current business. She has learned to figure out what customers really want and how to stay connected with friends and old-coworkers while working from home!
Julie Kohler joins Scott Hanselman and shows you how to execute batch geocoding calls using Azure Maps as well as how to get the polygon for a administrative area on a map. Batch geocoding enables a developer to pass up to 10k geocoding or reverse geocoding calls in a single call while Azure Maps handles the processing in the background. The polygon feature enables developers to get the boundaries for things like cities, states and postal codes and use these for doing geometry searches or creating geofences.Jump To: [03:30] Demo StartFor more information, see:Route Matrix, isochrones, IP lookup, and more added to Azure Maps (blog)Azure Maps overviewAzure Maps docsAzure Maps pricingAzure Maps Functional API reference docsCreate a free account (Azure)Follow @SHanselman Follow @AzureFriday Follow @Azure
Julie Kohler joins Scott Hanselman and shows you how to execute batch geocoding calls using Azure Maps as well as how to get the polygon for a administrative area on a map. Batch geocoding enables a developer to pass up to 10k geocoding or reverse geocoding calls in a single call while Azure Maps handles the processing in the background. The polygon feature enables developers to get the boundaries for things like cities, states and postal codes and use these for doing geometry searches or creating geofences.Jump To: [03:30] Demo StartFor more information, see:Route Matrix, isochrones, IP lookup, and more added to Azure Maps (blog)Azure Maps overviewAzure Maps docsAzure Maps pricingAzure Maps Functional API reference docsCreate a free account (Azure)Follow @SHanselman Follow @AzureFriday Follow @Azure
Die Informationstiefe von OpenStreetMap wächst rasant und übertrifft teilweise die der kommerziellen Anbieter deutlich. Diese Informationen sind zumeist visuell als Karte zugänglich. Die Daten textuell durchsuchbar zu machen ist vergleichsweise komplizierter aber nicht weniger relevant. Aktuelle Open-Source-Lösungen zur Durchsuchung von OSM-Daten hinken deshalb den kommerziellen Angeboten deutlich hinterher. Komoot (www.komoot.de) hat erst kürzlich seinen intern entwickelten Geo-Coder *photon* als Open Source veröffentlicht. Damit ebnen wir den Weg zu einer gemeinschaftlichen Entwicklung eines Geo-Coders unter Verwendung des aktuellen Stands der Technik. Photon verwendet *Apache Solr*, eine effiziente und hochskalierbare Suchtechnologie mit zahlreichen Features, darunter Volltextsuche und räumliche Abfragen. Mehrsprachigkeit sowie kontinuierliche Suche während der Texteingabe werden unter anderem unterstützt. Der Vortrag wird auf die Problemstellung näher eingehen sowie die Stärken und Schwächen von photon beleuchten. Gerne stellen wir uns Fragen und Anregungen aus dem Publikum. Unter www.komoot.de kann *photon* im live Betrieb begutachtet werden, nähere Infos zum Projekt finden sich auf github: https://github.com/komoot/photon
Ben Orenstein interviews Josh Clayton and Laila Winner on their book, Geocoding on Rails. Geocoding on Rails Josh Clayton's Twitter Laila Winner's Github
Today's Javascript 4 You looks at geocoding in Google maps again. If you have trouble viewing it here in the browser, you can also navigate directly to YouTube. Join the Facebook Group to discuss the tutorials. You can view the archives here. To watch now, click on the image below: If you have trouble viewing that directly, you can click here to download the video directly. If you need the video in a Windows Media format, then download that here. You can also watch it on YouTube: Tags: javascripts, maps
Today's Javascript 4 You looks at regional geocoding in maps. If you have trouble viewing it here in the browser, you can also navigate directly to YouTube. Join the Facebook Group to discuss the tutorials. You can view the archives here. To watch now, click on the image below: If you have trouble viewing that directly, you can click here to download the video directly. If you need the video in a Windows Media format, then download that here. You can also watch it on YouTube:
Today's Javascript 4 You looks at region specific geocoding. If you have trouble viewing it here in the browser, you can also navigate directly to YouTube. Join the Facebook Group to discuss the tutorials. You can view the archives here. To watch now, click on the image below: If you have trouble viewing that directly, you can click here to download the video directly. If you need the video in a Windows Media format, then download that here. You can also watch it on YouTube: Tags: javascript, maps
Today's Javascript 4 You looks at the reverse geocoding using the maps api. If you have trouble viewing it here in the browser, you can also navigate directly to YouTube. Join the Facebook Group to discuss the tutorials. You can view the archives here. To watch now, click on the image below: If you have trouble viewing that directly, you can click here to download the video directly. If you need the video in a Windows Media format, then download that here. You can also watch it on YouTube: Tags: javascript, maps
Today we look at some of the new features in Lightroom 4 Public Beta, such as Soft Proofing, Maps, Books and some Video handling enhancements. Full sized video on blog: https://mbp.ac/319 Lightroom 4 Beta download: https://mbp.ac/lr4b Geocoding Plugin: https://mbp.ac/jfgps
Today we look at some of the new features in Lightroom 4 Public Beta, such as Soft Proofing, Maps, Books and some Video handling enhancements. Full sized video on blog: https://mbp.ac/319 Lightroom 4 Beta download: https://mbp.ac/lr4b Geocoding Plugin: https://mbp.ac/jfgps
The Genealogy Gems Podcast with Lisa Louise Cooke - Your Family History Show
Lisa's New Book is Here! Genealogy Blog: Lisa's Upcoming Appearances: All day seminar on Google at the in Southern California conference Feb 10-12 in Salt Lake City to speak on Google Search Strategies Tips to Avoid Disappearing emails First go to your spam folder and select the emails you want and then click the Not Spam button – it may be called something else in your email, but most services have one. Create a Contact In your email system for the sender of the email. So for my newsletter, you would just add ur as a contact. GEM: Interview with Kory Meyerink 50 Most Popular Genealogy Websites GEM: Interview with Chris Bair (with thanks to Chris Bair for sharing)