Using My Maps for your summer sublet

[Cross-posted from the Google Student Blog]


Today’s guest author is Katie Corner, an Electrical and Computer Engineering student at University of Colorado, Boulder and a Google Student Ambassador. Check out more tips from students on the Google Student Blog, or submit your own to share.

The spring semester ends, and the frenzy begins: Quick, everyone find someone to sublet your apartment for the summer!

Hundreds of students in your university town will be simultaneously advertising their apartments to potential summer subletters. How can you help your apartment stand out among the crowd? Bring in Google Maps to save the day. Google Maps has a feature known as My Maps, which enables you to quickly and easily build a personalized map highlighting the locations you care about — all on one map! Simply share the map link with your family or friends to let them see it too.

Everyone knows that when looking for a summer sublet, it’s all about location, location, location. Where are the closest grocery stores? What’s fun to do nearby? There’s a running path along the creek just two blocks away? And the local bus picks up on the corner? Nothing sells these points better than an easy, personalized map.

It only takes minutes to create your own My Map. To start, sign in to your Google account and go to maps.google.com. Click on the link in the upper-left corner labeled “My Maps.” By clicking the “Create new map” link, you can pick a title and get to building your housing map.

To start finding locations of interest and placing them on your new My Map, search for those places in Google Maps, for example “park in boulder co.” After finding the location you are interested in, simply click on the red pin on the map, followed by the “Save to…” link. From here you can easily select the new My Map you created.

After adding a number of specific locations to your map, you can also customize and edit the map to fit your style preferences. To access your map thus far, click on the “My Maps” link in the top left corner of the page, and select the map you are interested in editing. By clicking the “Edit” button, you are now in editing mode on the map and can easily make changes to the names of locations or the style of icon. To make a change to a specific place, just click on that location. On the map, an editable box appears where you can easily make changes, such adding as some notes about the place.

The end product is a unique map showcasing why your sublet is the right option to pick. Here’s an example I used for an apartment in Boulder, Colorado.

Stand out in your next apartment rental posting with My Maps today!

Ready… set… track Santa!

[Cross-posted from the Official Google Blog]
From feasting on a turkey dinner to singing carols around the fire, there are certainly plenty of traditions to enjoy during the holiday season. Much to the delight of the child in each of us, the ritual of gift-giving continues today, and I know I still find cheer at the bottom of my stocking every Christmas morning.

Another tradition that brings joy to youngsters everywhere is the one started in 1955 by NORAD, the North American Aerospace Defense Command, which every year counts down to Christmas Eve and tracks Santa’s whereabouts as he delivers presents across the globe. Google similarly started tracking Santa in 2004 and has been partnering with NORAD on this fun project since 2007. Keeping the tradition alive, today marks the kick-off of this year’s countdown at www.noradsanta.org. On the NORAD website, kids can play holiday-themed games (a new one is released each day) and get updates from the North Pole as Santa prepares for his big sleigh ride.

If you haven’t tracked Santa in years past, we hope this is the year you’ll start a new tradition of visiting www.noradsanta.org and following Santa’s journey all around the world. Starting at 2 a.m. EST on December 24, you’ll be able to track him in real-time on Google Maps from your computer or phone as well as on Google Earth with the plug-in by searching for [santa].

So this year, along with my family’s usual tradition of gathering around to hear my mum read “Twas the night before Christmas,” we’ll gather around the computer to see when Santa might be coming to our neighborhood. In honor of the occasion, I wrote a new opening verse:

‘Twas the night before Christmas, and Santa was near
According to NORAD, he would soon be right here
So we hopped into bed and dreamt of new toys
And awoke in the morning to much Christmas joy

Happy holidays to all, and to tide you over till Christmas Eve!

Address Management

I assume you know your address. But do you realize how often you are asked for that piece of information? And how often have you received mail at your address that was meant for a previous resident? This time I want to discuss some of the issues of managing addresses and how they might be solved using the new buzz: web services.

We came to realize this fact once again upon moving to Redlands. We provided address information Social security, driver’s licenses, visa, utilities, tax, and (to some of our family) more important matters such as cable television and Internet.

For us simple folks, the administrative part of moving to a new address may sometimes be irritating but imagine that you are a utility company, a bank or the Internal Revenue Service. Not knowing where to send your bills or sending bills to the wrong address can result in a considerable loss of revenues.

Being a geographer, knowing where to send a bill is one thing, but knowing where your customers are is another. The well-known process of geocoding allows for geographic analysis that is beyond the extent of address-based analysis.

One of the prerequisites for the results of this analysis to be valuable is that the addresses used are accurate. Not only in the sense that it corresponds to the information that is analyzed, but also that the address actually exists and can therefore be located on the earth’s surface.

After capturing address information by an organization, it also propagates through organizations as part of information exchange, aggregation and reporting to (for example) higher government bodies. At any stage of this process, people verify the validity of address related information before actually using it. There is definitely room for improvement here.

In my last column I discussed software development in relation to geographic information systems. One of the laws of software development states that solving errors early in the development process saves as opposed to solving the problem at the end of the project. The same applies to having correct addresses. Instead of having a multitude of organizations checking the validity of addresses and spending amounts of time in the geocoding process, we could try to start out with correct address information at the source.

Those of you, who have actually set up a geocoding function, know that it uses a geographic dataset with street information and address ranges. And you also know that this dataset needs to be maintained as new streets get created on almost a daily basis. The decision for what area the street dataset is acquired and maintained greatly affects the cost of the geocoding function.

With the introduction of web services such as ArcWeb from ESRI, it is now possible to offer a high quality geocoding function at a low cost for organizations. The cost associated with maintaining the dataset is shared between a large number of users.

Applications pass an address to the geocoding web service and the result, consisting of a geographic location, a standardized (!) address and possibly a map of the surroundings of the address are returned to the applications. This is all done through agreed upon web interfacing standards, including as XML, SOAP, WSDL and UDDI. If necessary, the requests and results transmitted through the web can be encrypted when address information is considered sensitive information and privacy should be protected. Using an application independent transaction identifier, privacy protection can be enhanced even more.

Equipped with this new web service, the utility companies and all the other organizations can stop guessing who is living in my house, resulting in a better cost-benefit balance for them and less unwanted mail for me. Sounds like one of those win-win situations we’re all waiting for.

Appeared in GeoInformatics Magazine (www.geoinformatics.com) in October/November 2002