Pack up your laptop, grab your data and head to New York for the first annual "lightning mapping of user generated information" event. Dubbed Iron Sheep (at least until someone objects) the event seeks to mimic the format of the “Iron Chef” television series. This workshop challenges participants (grouped into teams with members from diverse backgrounds and skill sets) to produce meaningful analysis and fun, evocative mash-ups from the same sets of user-generated, geo-coded data within a four hour time frame. The goal is to provide a semi-structured environment where participants can socialize and work in a fun yet socially meaningful project. Participants will be drawn from academic, industry and artistic communities from around the world.
Teams will be assigned a targeted question (e.g., What is the most “out of shape” location in the U.S.? or How can we visualize the Occupy Wall Street movement? or Where is the most likely place for the zombie apocalypse to start? or Where is the origin and destination of Super PAC money?) and use crowdsourced data to create a new geo-visualization. Teams can also choose their own questions. The exact questions and datasets depends on the participants who join (see below).
When: Sunday February 26th 2012, 5 pm to 9 pm; Happy Hour(s) to follow
(During the Association of American Geographers Meeting in NYC)
A panel discussion of the event will take place at the AAG conference at 8 am on Tuesday (Feb 28th) in Conference Room E, Lower Level, Sheraton Hotel
Where: New York City, exact location to be announced (depending upon number of attendees)
Organizers
- the Floating Sheep collective
- the Oxford Internet Institute
- GeoIQ
- the New Mappings Collaboratory at the University of Kentucky
- Vizzuality
- Jeremy Crampton, University of Kentucky
- Mike Goodchild*, University of California, Santa Barbara
- Sean Gorman, GeoIQ
- Mark Graham, FloatingSheep and Oxford Internet Institute
- Muki Haklay, University College London
- Lize Mogel, Editor, An Atlas of Radical Cartography
- Stéphane Roche, Laval University
- Taylor Shelton, FloatingSheep and Clark University
- Monica Stephens, FloatingSheep and University of Arizona
- Javier de la Torre, Vizzuality
- Andrew Turner, GeoIQ
- Sarah Williams, Spatial Information Design Lab, Columbia University
- Matt Wilson, University of Kentucky
- Matthew Zook, FloatingSheep and University of Kentucky
How to attend
This event is open (register here) although the price of entry is that each participants contributes a dataset that is not commonly available (ideally crowdsourced) or one that has been enhanced in a meaningful and useful way. Data that is relatively comprehensive for the U.S. or world would work best, although something focused specifically on New York City would be appropriate as well. The goal is to have enough commonality between datasets that it is possible to do mashups. There will also likely be a "secret sauce" dataset (again borrowing from the Iron Chef idea) that all mappers would be challenged to include.
The organizers will likely be contributing the following data sets:
- The retail cost of marijuana at the city, county and state level (based on PriceofWeed.com reports);
- Busted meth labs;
- Some slice of geo-coded tweets;
- Super-PAC contributions;
- Flickr photos tagged with the word "cat";
- Precinct level voting records;
- VW bug ownerships;
- Sales of Twinkies and/or iPhones;
- Foursquare check ins at bars versus grocery stores;
- Spending on political ads.
- Grindr.com and/or BarebackRT.com check-ins;
- OK Cupid dating information
Sounds fantastic! I'll bring the Pop vs Soda dataset to share.
ReplyDeleteI can't attend, but I would like to donate a dataset of mobile home parks across the US. How can I get that to y'all?
ReplyDeleteThanks...you can mail it to zook@uky.edu
ReplyDelete