Published: Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008
Some light reading we do on weekends:
..unless we have our noses stuck in our GPS device instead, hehe.
..or if I’m too busy playing Guitar Hero : )
Inspire me. I want to finish this website before hiking season!! When I do, I’m treating myself with a new Mac.
Published: Sunday, January 6th, 2008
I tried importing my route and overlaying it into Google Maps all before 7 am!! Apparently this stuff gets me so excited I can’t sleep at night.
The GPS Visualizer, while great for Google Earth, doesn’t do the Google Map view the way I like it. It has plenty of options (too many?) and all their icons and self-promotion stuff is hidden in their code on their server. I spent some cleaning it up, but now I can’t get the Google Map Types to show properly – street view, satellite, etc. Don’t know what I’m doing, and besides, I don’t want GPS Visualizer so I don’t want to spend too much time fixing it. I just want the points/coordinates from my GPS, not a whole application based on their web server! I’ll be looking elsewhere.. but glad to see it actually works. Here’s what I came up with so far-
Terrain Test
I can probably embed it directly into my blog but I didn’t feel like messing with iframes so there it is, on a separate page. Terrain View is sweet though… I can definitely make use of it on my website… and provide free downloadable .gpx files!! Who does that?? NO ONE. Of course, not too many people have handheld GPS systems yet.. but when they do, I can say I was so far ahead of my time, and a trendsetter : )
Isn’t this such a relief to be reading about hiking instead of brewpubs all the time?? Haha.
Published: Saturday, January 5th, 2008
Guess what? Today’s Craig’s birthday!! I bought him a Garmin GPSMap 60CSx so we went to test it right away at Chickies Rock.
So cool!! Along with the iPhone in my pocket, I had over $800 worth of gadgetry in my pockets : ) Anyway, we hiked and tracked our route. We didn’t lose the signal once!

You can save your routes as .gpx files from Garmin, or any other GPS system, I’m guessing. And with the GPS Visualizer, you can convert the .gpx file into something Google Earth can read (.kmz file). Then import the kmz into Google Earth. Add -> Network Link, then browse to the file location. Easy, right??
I’m sure the same can be done with Google Maps and their awesome Terrain View. Probably tomorrow, I’ll try it.
Anyway, here are my routes in case you want to import it into your own GPS or Google Earth or whatever.
GPX file
KMZ file
Published: Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008
Happy 2008!!
Sorry it’s been awhile… got sick, lost my balance, and all of that stuff. But I have an iPhone now so all is good : ) Nothing quite beats your email and Google Maps on your phone! : )
One thing I didn’t notice was that the iPhone requires Mac OSX 10.4 to activate.. something I don’t have. I’m deprived and so low tech so my PowerBook is only a 10.3. Actually, 10.4 (Tiger) didn’t come out until April of 2005. So, if you didn’t upgrade or buy a new Mac since mid 2005, you’re screwed. But Windows XP works perfectly fine… released in 2001!! Argh!! Apple’s screwing with their own fan base. Luckily Craig has a Vista so I could activate and use my iPhone.
Anyway, I’ll update more often and play with my Google Maps some more. I need to be inspired. Maybe later… the Wii is looking lonely : )
Published: Sunday, November 25th, 2007
I was denied an iPhone on Friday : (
I had an Apple Gift Card to use so I decided the iMacs can wait – I want the purty iPhone! So we first waited in line to get into the store because everyone was there buying iPods and iPod accessories that were barely even on sale!! Go elsewhere if you want iPods, and out of my way! Umm, so when we finally got in, I did the obligatory touching and petting of Apple products.. something we haven’t done since our trip out west in Salt Lake.
Next we waited in line for the cash register and when it was my turn, I tried to contain my excitement and asked for the iPhone. It was sitting there in front of me, not more than 6 inches away when the girl saw my Apple Gift Card and told me APPLE DOES NOT ACCEPT THEIR OWN APPLE GIFT CARD FOR IPHONE PURCHASES!!! Where does it say this? On their website? On the gift card? No no no no no. They also don’t accept cash, so don’t even try. Is this even legal??
I could have still bought the iPhone with my own money, but the whole idea was to use the gift card Craig had gotten me… so then I can tell everyone he bought me an iPhone! Anyway, I was told I can still buy it online using the gift card… just not at an Apple Store. So I did.
The iPhone should arrive within the next week hopefully… : ( Poor me.
Published: Tuesday, November 20th, 2007
With snow showers in the forecast, we canceled our plans to go camping last weekend and thus saved ourselves from being trapped inside the tent due to a frozen zipper..
So instead I worked on my website a bit, broke my website, and fixed it again. Something about a Fatal Error and being caught in an SQL Infinite Loop. Mmm, such nerdery : ) Then afterwards, I came up with a design for Craig’s website… which may or may not launch by 2046.
And as promised, the map on the main page has been replaced with Google Maps. I think it’s working ok. In fact, it’s better than a plain Google Mashup because those brewpubs were plotted using the Yahoo! Geocoding API. Whatever algorithm they use, Yahoo! plots them all on the correct side of the road! NEAT!!
You know what else is NEAT? I’m off to the Apple Store on Black Friday!!! An iPhone, perhaps?? Mwahahaha.
Published: Sunday, November 11th, 2007
Working hard! I collected addresses for my brewpubs thinking Google Maps will geocode them for me, but their tutorial called for lat/longs. So.. lat/longs… a quick search brought me to Batch Geocode. Just copy/paste a tab delimited file (mine was created in Google Spreadsheet – free stuff!) and they’ll provide lat/longs for each address. Not only that, a KML was provided!!
KMLs can easily be imported into Google Earth. Go to Add -> Network Link -> then browse to your KML file. Download brewpubs by right-clicking and ‘Save Target As’.
And voila! This is what you get. Currently there are 96 brewpubs in my database that are all plotted properly.

The beauty, of course, is that everything is Open Source, Open API, FREE!! You can try this with any data, your own personal address book? Why? Umm, because you can…?
Anyway, I keep getting sidetracked with Google Earth. My goal is to have this completed for Google Maps by next weekend if Guitar Hero doesn’t get in my way : )
Published: Saturday, November 10th, 2007
I go wherever the GeoServer tutorial takes me and it took me to Google Earth rather than Google Maps. No biggie, but I’m all confused now. Which direction do I want to go? Offer both? Because I’m that awesome?
Here’s the extremely simple Google Earth mashup that was done after an infinitely more difficult install of GeoServer and setting my 3 year old Mac into a server. I think I need a new Mac, just ’cause.

With a basic shapefile of the states, I was able to stylize it with a pinkish tint and label each state with its FIPS code. I should point out that Pennsylvania’s State FIPS code is 42 – the answer to life, the universe, and everything.
Anyway, if it’s this simple to overlay shapefiles onto Google Earth……..
Published: Thursday, November 8th, 2007
Ok, trying to act a little more ‘professional’ here. No talks of Guitar Hero and Wii Play.. did I mention I’m getting the Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Games soon? And and, Super Mario Galaxy.. and Super Smash Bros. Brawl?? Because Craig wants to play, not because I want them… nooo….
Sorry. Maps. That’s what I’m here to talk about. I signed up for a Google Maps API Key, meaning I can plot my brewpubs there. And potentially hiking trails as well. But also, I’m looking into GeoServer. From their website:
“GeoServer aspires to be the Apache of spatial data sharing, by providing an open source, freely available implementation of the Open Geospatial Consortium’s (OGC) Web Feature Service (WFS) and Web Map Service (WMS) specifications. We hope to enable greater geographic interoperability by enforcing OGC standards and lowering the barriers to entry for geographic data providers interested in sharing their data.”
Sounds cool and it should allow me to overlay any sort of data on my Google Map. Topography possibly? Contours? Hikers love that, I hear.
So while I try to figure out this GeoServer (I’m stuck on the install!!), take a look at my Google Map. I umm, created a red border, zoomed in and centered it on my apartment, and set the default view to Satellite. Pretty rural out here. There are COWS everywhere, and they stink too.
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