I don't think what I stated is an exotic interpretation, dictionary
definitions aside. You say Tomato, I say Fossil. :P

 

There are useful parallels with work in geovisualization, where we have been
developing tools for end-users to develop their own maps and data
visualizations for a long time now. A significant chunk of people in geoviz
are also using google maps, GE, and other sorts of mashup tools to develop
web-based geoviz apps. The ephemeral thing is quite important in the geoviz
context too, where there is no final map that is made (this presents a
problem when it comes to trying to save something in a geoviz tool).

 

So there's a good example of a crossover worth exploring between researcher
and non-researcher geographers - there is value in exploring ephemeral maps
for people interested in analytical geoviz as well as those making web
mashups for non-analytical tasks.

 

RE: Bins – I wouldn't have expected that from CU-Boulder. We rally around
four groups - Human, Physical, GIScience, and Nature-Society, and there is
constant discussion about exploring overlaps between those. 

 

 

Cheers,

 

 

-Anthony

 

 

Anthony Robinson, PhD

Research Associate

John A. Dutton e-Education Institute / GeoVISTA Center

Department of Geography

The Pennsylvania State University

 <http://www.personal.psu.edu/acr181/> http://www.personal.psu.edu/acr181/

 

 

 

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Eric Wolf
Sent: Sunday, November 23, 2008 3:53 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Geowanking] Idea for a Neogeographers meet Paleogeographers
panel at Where 2.0

 

Paleo = old, extinct, fossilized, etc… 


Hmmm... Merriam-Webster gives:

Main Entry:

pale- 

Variant(s):

or paleo- 

Function:

combining form 

Etymology:

Greek palai-, palaio- ancient, from palaios, from palai long ago; probably
akin to Greek tēle far off, Sanskrit carama last

1 : involving or dealing with ancient forms or conditions <paleobotany>
2 : early : primitive : archaic <Paleolithic> 


I checked a few other definitions as well and nothing gives "extinct" or
"fossilized" as synonymous with paleo-. I think you are imposing this
negative definition on the term. Instead, we could see paleogeography as
deriving from Webster's first definition:

Involving or dealing with ancient forms or conditions of Geography

 
Perhaps it would be better termed Neocartography and Paleocartography - but
the end result of Neogeography goes beyond the creation of a map. The map
actually fades more into the background, allowing the purpose to come
forward. This is why Google Maps leave off churches and other landmarks. The
purpose of their map isn't so much to capture a spatial representation of a
culture as it is to help you find the closest Starbucks. Granted, you can
argue that what they are doing is exactly producing so many representations
of a culture - and this is where the Paleo needs to point out the the Neo
what it is they are actually doing. But Google Maps are designed to be
ephemeral - they are meant to be even less permanent than a map drawn on a
napkin.

So, if Neo- is meant to be different from Paleo-, then what would be Neo
would be the "forms and conditions". The form is a very ephemeral map that
contains only the information the map user wants (or at least, the
information that the mapping engine can produce). Mashups allow the map user
to go the next step further and create their own combinations of information
that others can consume (unlike a paper map on a wall with pushpins that can
only be viewed in person). The conditions are also new (or Neo-) in that the
entire process is fairly democratized (excepting the digitial divide) and
ubiquitous. Turn on your iPhone, Google Starbucks, get a map. Turn off your
iPhone and the map is gone. All that exists are traces in the Googleplex
letting them know that someone with an iPhone likes to know where the
Starbucks is.

But maybe this is the wrong venue to have this discussion. Almost by
definition, anyone following this list would qualify as a Neogeographer and
there are many of us who also clearly qualify as a Paleogeographer. And
while I do agree that the terms belittle the expanse of Geography as a
discipline, they also help us understand some of the dynamics of the
situation. These two bins probably should not be viewed as independent, but
rather as ends of a spectrum.

Of course, I deal with the problem of similar bins every day. I'm at a very
traditional Geography department where people are immediately classified as
"Human" or "Physical". In fact, our second semester graduate seminar in
research design is split into "Human" and "Physical". Grad students, like
myself, who study cartography, GIScience, etc. have to choose from one of
the two bins of which neither is a particularly good fit.

-Eric

 

The term itself sets up the situation of defining one group as irrelevant
and the other fresh, new and revolutionary. I am not going to embrace any
categorization of my work as extinct or fossilized. Nobody would - it's
hardly a positive characterization. Why isn't it OK to just look at these
things as different, not necessarily one better than the other? There are
very different goals at work here that make these comparisons not terribly
meaningful. Academics work within a well-defined culture and have priorities
that focus on advancing science goals and educating/advising students. A
FOSS neogeographer likely has different priorities. And there are quite a
few people who could be considered part of both camps. 

 

What I suggest is that defining these groups and starting us vs. them
battles that do not seek interesting areas of common concern are not
productive activities. There's way too much generalization going on – too
many exceptions to both camp definitions and not enough value to be had from
hashing out those definitions.

 

I don't see how what I suggest is throwing up a wall… quite the contrary.
I'm interested in whatever we can do to avoid setting up walls in the first
place. Collaborations like the one FortiusOne has with the U-Wisconsin folks
is one great example of the huge potential for mixing people from both
backgrounds. I think setting up a charged environment by placing people in
one or more camps that are narrowly defined with one group clearly being
viewed as new, exciting, fresh, while the other is ancient, extinct, and
irrelevant is a clear exercise in wall building that will only end up
benefiting academics who critique trends in academic geography (that would
be ironic, don't you think?). Maybe I'm not seeing it clearly – help me out
here.

 

It should be an interesting session at Where 2.0 if it ends up happening. I
think we can agree that discussing this stuff in a postive,
collaboration-oriented way is a good idea for everyone concerned. Hopefully
I can leave the soft comforts of my ivory tower perch where I do nothing but
generate secret, irrelevant, navel-gazing work that only other academics can
understand to attend the meeting and participate myself.*

 

 

Cheers,

 

 

-Anthony

 

 

*just a touch of sarcasm there… J

 

 

Anthony Robinson, PhD

Research Associate

John A. Dutton e-Education Institute / GeoVISTA Center

Department of Geography

The Pennsylvania State University

http://www.personal.psu.edu/acr181/

 

 

 

 

 

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Eric Wolf
Sent: Sunday, November 23, 2008 2:10 PM


To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Subject: Re: [Geowanking] Idea for a Neogeographers meet Paleogeographers
panel at Where 2.0

 

Rather than thinking of neo vs. paleo as divisive, I think it's helpful to
assume the perspective of the folks calling themselves "neo" geographers. I
believe, from their perspective that this "geography" which is mostly
embodied as web-based cartography is a new (or "neo") thing. But it's new on
two counts:

1. It's new to the practitioners. They are the amateurs in terms of
geography but they are NOT amateurs in terms of technology.

2. This technology democratizes cartography in a way not seen since
Guttenberg made it possible for more people to have maps. In that sense, it
is new or "neo".

Regards to Geography as a discipline: In the realm of academia, neogeography
does not mean to supplant Geography. But to simply say:

"There is a new field for geography to research. Nothing more and nothing
less in my eyes."

Is to underestimate the significance of democratized cartography. And for 

"Mapping and spatial analysis methods didn't simply appear out of thin air
to become mashable through an API. "

It is admirable that you make efforts to get your software out as FOSS - but
that's actually not that common in academic Geography. So many academics
keep their software and data a closely held secret. They publish analysis
methods but only in venues that other academics participate in.  What
happens is methods and APIs do "simply appear out of thin air" as these FOSS
"hackers" reinvent the methods that are published in an inaccessible manner.
Even APIs get supplanted because the overly formalized, academic APIs like
OGC appear too complex (thus we get the Google API and the OpenStreetMap
API). Further, many FOSS "hackers" are brilliant thinkers with a strong
dislike of academia. They dropped out of college because the CompSci
department taught decades old material in a very slow pedagogy.

I believe is it very important for us Paleogeographers to wear the name with
honor and embrace the efforts of the Neogeographers. We do carry with us
much hard-fought knowledge and wisdom that the Neogeographers would benefit
from. But, at the same time, if we don't make it accessible in a manner THEY
get, then the Neogeographers will stumble their own way along backed by
Billion$ in Venture Capital and Millions of code contributors.

Geography has always struggled in defining itself. To throw up walls because
of a definition being given it by a massively productive culture would, I
think, be another blow against the discipline.

-Eric

-- 
-=--=---=----=----=---=--=-=--=---=----=---=--=-=-
Eric B. Wolf                          720-209-6818
USGS Geographer
Center of Excellence in GIScience
PhD Student 
CU-Boulder - Geography


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-- 
-=--=---=----=----=---=--=-=--=---=----=---=--=-=-
Eric B. Wolf                          720-209-6818
USGS Geographer
Center of Excellence in GIScience
PhD Student 
CU-Boulder - Geography

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