I do see rubber-bending of US State shapes. Quite funny indeed, but I would not fit to my rigid definition of map. However, there are other broader definitions [1] which do not require that map should have specific reference to real world. Maybe its because the word map is much more ambiguous in English, compared to my native tongue for instance.
[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map -- Jaak Laineste www.nutiteq.com [email protected] skype: jaakl3000 Mob: (+372) 509 2586 On 25.07.2012, at 21:00, Mr. Puneet Kishor wrote: > > On Jul 25, 2012, at 1:35 PM, Tom Longson (nym) wrote: > >> I'm not sure this is my favorite map, but it's pretty close... >> >> http://mbostock.github.com/d3/talk/20111018/force-states.html >> >> What's your favorite map, and why? >> > > > the one on the cupcakes, of course. > > > to those who can't see the map, get a standards-compliant browser. D3 is all > JavaScript all the way, and works fine in modern browsers. > > > > -- > Puneet Kishor > > > _______________________________________________ > Geowanking mailing list > [email protected] > http://geowanking.org/mailman/listinfo/geowanking_geowanking.org _______________________________________________ Geowanking mailing list [email protected] http://geowanking.org/mailman/listinfo/geowanking_geowanking.org
