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Appendix D
Example Prototypes
Detailed in this section is a sample of World Wide Web sites chosen to
illustrate existing elements of the distributed geolibrary vision. Each
is largely isolated from one another and falls short of the full vision.
Taken together, the set illustrates both what is already possible and
how far we still are from a distributed geolibrary.
Microsoft's Terraserver
Terraserver offers digital imagery from the Russian SPIN-2 satellites
and digital orthorectified photographs (orthophotos) from the U.S.
Geological Survey. The archive contains over 1 terabyte of information
and can be queried by pointing, zooming, and panning on a basemap or by
specifying place-names. No services are provided for finding or
integrating other data based on place.
MapQuest
The MapQuest site offers a range of services based on its database The
map illustrates the ability to provide services based on specific
collections, in addition to serving unmodified information.
Environmental
Protection Agency ZIP Code Search
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) web site offers several
forms of place-based search through the agency's archives, including
Maps On Demand and ZIP code search. From the web site:
The EPA Envirofacts Warehouse is a database that includes
information on Superfund sites, drinking water, air pollution, toxic
releases, hazardous waste, and water discharge permits. Through
Envirofacts, you can get lists of which facilities in your neighborhood
are releasing pollutants or are legally handling hazardous materials,
where any Superfund sites are located and what their cleanup status is,
and more. In many cases, you can link to more information about the
chemicals involved at the listed sites, and find out whether they are
potentially harmful.
Through Envirofacts' EnviroMapper feature, you can cus-tomize a
computer-generated map of your neighborhood to view the location of EPA
regulated sites, schools, churches, streams, streets, and other
geographic features.
U.S. Bureau of the Census TIGER Map
Server
The Bureau of the Census web site supports place-based search for census
data. The main purpose of the TIGER Map Service project is to provide a
good-quality, national scale, street-level map to users of the World
Wide Web. This service is freely accessible to the public, and based on
an open architecture that allows other Web developers and publishers to
use public domain maps generated by this service in their own
applications and documents. We planned to provide high-quality street
maps, with simple GIS capabilities such as point display and statistical
choropleth mapping.
U.S. Geological Survey National
Atlas
The National Atlas web site creates and delivers maps on demand from the
National Atlas database.
MIT's Digital Orthophoto
Server
This Massachusetts Institute of Technology web site serves digital
orthophotos (DOQs) for the area around Boston. By clicking on a tile it
is possible to retrieve the associated data at a user-defined level of
resolution.
Alexandria Digital
Library
The Alexandria Digital Library (ADL) is the product of a research
project at the University of California, Santa Barbara, funded through
the Digital Library Initiative of the National Science Foundation, the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency. The
first screen
in ADL's process of defining a place-based search. Additional properties
can be specified to narrow the search, which is then applied to the
order 106 data sets in the current ADL collection.
Microsoft's HomeAdvisor
This Microsoft web site is designed to help people searching for homes.
It includes the ability to access demographic and other information
about neighborhoods (see Chapter 1), search
listings, and estimate payments.
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