[uf-discuss] geo - accuracy of coordinates
 Kevin Marks 
 kmarks at technorati.com
 
 Mon Oct 2 16:36:45 PDT 2006
 
 
 
On Oct 2, 2006, at 4:11 PM, Michael MD wrote:
> Not really, if it's a large city...
>>> Consider Birmingham, England, whose "centre" is far from being
>> equidistant to all points on its boundary - it's in "Ladywood" on this
>> map:
>> http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/wards
>>>> GeoRSS uses a "radius" element, which could be a uf class and would
>> specify in meters, kilometers, or miles (itself a discussion for
>> units). Or perhaps better would be a featuretypetag (again using
>> GeoRSS as a working case example) that can specify "city"
>>>> Or the capacity to describe a polygon...
>> In many cases the available data is just not accurate enough to be 
> able to
> accurately describe a radius or polygon.
> (if it were, it might be accurate enough for a street address too!)
Again, consider this URL:
http://flickr.com/map/?&tag=yankeestadium&fLat=40.828081&fLon= 
-73.920821&zl=7
if it were expressed as a radius of 10km, I think it would do for Brum 
as a whole.
> Even with only city-level accuracy, lat/long data can still be very 
> useful,
> but clearly I'd want to avoid having it end up being used to generate a
> local street map that gives someone incorrect directions to get to a 
> street
> address!
>> The radius idea could possibly be used but the radius itself would be
> inaccurate.
That's fine - it's really an order-of-magnitude expression of detail.
> I think the featuretype idea is probably better for this if
> there can be a standard for the actual feature type names.
> (but in GeoRSS it appears to be folksonomy-based so if data comes from
> multiple sources, an application might need to look up some kind of
> dictionary of commonly used terms just to work out that it's a "city")
Or, as in this example, it could be derived from the tag + geo 
expressed by several people.
 
 
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