Progress on GPS visualization project for the data workshop, part 2

Visualization of GPS data, iteration 3 from Bert Balcaen on Vimeo.

In this video the color of the trail corresponds to its location on Google Maps. I spend a lot of time on this, but I think it’s adding a very interesting layer to the visualization. I’m using the Static Maps API from Google to download map images with a PHP script and then check the color of the pixel in the center. I turned off all text labels in the maps. Here’s an example:

I also decided that a little more context would be good, so I added the street names using reverse geocoding with OpenStreetMap. Example:

http://nominatim.openstreetmap.org/reverse?format=xml&lat=52.5487429714954&lon=-1.81602098644987&zoom=18&addressdetails=1&format=json

The data from the AntiMap app is very detailed. I got banned a couple of times because I was exceeding the rate limit of these API’s. Most of them allow only a certain amount of queries per hour. It also means the process of getting the street names and colors can take ages. For now I’m only doing this for a fraction of the data.

I’m experimenting with typography. Here I set the type in Futura Extra Bold Condensed. It’s a typeface from the same area where some of my inspiration comes from (the 1930s & the emergence of the flaneur).

I created the video’s by using saveFrame(“screenshot-######.png”) and ffmpeg:

ffmpeg -i screenshot-00%4d.png -vcodec libx264 test.avi

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