Simon Willison’s Weblog

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6 items tagged “geolocation”

2013

Is there an open source (or freely accessible) database of geofence coordinates for common places, such as cities or national parks?

Take a look at Flickr’s openly licensed shapefiles:

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It is posible to send an RSS feed to Twitter geolocalized?

Yes, this is possible using the Twitter API. A competent web programmer should be ale to build this for you in a few hours.

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2010

owlsnearyou.com. Nat and I built this over the weekend. It asks for your location, then tells you where your nearest Owl is (using sightings data people have entered on WildlifeNearYou.com). If you’re using Firefox 3.6 or an iPhone it grabs your location using the W3C geolocation API so you don’t have to type anything at all.

# 19th January 2010, 2:45 pm / geolocation, iphone, owls, owlsnearyou, projects, wildlife, wildlifenearyou

2009

Firefox 3.5 for developers. It’s out today, and the feature list is huge. Highlights include HTML 5 drag ’n’ drop, audio and video elements, offline resources, downloadable fonts, text-shadow, CSS transforms with -moz-transform, localStorage, geolocation, web workers, trackpad swipe events, native JSON, cross-site HTTP requests, text API for canvas, defer attribute for the script element and TraceMonkey for better JS performance!

# 30th June 2009, 6:08 pm / audio, browsers, canvas, crossdomain, csstransforms, dragndrop, firefox, firefox35, fonts, geolocation, html5, javascript, json, localstorage, mozilla, offlineresources, performance, textshadow, tracemonkey, video, webworkers

2008

Gears API Blog: Gears 0.4 is here! New features are Geolocation, a Blob API for dealing with arbitrary binary data, onprogress() events for tracking HTTP downloads and uploads (meaning progress indicators) and the built-in Gears dialogs localized to 40 languages.

# 22nd August 2008, 10:14 am / blobapi, gears, geolocation, http, javascript, onprogress

Google Code Blog: Two new ways to location-enable your web apps. The Gears Geolocation API isn’t very exciting just yet as it only really works on windows mobile devices, but the new google.loader.ClientLocation Ajax API is great—it gives you the user’s location based on looking up their IP address, saving you from needing to install a IP-to-geo lookup database.

# 22nd August 2008, 10:12 am / apis, clientlocation, gears, geolocation, javascript, location