MAP HUNT
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- Jimbo82
People of QBN!
I'm on the hunt for cool ways of presenting a tube map for print.
Anybody got any interesting links?!
I know there's a site that lists interesting mapping techniques but can't for the life of me remember where it is...
Cheers!
- scribbler0
do you mean the design of the map itself or the physical printed object?
- Jimbo820
Just that it's going to be printed. Kinda needs to be something slick.
- GreedoLives0
http://strangemaps.wordpress.com…
always something interesting and inspiring in there- I could spend hours in here, thanksJimbo82
- what happened to the whale one?capsize
- ended up in some text book by the UC Berkeley PressGreedoLives
- lajj0
- GreedoLives0
http://nmviewogc.cr.usgs.gov/vie…
this is kind of like a retarded google earth, but that's the government for you...
still, fun to play with all their layers
- Jaline0
Driving Orientation
Dark blue: drives on left (mainly British ex-colonies).
Light blue: used to drive on right, now on left (Namibia).
Purple: used to have mixed system, now drives on right.
Light red: used to drive on left, now on right.
Dark red: drives on right."Right-handedness, a trait shared by 85 to 90% of people, is the reason for the initial preference for left and for the switch to right side driving.
Throughout the ages, horsemen preferred passing each other on the left side, because this allowed them to hold on to the reins with their left hand while with their right they shook hands with or swords at passers-by (as the situation warranted).
In the late 1700s, teamsters in many countries switched to bigger freight waggons drawn by multiple pairs of horses. They would sit on the left rear horse, thus able to whip with their right hand. This allowed them better vision on their left-hand side, so they preferred the opposing traffic to cross them on the left – meaning they switched to driving on the right-hand side of the road. So nowadays, an estimated 66% of people worldwide live in right-hand side countries, and 72% of all distances are completed while driving on the right side of the road.
Britain was the main exception: smaller waggons meant the driver was able to sit on top of them, not needing to ride one of the horses. British drivers remained seated on the right-hand side, and thus kept driving on the left-hand side of the road. This British custom would be adopted in most if not all British colonies, at least initially.
One of the main promulgators of driving on the right was revolutionary France, at that time Britain’s arch-enemy, thus lending a ‘political’ subtext to this purely practical question. France spread the practice to most of the countries it conquered at the turn of the 19th century. "
sorry for derailing things but I find it interesting
- thats wrong, in croatia was never any driving on the left sidemoamoa
- maybe back when it was austria-hungary? austria DID use to drive on the left...GreedoLives
- hmmm never heard about it... maybe they generally talk about yugoslaviamoamoa
- Jaline0
- maybe you should post the entire strange maps blog, that would be helpfulGreedoLives
- :(Jaline
- By the way, that's the same thing as me posting my del.icio.us page and everyone else posting links from that pgJaline
- just saying...GreedoLives
- I did mention above that I was derailing the thread.Jaline