Quote – The Map Room https://www.maproomblog.com Blogging about maps since 2003 Tue, 06 Feb 2018 23:37:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.maproomblog.com/xq/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/cropped-logo-2017-04-32x32.jpg Quote – The Map Room https://www.maproomblog.com 32 32 116787204 Wisława Szymborska’s ‘Map’ https://www.maproomblog.com/2018/02/wislawa-szymborskas-map/ Tue, 06 Feb 2018 23:37:21 +0000 http://www.maproomblog.com/?p=1784938 More]]>

I like maps, because they lie.
Because they give no access to the vicious truth.
Because great-heartedly, good-naturedly
they spread before me a world
not of this world.

From “Map,” the last poem the Nobel laureate Wisława Szymborska wrote before her death in 2012. Translated and reprinted in The New Yorker. [WMS]

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How the Apple Maps Debacle Changed Apple’s Culture https://www.maproomblog.com/2016/08/how-the-apple-maps-debacle-changed-apples-culture/ Thu, 11 Aug 2016 00:08:02 +0000 http://www.maproomblog.com/?p=2596 More]]>

“We made significant changes to all of our development processes because of it,” says Cue, who now oversees Maps. “To all of us living in Cupertino, the maps for here were pretty darn good. Right? So [the problem] wasn’t obvious to us. We were never able to take it out to a large number of users to get that feedback. Now we do.”

Apple senior vice president Eddie Cue, quoted in this Fast Company profile of Apple, on how the Apple Maps debacle changed Apple’s famously insular culture, opening things up to the point that they now have a public beta program. [James Fee]

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‘A Form of Cartophobia’ https://www.maproomblog.com/2016/02/a-form-of-cartophobia/ Fri, 19 Feb 2016 13:37:32 +0000 http://www.maproomblog.com/?p=942 More]]> Benjamin Hennig calls on social scientists to “rediscover maps and other forms of geographical visualization”:

It is interesting to consider how far the discipline of human geography appears to have distanced itself from maps over recent times, resulting almost in a form of cartophobia. Several papers over the last years showed a decline in map use and mapping practices in high-profile geographic journals. Cartographic skills as a natural expertise of a geographer seems to have vanished in many places, as have the theoretical and practical elements of geographic data visualization. Do many geographers ‘prefer to write theory rather than employ critical visualizations’, as Perkins (2004: 385) notes?

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