About the Author:  Sean Gorman founded FortiusOne in 2005 to bring location based analytics to the mass market. Sean brings over 10 years of experience at the forefront of the geospatial revolution as a researcher, practitioner, and entrepreneur at FortiusOne. Through both academic and entreprenurial efforts he has been working to make geographic data more accessible to the public since 1997 culminating in the creation of GeoCommons – a crowd-sourced repository of statistical data and social feeds that can be easily mapped, remixed and reused by non-technical users. Sean has been featured in media such as, Wired, Der Spiegel, ABC, Washington Post, Business 2.0, MSNBC, CBS and CNN. He also holds a PhD. From George Mason University in Public Policy where he was the Provost’s High Potential Scholar and was the recipient of the Fischer Prize. He has published dozens of articles on geographic data sharing and analysis, and authored the book Networks, Complexity and Security: The Role of Public Policy in Critical Infrastructure Protection. Read more from this author


We are happy to announce that our collaboration with PointAbout to map the Obama inauguration has officially launched. The application is called “Navigating Washington” and can be downloaded for the iPhone or BlackBerry. The site serves two major functions 1) aggregating useful geographic data for the inauguration like security zones, closed bridges, events, public restrooms etc. and 2) a geo-enabled polling application called “Speak Your Mind“. On the data aggregation side we only have inauguration events and travel restrictions, but we’ll be adding more layers as the event draws closer. Any layer in GeoCommons is a candidate to show up in the application, so if you have some data that you think would be timely and relevant definitely let us know.

While we always love aggregating data we are particularly excited about the “Speak Your Mind” application. We’ve always been fascinated by mapping out public opinion and visualizing its diffusion (remember PollMapr ;-) . The inauguration gave us a great opportunity to dynamically map out the public’s opinion on the inauguration and the policies of the new administration. You often here the quip, “how will it play in Peoria” well we wanted to see how the inauguration would play around the country/world to a far more personal but anonymous level. Since the voting mechanism from “Speak Your Mind” is located on a mobile device your opinion can be mapped to a meaningful location. So when it comes to opinion about the inauguration we can see how it is playing in Peoria IL, San Francisco CA, Cedar Rapids IA, Valdosta GA, Grand Rapids MI, Chester MI, West Lake OH, West Palm Beach FL etc. etc. PointAbout did this short preview on Vimeo:


2009 Obama Inauguration – “Speak Your Mind!” Application from Daniel R. Odio on Vimeo.

Also here is a screen shot of the web destination with preliminary polling results on the question, “Can Obama get us out of recession?”

nav_wash_polls

Many of these ideas evolved out of Andrew Turner’s work with TwitterVoteReport, and I think there is a great generic application of the concept to mapping opinion. Andrew is going to follow up with a more technical posting of how we built “Navigating Washington”, but as a sneak peek it was done with the GeoCommons API that is supported by an Amazon EC2 instance of the GeoCommons platform. Lots of great possibilities with the combination and there will be more from Andrew soon. Also keep an eye out for NPR’s InagurationReport09 where we’ll be lending related technology support.

p.s. – if you have ideas for polling question you think would work well please feel free to add them to the comments sections.

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2 Responses to “Mapping the Inauguration: a.k.a. Putting Your Opinion on the Map”

  1. Daniel OdioNo Gravatar Says:

    We’re off to a running start with your stunning visual analytics. Looking forward to seeing how people across the USA respond to questions from their iPhones! – DROdio

  2. James Fee GIS Blog » Blog Archive » Navigating Washington Says:

    [...] if there was one in the works, it is of course easier to forget about the conversion and wait for Sean to blog about it himself.  What I assume is one of the first GeoCommons API (this example is running on Amazon’s EC2) [...]

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