Daniel J Lewis is a PhD Student in University College London (UCL) Department of Geography, he is funded by an ESRC CASE award with Southwark Primary Care Trust and is supervised by Paul Longley and Pablo Mateos. This research blog, volunteered geographic information in every sense, aims to collect together Daniel’s ongoing research and discourse.
UCL Geography/GIS Blogs
- Towards Second Generation Crime Maps for the Public – the paper I presented today.
- Historic London
- Spatial Narratives and the Construction of Space
- Stunning Old Atlases
- Strelka VVSR – Seasons in the City and дача
- Strelka VVSR Workshop Day One (two)
- urbanTick at Strelka – Virtual vs Real
- Future of Policing
- Vacation/Holiday and MRes Application Deadline
- 24 Hours in London: A Timelapse
Dan’s Tag Cloud
accessibility
cartogram
Choice
communities
community
Critical GIS
data
geocoding
geodemographics
Geography
GIS
google
GPs
grid
health
households
local
map
Maps
matplotlib
mixed-methods
Modeling
neighbourhoods
NHS
NHS Choices
OAC
PCT
place
places
PopFest
population
python
qualitative
Quality
quantitative
R
Representation
RGS
RSS
service
Southwark
spatial equity
synopsis
uncertainty
visualisation
Hi Daniel – I have been following your blog and really enjoy what you have to say. I wanted to share with you something that I am working on. The site is called http://www.geo-tee.com. I have been involved in GIS for 15 years and have always found our unique technology culture to have humor buried within it. So I decided to dig some of it up an place it on t-shirts and stickers. Slogans like NAD27 – Never Forget, GIS Ninja, and WM4F (Will Map for Food), GIS Swing’n – Many to Many Relationships, all have become very popular with visitors to the site. I was wondering if you could do a blog post abut the site. I would be happy to exchange some products for a post. Let me know what you think.
Thanks,
Scott
Whilst I don’t want to post about your site, as fundamentally my blog is a research blog based around my thoughts regarding my PhD and associated discourses, you can have this comment. Thanks for the interest.