Black Friday has a long tradition in the United States dating back to 1966 when Philadelphians used the term to describe the disruptive pedestrian and vehicle traffic that plagued the city the day after Thanksgiving. More recently it has come to represent the day that retailers move into the “black” of profits and has [...]
Continue Reading →One of the great parts of working GeoCommons is seeing all the interesting datasets people upload. We have everything from Afghanistan Polling Stations to Collegiate Quidditch Teams in Texas. Daily I look through for interesting information to post on either our Facebook Group or on the GeoCommons Twitter account.
One feature [...]
Continue Reading →I first talked about the ArcGIS version of our toolbars back at the DC Dev Meetup in September. Since then we’ve launched our developer site where you can download the toolbars, but you probably haven’t heard very much else about them. Designed to make sharing your analysis easier as well as find additional data we’ve [...]
Continue Reading →We’ve deployed part of the FortiusOne engineering to Denver for Hooky Bobbing and WhereCamp5280 for geo-nerding. If you see Andrew Turner, Kate Chapman, Andrei Taraschuk or Chris Helm say hi and if you have any questions on projects we support they are there to help. So, if you would like to hack on [...]
Continue Reading →A core component of GeoCommons is visualizing data through maps – allowing anyone to be a cartographer. We’ve worked with a number of amazing organizations to help us make GeoCommons a leading map visualization platform – such as AxisMaps and Continue Reading →
A customer asked me recently if GeoCommons was a data market place. After giving it some thought my answer was no. GeoCommons is part of the Web. If you do a Google search for “Foursquare DC metro” you get data sets and maps from GeoCommons as a result:
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Continue Reading →There is a lot of buzz about analyzing social media today, but I don’t think we spend much time thinking about how we can make analytics themselves more social. The Web has done a great job of making several things more social. At many levels the heart of the Web 2.0 moniker is making [...]
Continue Reading →A few weeks ago we updated GeoCommons with the new major version of our platform. Amongst a number of user interface improvements we also completely re-architected our application programming interface (API) – providing a full suite of capabilities for developers to use in building applications on top of the GeoCommons [...]
Continue Reading →About Us
Welcome to the GeoIQ blog. We write about features of our GeoIQ analytics engine, what is new and exciting in the GeoCommons community, and general industry thought leadership and discussions of geospatial data visualization and analysis.
Please explore what we're working on and let us know if you have any questions or ideas!
New GeoCommons Maps- MSLs W/ MSL Targets chaiclin
- Sales Targets w/ MSLs chaiclin
- MSLs with all Rheumatologists chaiclin
- HeatMapShipmentData_WithCost frtools
- MSL Geolocations chaiclin
- American Indian Tribal Subdivisions: 2000 lightraider
Recent Comments
- Connie Briggs on Dataset of the Day: Who is more Generous? Republicans or Democrats?
- 2011 in Review | GeoIQ Blog on The Oscars and Location Based Sentiment Analysis Through Twitter
- 2011 in Review | GeoIQ Blog on GeoCommons 2.0
- Kate on Dataset of the Day: Birth in the USA
- horlama aparatı on Dataset of the Day: Early Voting—November 3, 2008
