Swiss Historical Maps Allow Journey Through Time In Your Browser 32
An anonymous reader writes "The Swiss Federal Office of Topography has published a complete set of digitized historical maps from 1938 to 2011. The twist: a browser application allows you to create a time travel movie at any place in Switzerland for any zoom level. As an example, you can see the recession of Europe's biggest glacier over the last 75 years. The application is the most recent effort of the Swiss Government to make geodata freely available to the public at no cost using open source software and will include maps dating as far back as 1838."
A glass darkly (Score:2)
EOM
Google Maps (Score:5, Interesting)
I've always wished Google Maps would add another slider that lets you scroll back to previous satellite images of the same area.
Re:Google Maps (Score:5, Informative)
This is possible in Google Earth, it is a really neat feature. For some areas they have imagery that dates back to the 80s.
For instance, you can check naval bases and see which aircraft carriers have been in at certain times. Or, more mundane, just look at how your neighbourhood/city has expanded/changed over the years.
Re:Google Maps (Score:4, Insightful)
Extend that to photographs and postcards. I've seen postcards of villages from 90 years ago, and they haven't changed. The most haunting one was to see pictures of the shop-owners and their children. The shops and homes were the same with minor modifications. But it was so strange to realize that none of those people were around any more.
Fantastic Idea (Score:4, Insightful)
Old (Score:2)
You know you are getting old when records from 1938 are "Historical".
Historical, that's from the 1800s...not a mere lifetime ago.
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1838? 1938? Which is it? (Score:2)
Re:1838? 1938? Which is it? (Score:5, Informative)
It's 1938 so far, they have much older maps that they're still working on. 1838 was the year the first full-country map of Switzerland was published.
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CERN Evolving (Score:5, Interesting)
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I have an idea (Score:4, Funny)
Can this system be patented: Not criminalizing people for liberating data because is it already free?
I know that Switzerland has very clever patent clerks.
They tried this in Japan once (Score:1)
They tried showing historical maps in Japan once. They overlaid them on top of current maps.
It only led to people attempting to revive a caste system and discrimination.
Bah developers suck (Score:2, Funny)
It doesn't work in IE 6. Can they fix it by the end of the day?
Sincerely, PHB
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Perhaps I was too harsh. PHB is an acronym for "Pointy Haired Boss." Although someone reading Slashdot and not getting a Dilbert reference...
Whoosh!
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This capability is going to be fantastic when applied to Slashdot so we can see it when it was good and compare it to now.
I must conclude (Score:2)