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jandrewrogerstoday at 12:37 AM2 repliesview on HN

I think geospatial analytics is important (because of course I would), but to be frank geospatial software has been stagnant for a long time. Every new thing is just a fresh spin on the same stagnant things we already have. This more or less says exactly this?

For geospatial analysis, the most important thing that could happen in software would be no longer treating it, either explicitly or implicitly, as having anything to do with cartography. Many use cases are not remotely map-driven but the tools require users to force everything through the lens of map-making.


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dbreunigtoday at 12:58 AM

I was struck by this as people suggest alternatives that refute the headline (QGIS, PostGIS, GDAL, etc): nearly every one emerged in the early 2000s.

Strongly agree with your sentiment around maps: most people can’t read them, they color the entire workflow and make it more complex, and (imo) lead to a general undervaluing of the geospatial field. Getting the data into columns means it’s usable by every department.

azinman2today at 12:38 AM

Can you give some examples?

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