What do you need to know when starting in Geo as a developer? Read on to know!
Tag: fiji
How we checked road graph correctness
How to make the roads better?
What about roads on a map?
Read to learn what graph (and non-graph) algorithms we implemented to make the roads good.
One particularly nasty and cold day, in the middle of February, our users, cartographers, came to visit us, developers. And they looked worried.
We offered them hot tea and chocolate candy. By gentle nudging and careful questioning we managed to understand what was bothering them.
They wanted the roads to be good.
Geo Information System: Map Navigation
Bad-ass development of scalable systems with lots of user requirements, tight schedules and limited resources? Ask me how!
This is the series of articles about building a professional enterprise Geo Information System. Here I’m going to tell you how we dealt with the most intensive and visible part – the map navigation.
I’m continuing the series of articles about developing a Geo Information System for 2GIS company.
In the first part of the series I described the user requirements for the Geo Information System we were developing, and in the next part – an overview of the architecture. Here I’m describing in more details how we dealt with map navigation.
Geo Information System: Architecture
Bad-ass development of scalable systems with lots of user requirements, tight schedules and limited resources? Ask me how!
This article is about our GIS-system architecture. Read on to learn how we dealt with all requirements!
I’m continuing the series of articles about developing a Geo Information System for 2GIS company.
In the first article I described the requirements we gathered. Now it’s time to talk about the implementation.
Geo Information System: Requirements
Bad-ass development of scalable systems with lots of user requirements, tight schedules and limited resources? Ask me how!
This is the first article in series about building a Geo Information System. Here I’m going to tell you about user requirements we gathered before we rushed into development.
I’m starting a series of articles about building a geographic information system, or GIS-system. With a great team of smart and very dedicated developers, we created a robust scalable solution that our users were happy with. Or, almost happy. You can never make users completely happy. Sigh.