A farewell to Google Maps. Say Hello to Maptoolkit!

The short story:

We do the switch2osm from Google Maps, and from the Google Maps API to Maptoolkit v8 with Openlayers! See the result here.

The long story:

When the Google Maps team announced the introduction of usage fees for high traffic websites such as our Bikemap.net, we were shocked at first. Thousands or tens of thousands of dollars a month is far beyond what a free service such as Bikemap can afford.

Cartography: Our own Openstreetmap style

When I first heard of the project Openstreetmap, 2006 at a presentation by OSM founder Steve Coast in Copenhagen, when merely London was mapped, I couldn’t imagine the project going very far. But already in 2008 Peter and I were giving OSM presentations ourselves, at BarCamps and tourism events in Germany and Austria. We mapped the West African city of Ouagadougou almost entirely on our own and persuaded some local authorities to supply their GIS data. It was clear that Openstreetmap would eventually outperform commercial map vendors, due to its simple structure and growing community. So when Google announced the end of the free party (which, by the way, we are endlessly thankful for!), we knew we wouldn’t go anywhere else than the open way.

We opted for the hard (but rewarding) development our own map style, together with our newest team member, OSM aficionado Holger Schöner. Just as many others – e.g. Nestoria, Active.com, GPSies, Fubra – we could have used existing renderings but weren’t fully satisfied with the available options.

As most of our use cases involve outdoor activities, we decided to include a nice digital elevation model (with SRTM data from CIAT and OGD sources). As for cartographic information density, we opted for a light streetmap (in contrast to only marginal streetmap information in renderings such as Google Terrain), while toning down feature density in comparison to full street maps such as the original OSM rendering from Openstreetmap.org.

See the screenshot above or the interactive demo at Maptoolkit.net. Our style will be further developed, both with the objective of high performance and of better, more interactive information quality, that is also adaptable to specific use cases.

By the way: Regardless of our own maps we will continue to offer Google Maps within our mashups. They have set standards in terms of web cartography and continue to do so. Hat tip to the fabulous Google Maps team!

New API: Maptoolkit v8

Map tiles are only half the battle. We also needed a decent Javascript application to display them. There are a couple of alternative APIs out there, most notably Bing, Mapquest and Cloudmade. For various reasons we had already abstracted most of the features Google supplies over the course of the last years, moving a lot of functionality into our own API Maptoolkit (MTK) that resides on top of the Google API. As of Version 7 of MTK the Google API merely is responsible for basic interface features. We now have moved that API foundation to the fabulous opensource project OpenLayers, which as of the new Version 8 of MTK covers not only the basic functionality but also provides us with the richness of functions from a large and active community of developers. To which we will happily be contributing to as well.

Don’t get me wrong: We continue to be huge fans of Google Maps. We have been building some of the map benchmarks of the European tourism industry with Google Maps. And we will continue to do so: The Google Maps API is tightly and well integrated (in alignment with Google’s terms) into MTK and can be used as ever. It is just not preconditional any more. Our customers will be able to decide when to use Google Maps basic, when to use Google Maps Premier, when to use Maptoolkit – and when to use Maptoolkit and Google together, in order to stay below usage limits. And they can throw in third party map tile servers such as Mapquest to the mix as well.

We will deploy both MTK v8 and our new rendering style within the upcoming weeks at Bikemap.net and selected customer projects. Please do get in touch if you are interested in any of our services.

Some notes on our demo:

  • It is for now limited to an alpine section of Tyrol in the alps, around the beautiful city of Innsbruck. We are in the course of providing a worldwide rendering up to a certain zoom level and more zoom levels for our most important markets, as needed.
  • Try switching between Toursprung maps, Google or the official Openstreetmap Mapnik rendering for comparison.
  • Try out displaying some geo content from the menu on the right. We have designed our maps in a way that doesn’t interfere with POIs and clusters, as this is a requirement in most of our use cases.
  • Everything is still beta: We are still working on many aspects of representation, interface controls and behaviour, production process and data quality.

Most importantly: How do you like our new maps? Let us know in the comments or on the Bikemap or Toursprung page on Facebook.


Showcase: Ötztal bike & hike routes

We have neglected our blog far too long, sorry for that. Many shiny new customer projects that are worth mentioning stayed unmentioned.

For now Mathias Kimpl from the Vienna based agency Wunderman PXP has done our job on his personal blog, documenting the great hike and bike route portal (in German) they implemented with our technology Maptoolkit for the Austrian regions Sölden, Ötztal and Obergurgl. (<-- See these links for the outcome!)

The great thing about the project:

Wunderman PXP implemented it largely on their own, relying on existing MTK functionality and its documentation, with only occasional support from us. That is what Maptoolkit was made for: Empowering our customers to build the applications they want, the way they want.

Contents and route descriptions are fully hosted on their servers, giving their site full SEO value. No iFrames, ma'am.

Screenshots:

Above: Choose your ideal route by using the map and/or a range of filter controls.

Above: The interactive route view, with elevation profile, metadata and download options. Example: Hüttentour Windachtal.

Above: All routes that pass a certain point, put together as a set. In this example all routes that pass the village of Sölden.


Martin Schobert über Toursprung

martin-schobert

Der ehemalige Leiter von Forschung und Internetstrategie der Österreich Werbung, Martin Schobert, schreibt heute in der Reihe “Vor den Vorhang” auf der Facebook-Page seines Beratungsunternehmens Tourismusdesign über uns:

Als Österreich Werber hatte ich Kontakt mit einer Vielzahl von Kartenanbietern, [Toursprung waren] die ersten die Karten aber “sozial” machten, intensiv an innovativen Projekten wie Openstreetmap arbeiten und v.a. kostengünstigen Sofortlösungen anbieten können – mit hoher Qualität.

Danke, Martin! Es war eine besondere Freude, mit dir zu arbeiten! Übrigens: Letzte Woche ging eine neue Version der Großen Österreich-Karte der Österreich Werbung mit neuen Datenquellen und überarbeiteter Navigation online.


COMPUTERBILD about Bikemap

German Newspaper COMPUTERBILD about Bikemap

German Newspaper COMPUTERBILD about Bikemap


Runner’s World Deutschland using Maptoolkit

RW_0610_Cover_85x110Runner’s World is the leading running magazine worldwide. Their german edition is Gemany’s largest running magazin, too.

Their website www.runnersworld.de consists of four main features: 1) running partners, 2) training log, 3) training plans and 4) running routes on meineLaufstrecken.de.

meinelaufstrecke

We are happy to announce that meineLaufstrecken.de by Runner’s World is powered by our Maptoolkit. More exciting projects are on their way.



Bikemap & friends go global

bike-ghana

Today we didn’t only launch Bikemap, Runmap and the other sites in Bulgarian, the tenth language after Dutch, Chinese, Czech, Polish, Italian, French, Spanish, English and German. We also launched an easier than ever new translation interface.

The Bulgarian version was translated by Nikolay Mladenov, a Bikemap user from Bulgaria, test-driving our new translation service. Thanks Nikolay! Catalan, Swedish, Hungarian, Romanian and Japanaese are in the works.

If you are a user of our sites and want to translate them into your mother tongue, just drop a comment below. It is really simple.

(Picture (cc) by Stig Nygaard)


Kooperation mit BestFewo.de

Ab sofort sind auf unseren Portalen Bikemap.net, Wandermap.net usw. über 30.000 deutsche Ferienwohnungen einblendbar.

Die Planung der eigenen Radtour oder Wanderung lässt sich nun noch einfacher mit der Buchung der dazu passenden Unterkunft kombinieren.

Ferienwohnungen in Bikemap

Die Fewo-Daten stammen von BestFewo.de, der größten Suchmaschine für Ferienwohnungen in Deutschland.


New feature for routes starting at same point

Due to frequent demand by our users we solved a common problem that occured when too many routes started at the very same point.. Those pins just were too close to each other:

New feature of close pins

With a simple mouse over a magic hand now pushes them aside where they now can be easily accessed:

New feature of close pins

Give it a try:


Popular routes in this area – powered by Runmap 

Ready for Maptoolkit? Take the Quiz.

Our product Maptoolkit is a complex one, so people looking for online map technology may find out that Maptoolkit is too powerful for their needs only after enquiring.

Maptoolkit

Here’s a simple quiz for eveyone asking themselves:

Is Maptoolkit the right technology for my project?

  1. Do you want to display large amounts of points of interest (or routes) on a map?
  2. Do you need best performance and scalability?
  3. Do you want to display your own geodata and/or cover a big range of touristic/informational geodata needs with 3rd-party sources (that we provide)?
  4. Are you impressed by Maptoolkit implementations such as Austria.info, MaptheQ or Bikemap.net?
  5. Are you responsible for a large scale web project that needs mapping technology and data, and ready to invest what it takes?
  6. Do you need to get your project online superquick?
  7. Do you rather rent proven technology than undergoing risk and costs of having to develop your own solution?

If you have 5 or more “Yes” on the above, you should get in touch!


Google-Sprecher lobt unsere Arbeit

Ein Lob aus befugtem Munde freut immer ganz besonders: Nicht nur Qype sondern auch Google-Deutschland-Pressesprecher Stefan Keuchel gefällt unser Qype-Mashup MaptheQ.com:

frischkopp

Übrigens haben wir MaptheQ nun auf einen schnelleren Server übersiedelt (<– Österreichisch für “umgezogen”) und vor allem im Funktionsumfang erweitert: Jetzt kann nach beliebigen inhaltlichen Kategorien gefiltert werden, und es werden jetzt auch fast alle Qype-Kategorien angezeigt. Vorher waren dies nur Lokale und Hotels.