From paper maps to the Digital Earth and the Internet of Places

Maps have always been tools that have fascinated men, for their ability to make us see the world that surrounds us. They were and are the outcome of models and methods applied to the observation of the world, starting from geodesy, surveying photogrammetry and remote sensing. All these disciplines, which we now group under the new name of geomatics, have had a tremendous boost in recent years. However, the synergy with information computer technology is probably the aspect that is revolutionizing more cartography. Earlier computers and after the Internet have brought us to new concepts and tools that will have profound effects not only in the world of niche of cartographers, but also more generally in the life of all human beings. The Digital Earth, proposed in 1998 by Al Gore, has been enriched in just twenty years of a set of new demands, which make even more interesting and challenging being cartographers today. The paper, without claiming to be comprehensive, aims at providing a concise overview of the state of art and of the advancement in this area. Moreover, it urges the community of geomatics to be protagonist and promoter of a new cartography, largely to be reinvented, and that would put us at the center of processes of knowledge and management of the Earth. The map makers in the past helped discovering new worlds, now the challenge is to rediscover our common world with new eyes of environmental, social, economic equity, sustainability and participation.

[1]  Xing Fang,et al.  IBM Cloud Computing Powering a Smarter Planet , 2009, CloudCom.

[2]  Z. Liu,et al.  Digital Earth: decadal experiences and some thoughts , 2010, Int. J. Digit. Earth.

[3]  Maria Antonia Brovelli,et al.  PARTICIPATORY GIS: EXPERIMENTATIONS FOR A 3D SOCIAL VIRTUAL GLOBE , 2013 .

[4]  Tele Tan,et al.  Enhancing accessibility to web mapping systems with technology-aligned adaptive profiles , 2014, Int. J. Digit. Earth.

[5]  Jianya Gong,et al.  A virtual globe-based 3D visualization and interactive framework for public participation in urban planning processes , 2010, Comput. Environ. Urban Syst..

[6]  Huadong Guo,et al.  Next-generation Digital Earth , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[7]  Huadong Guo,et al.  Scientific big data and Digital Earth , 2014 .

[8]  Maria Antonia Brovelli,et al.  THE POWER OF VIRTUAL GLOBES FOR VALORISING CULTURAL HERITAGE AND ENABLING SUSTAINABLE TOURISM: NASA WORLD WIND APPLICATIONS , 2013 .

[9]  Kevin Shaw,et al.  Geospatial Services and Applications for the Internet , 2008, Geospatial Services and Applications for the Internet.

[10]  Erik Kjems,et al.  Geodata – Not Just for Maps , 2014 .

[11]  S. Li,et al.  MASHUP : A NEW WAY OF PROVIDING WEB MAPPING / GIS SERVICES , 2008 .

[12]  Michael F. Goodchild,et al.  The use cases of digital earth , 2008, Int. J. Digit. Earth.

[13]  Krzysztof Janowicz,et al.  The Digital Earth as knowledge engine , 2012, Semantic Web.

[14]  Maria Antonia Brovelli,et al.  Multi-frame and multi-dimensional historical digital cities: the Como example , 2014, Int. J. Digit. Earth.

[15]  Fabio Remondino,et al.  Reality-Based 3D Modeling, Segmentation and Web-Based Visualization , 2010, EuroMed.

[16]  J. D. Stanley Planetary skin institute ALERTS: automated land change evaluation, reporting and tracking system , 2011, COM.Geo.

[17]  A. Gore The digital earth : Understanding our planet in the 21st century , 1998 .

[18]  Anthony M. Castronova,et al.  Models as web services using the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Web Processing Service (WPS) standard , 2013, Environ. Model. Softw..

[19]  Huadong Guo,et al.  Digital Earth 2020: towards the vision for the next decade , 2012, Int. J. Digit. Earth.