Open Research

The Nunaliit Cybercartographic Atlas Framework was born out of a multi-disciplinary research project led by Dr. Fraser Taylor, a Distinguised Research Professor in the department of Geography and Environmental Studies and director of the Geomatics and Cartographic Research Centre at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada.

The 4-year Cybercartography and the New Economy (CNE) project is funded by the Social Sciences and Hunamities Research Council of Canada and seeks to develop the theory and practice of cybercartography - a concept that takes a holistic approach to information and sees the map as a central unifying principle.

The Nunaliit framework aims to make it easy for anyone to build a cybercartographic atlas - telling stories and exploring the relationships between space, time, knowledge, and our senses. Initial development has focused on an XML schema for organizing and connecting content into a meaningful state, and a compiler to render that information out to an interactive web interface. This system is quite usable now, if you're comfortable with XML.

Future developments will see great improvements for creators as the tools to contribute, link, and tell stories around content and maps are built and integrated. Our goal is to have cybercartographic story-telling be as simple as working with collaborative web technologies like Wiki are today.

Screenshots

Cybercartographic Atlas of Antarctica - Territorial Claims module

Credits

To date, numerous individuals have contributed to the Nunaliit framework in some capacity through the CNE project. The list of CNE project participants gives some idea of the breadth of study that informed much of the theory and concepts upon which Nunaliit was built.

The Nunaliit framework development itself consitutes only a fraction of the CNE project and a few people deserve special mention for their participation on the production team.

More thank-yous and kudos are located in the LICENSE.txt file contained in the Nunaliit packages.

The License

As an output of a publically funded research project, it was important for us to release the Nunaliit code under a license that permits broad adoption of the software and encourages use of the ideas as widely as possible. We have chosen the New BSD License as it permits use, redistribution, and modification by anyone with no obligation to make the modifications available for others. That being said, we expect that individuals and organizations, whether for profit or not, will see the benefits of contributing their effort back to the nunaliit community. Please see the Community and Developers sections of this site to contribute.

Web Site Design

The Nunaliit web site is maintained by Amos Hayes. Please email me with comments or questions. The web site design is based on a CSS template freely distributed by Andreas Viklund. He makes some neat music too.

Did you know: The word nunaliit means "settlement", "community", or "habitat" in Inuktitut - the name given to the dialects of the Inuit language in Canada. Written in Syllabic Inuktitut, it appears at the very top right of this site.

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