User:Pinecone

From Geohashing
Revision as of 02:42, 21 June 2008 by imported>Pinecone

Pinecone is a Boston based conifer.



2008-06-21  Meet up at 4pm at 92 Coleridge St

Planning

Today was a hard fought contest with (42.3,-71.0) edging out (42.3,-71.1) 3.5 miles to 3.8. 42.379317,-71.013963 is on the edge of a lovely mudflat with the Google Directions to it ending on nearby Coleridge St. Constitution Beach is adjacent which is a lovely place if you don't mind the airplanes giving you a haircut.

Boston2 could be worth a visit. It's in front of the Museum of Comparative Zoology on the Harvard main campus.

Todays locations in the Boston graticule:

DECIHASH     IN DECICULE     DISTANCE FROM "BOSTON"     LOCATION
Boston0 (42.9, -71.6) 61.8 miles Always at the graticule hash of course
Boston1 (42.3, -71.0) 3.5 miles 92 Coleridge St, Boston - Meet up
Boston2 (42.3, -71.1) 3.8 miles Divinity Ave, Cambridge
Boston4 (42.2, -71.1) 7.6 miles Mt Calvary Rd, Boston
Boston3 (42.2, -71.0) 8.1 miles Quincy Shore Dr, Quincy

WARNING: The decihash system is an experimental technology. It may become unstable or exploode at any time. Use caution when following it's directions. If it instructs you to pick up any sharp object please report it immediately.



2008-06-14  Meet up at 4pm at the corner of University Dr S and University Dr E, Dorchester

Planning

Today's Boston decihash is being hosted by decicule (42.3,-71.0). The location itself is under water 42.306746,-71.038886, but Google's directions to it end at the coast on the campus of the University of Massachusetts. There is a walkway from there that goes to the waterfront. I imagine a cafeteria thereabouts could be used for games afterwards.

Results

Total disaster! Trusted the MBTA public transit system who decided to run buses through the middle of the Gay Pride march. 45 minutes late to the decihash. Will the experimental results still be valid??

The decihash itself was on the perimeter of the University of Massachusetts campus and had a lovely harbor view. I marked the spot and left a game for the next person to finish.


An Immodest Proposal

[Could someone familiar with the Google API help me with a reference implementation?]

The Issue

A typical hash is about 30 miles away from you. Ramifications of this:

  • An long drive each way for those with car.
  • Somewhat more problematic for those without.
  • On the social front, you meet a lot of nice people but they live far away from you.
  • Nobody is ever going to get the damn Couch Potato ribbon.
  • You usually get sent to less populated areas:
    • Ironic to burn a lot of oil to go see greenery.
    • You don't often get to play with cities.
    • In populated graticules you have to find a park to hang out in. This is nice for frisbee but less handy for table games.
    • In unpopulated graticules most expeditions are less social club and more hiking trip.
    • It's a bigger problem for everyone in the winter.

Reasons I might like something nearer at hand:

  • Lacking transport
  • Want a local group to socialize with
  • Want to play with cities
  • The regular hash is someplace god-awful
  • I am feeling lazy

Obviously we could just divide up the graticules into smaller pieces, but this would scatter the children of XKCD far and wide. I present a solution here that I think can address these issues.

Decicules and Driving Directions

1. Divide each graticule into tenths called decicules. For example, if I live in graticule (42,-71) then some decicules near me are

                                  (42.0,-71.0)                           (42.0,-71.1)                           (42.0,-71.2)                              ...
(42.1,-71.0) (42.1,-71.1) (42.1,-71.2) ...
(42.2,-71.0) (42.2,-71.1) (42.2,-71.2) ...
etc.

2. The day's hash for your graticule will define 10x10 = 100 decihashes which match the hash coordinates except for varying in their tenths digits. For example, if the hash is (42.1357,-71.2468) then some of the decihashes are

                                  (42.0357,-71.0468)             (42.0357,-71.1468)             (42.0357,-71.2468)                ...
(42.1357,-71.0468) (42.1357,-71.1468) (42.1357,-71.2468) ...
(42.2357,-71.0468) (42.2357,-71.1468) (42.2357,-71.2468) ...
etc.

3. Pick the urban center you are closest to. There will be four decihashes surrounding that location. For example, if I am near Boston the layout for the above hash would be

                                  (42.4357,-71.1468)             (42.4357,-71.0468)
Boston
(42.3357,-71.1468) (42.3357,-71.0468)

4. Use Google Directions to find which of these decihashes has the shortest driving distance from the name of your urban center. E.g. "Boston".

5. The end point for that set of driving directions is the Boston decihash for the day.

The reason for that last point is to solve one additional problem. When a hash location is inaccessible, there can be confusion about where to meet up. But when you give Google Directions an inaccessible destination, it gets as close as it can using public roads. That endpoint will always be accessible and unique.

The chosen decihash will usually be within 6 miles of the city center. It doesn't matter where Google Maps thinks "Boston" is, or that you won't be driving the route it finds. What matters is that it's consistent for everyone who checks it.

An Example

On 5-24-08 the (42,-71) meet up was at 42.126648,-71.547534:
-
Meanwhile, back in Boston:
Player (42.3,-71.0) wins!

So in this case, those who are able go to the graticule hash in Hopedale, MA while those more local could meet up at 695 William J Day Blvd, Boston which is where the driving directions for the winning decihash end up. If you have plans to visit a decihash on a given day, best to mention it on the graticule wiki page ahead of time.

In a graticule with high population there might be several active decihashes. In my area one would expect Boston, Worcester, and Nashua to have their own contingents. These decihash meet ups would likely be overridden if the graticule hash itself were nearby.

Honest, this is less complicated than it sounds and an implementation will make it all clear. And you really only need this for urban areas were population density makes sub-meet ups feasible.

Notes

If the decihash is going to suck, you can pick the location with the 2nd shortest driving distance instead of the shortest. You would name the decihashes in order as: Boston1, Boston2, Boston3, etc. Boston0 would probably mean the actual hash for the graticule that Boston is in.

A decihash can be used as the fall-back for everyone in a graticule if the real hash is going to suck. E.g. "Today's hash is in the middle of a swamp but Boston3 is in the hardware department at Sears. Let's go there!"

You can use any location to define the origin from which to measure a decihash. The Boston decicule would sometimes go to then same location as a Brookline decicule, sometimes not. You would only define a local center if there were a high enough concentration of Our Kind to make it worth while.

An in-town location is likely to pick up some more people just because some can't get out to the hash and because there are just more people in those areas. I'm certainly more willing to meet on a street corner in winter than in the forest.

During weekdays I'm unlikely to be able to road trip to a graticule hash, but it would be great to have a convention to meet up at Boston1 at say, 8pm.

All this is not meant to detract from the preeminence of the original meet up system. Long live the mighty graticule!

Issues

Boundary question: is it allowed to sometimes use a neighboring graticule to get the closest decihash?

Naming convention confusion: Boston graticule vs. Boston decicule. Decicule vs. decihash.

The "dangerous part of town" problem.

Comments?

I think the idea would be considerably more appealing if it were more simplified. You don't need Google routes, city centers, and all that. Just this:

  • A decihash is a location that differs from a geohash in only the tenths digits.

Then people can coordinate which decihash to meet at, when they don't have the transportation, the time, or the inclination toward being lost in the woods to get to the actual geohash. If one decihash is inaccessible, there's another one a couple of miles away that isn't.

Decicules can be named after what they contain, as graticules are, not just the nearby city center and a rank-ordered number. For example, there could be (hypothetically, I haven't checked the boundaries) a Cambridge decicule, an Arlington decicule, a Back Bay decicule... And this can be good, because the decihash closest to what Google Maps calls "Boston" might be close in the wrong direction for most people. (Many places south of the center of Boston would be considered "the bad side of town".)

The problems in particular with basing the locations on driving directions:

  • You can't check that you're there with a GPS
  • "Boston1", "Boston2", etc. would not refer to stable regions, leading to confusion on which one is which each day
  • Google's driving directions for Boston are often stupid anyway

Rspeer 19:15, 15 June 2008 (UTC)