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Hand feeding

Published Thursday 14th February 2008 14:26 GMT

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Yea, me too. 

By Robinson
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 14:54 GMT

Apart from geospatial types (which I'm going to be using for a GPS based application), we also have hierarchies (via hierarchyid), alternatives to storing image blobs in the database (FILESTREAM) and a way of passing arrays into stored procedures (table based parameters). These are the 4 main new features of the DB engine and all 4 of them are going to make my life a lot simpler.

Pleasby Wood 

By Andrew Bolton
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 15:42 GMT

Google Pleasby, find a book impression about Forest Scenery, google some other places near it, notice there is another edition of the same book where Pleasby is now called Pleasley. Find Pleasley on maps. There is a wood to the NE of it, just north of Pleasley Vale. And although it says Derbyshire on Google maps, the Notts/Derbys border runs right through it.

T'internet's marvellous, isn't it?

ESPG 4326 = WSG84 

By Peter Mount
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 16:18 GMT
Boffin

The 4326 is the WSG84 datum describing the curvature of the earth. It's the most commonly used datum when handling coordinates

That 4326 is... 

By Rory Plaire
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 16:34 GMT

...the ID of the coordinate system used to give the number pairs meaning. This particular ID is published by the European Petroleum Survey Group (ESPG) and is a de-facto standard in the GIS world. 4326 means that the numbers are in Latitude / Longitude, with Greenwich at 0 Lon, and with the WGS84 ellipsoid (a slightly squished sphere) used to model the surface of the earth in order to figure out where those coordinates end up.

Well, now, that should be cleared up.

Pleasby Wood 

By Mark Whitehorn
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 19:28 GMT
Thumb Up

Excellent Andrew, thank you! That's another one accounted for.....

Clayhithe 

By Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 21:19 GMT

I think is on the Clayhithe Road, between Horningsea and Waterbeach.

Clayhithie 

By Mark Whitehorn
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 22:09 GMT

AC is very kind but these four

Streatley Hill, Berkshire

Clayhithe, Cambridgeshire

Yalta, Crimea

Causey Pike Gill, Cumberland

are examples of ones for which we DO know the location:

51.52305, -1.15609

52.25789, 0.19911

44.49673, 34.16313

54.57683, -3.19908

However, as I say, the thought is much appreciated,

PostgreSQL+PostGIS? 

By Greg Fawcett
Posted Thursday 14th February 2008 22:34 GMT

I guess you're a a Microsoft shop, but I wonder if PostgreSQL with the PostGIS spatial data add-on (http://postgis.refractions.net/) could have met your requirements?

If so, you have a valuable backup strategy if MS suddenly drop spatial data to get it out the door on time. Possibly worth some research while you wait for MS to get to the party?

@ Robinson 

By Greg Fleming
Posted Friday 15th February 2008 21:20 GMT
IT Angle

Why are you attempting to store image Binary Objects INSIDE the DB?

Sheesh. Kids nowadays.

Ummm 

By Greg Fleming
Posted Friday 15th February 2008 21:25 GMT
IT Angle

Coordinate mapping is already happening in databases. Now. Today. In really bog-standard RDM systems.

Is this really something to get interested in? Is software engineering so bereft of ideas that this actually seems cool?

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