Map correctness and its consequences

I’ve had a globe for years and prefer it when looking up countries with my kids, as obviously it provides us with the most accurate perspective on our world (Google Earth too now, of course). There is no shape/size filter or projection involved.

But on paper, we are used to looking at the world in Mercator projection. It’s what on most atlas pages.

World map in Mercator projection

The Mercator projection originates in the 16th century, and is really useful when navigating the world’s oceans by boat. However, it does very little for giving you even a remotely adequate idea of what the world really looks like – specifically, proportions.

Sure, we know and can see that since earth is roughly a sphere, in order to do this projection we need to stretch the world horizontally the closer we get to the poles. But what you may not usually spot is that the equator is located about two thirds down the page. Hmm….

Below is our world in Peters projection:

Peter's Map

One of its main features (at least to me) is that it puts the equator in the middle.

You can further mess with your brain by putting Australia in the centre, and/or turning the whole map up-side-down. All that still amounts to the same earth, it’s just a matter of perspective. And perspective matters. It matters a great deal.

Generally speaking, larger is regarded as more important, and by convention things at the top of a page similarly so. What proper proportions (and positions) teach is a better sense of where we (you and I individually, and our respective countries) are in the world in relation to everything else.

This clip from The West Wing TV series covers the topic awesomely well:

See http://www.whydontyoutrythis.com/2013/04/the-true-size-of-africa-erroneous-map.html for some more maps and info on true relative size.

A case can easily be made that these days, map projection amounts to politics. Your projection will define how you view the world and your own relative position (and size) in it. Interesting, isn’t it?

Open Letter to Origin Energy (Gas)

Dear Christina Wilson (Executive Customer Sales and Operations) at Origin Energy

No I will not (re)connect natural gas at my premises. You appear to be (corporately) forgetful.

Only last year I cancelled the gas supply, as it has become everything but natural. As you yourself stated to me, it’s now all Coal Seam Gas (CSG). I don’t think CSG is a smart idea and thus I want no part of that.

Your additional offer to “offset” the resulting CO2 emissions don’t even touch the root problem.

In reciprocation of your looking forward to welcome me, I look forward to the day when you actually listen to your customers rather than just ignoring their feedback and then continuing to send them mail trying plug your products – particularly products they’ve explicitly cancelled. Take it from a business owner: that looks bad.

P.S. I’d write to you in a more direct manner, but even though you sign your letters by name, you don’t actually supply an email address or specific postal address either in your letter or on your website. Phone appears to be the only way to communicate with Origin, but a 1300 number will only connect me to a generic callcentre person, won’t it… not very useful at all.

6 ‘Harmless’ Fads That Caused Widespread Destruction

http://www.cracked.com/article_20411_6-harmless-fads-that-caused-widespread-destruction.html/


It turns out some fads have poisoned thousands, started wars, and enslaved entire nations, all for the sake of some dumbass thing people wanted to ride, wear, or eat.

Average CO2 levels rise past nasty threshold | NYT

The average carbon dioxide reading surpassed 400 parts per million at the research facility atop the Mauna Loa volcano on the island of Hawaii […] The best available evidence suggests the amount of the gas in the air has not been this high for at least three million years […]
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/11/science/earth/carbon-dioxide-level-passes-long-feared-milestone.html

Ground control to Major Tux: Space station dumps Windows, now uses Linux