Archive for January, 2009

Cities are terrible

Fellow Nestorcrats,

As you well know the stress and strain of city life can often be unbearable (How many “passenger incidents” does a man have to live through? Central line – I’m looking at you). Which is why it gives us great pleasure to announce our new relationship with premium property website and publication Country Life. From today property searchers will be able to peruse tens of thousands of premium country homes perfect for the discerning buyer on Nestoria.

Country Life listings on Nestoria

So, when you’re ready to turn your back on the urban jungle, we’re here to help. Hooray, death to the city!

And for those of you not yet ready to abandon city living, you’ll be pleased to know that County Life also offers a significant selection of premium city homes as well. Unfortunately they can’t help with the tube.

Happy house hunting.

Where can you live?

Fellow Nestorinians,

today we announce another new service for property hunters. Where Can I Live? is a new service designed to make it simple for London commuters to find areas that might be relevant for your property search. Basically, we were very familiar with the use case of knowing where you will work (or study or otherwise spend your day), knowing how much money you have to spend, but not knowing where in London to live. We hope this tool can help solve that problem.

where-can-i-live.com screenshot

Like all of the services we feature on our interface testbed Lokku Labs, this is an experiment designed to help us learn about how users want to search for property. One major challenge we face with Nestoria is that we have only one website that tries to simultaneously meet the needs of many diverse user groups. We build these test sites as a way to try out new interfaces and new technologies that aren’t yet ready for primetime on Nestoria.

Some words of thanks for the folks involved. First of all, full credit to mySociety and their time-travel maps. Those proof of concepts gave us the idea. So last summer we started working with Chris Osborne. Chris did most of the conceptual work and built a prototype as his master’s project at UCL (BTW since working with us, Chris has gone on to big things, and currently runs #geomob a meetup of London geo and mobile developers. We’re looking forward to a great event this Thursday). London-based Doodledo helped us on the design and technically scaling things up. On a final note, big thanks to all the OpenStreetMap volunteers who created the maps.

There’s been some initial coverage of the service over on Property Portal Watch, Renthusiast, and TechCrunch.

Based on that initial coverage, we’ve been lucky enough to already get some initial feedback. This is just version 1, we know we need to add things like Overground Stations and bus routes. We’re working on it. Please let us know what you think.

Finally, we do hope this site and the other Lokku Labs sites proves inspirational for others. If you’re a researcher or academic looking to do interesting things with property information or you’re a web developer looking for an interesting project to show off your mad interface and data slinging skillz please get in touch.

Welcome AOL Users!

Fellow Nestori,

I’m delighted to announce to you that we’ve partnered with AOL, and now provide a version of Nestoria property search to AOL users on AOL.co.uk and the Homes and Property Channel.

Nestoria powers AOL property search

For a little band of vertical searchers like ourselves, it’s a great milestone to work together with a global internet titan like AOL. More importantly though we believe it’s great news for every home seller whose property appears in Nestoria and now reaches a larger audience. For us it’s another chance to learn from more users, and thus continually fine tune the property search experience. Big thanks to all the people who helped make it happen. Please give the service a spin and let us know what you think.

Inman Connect New York Summary

Fellow Nestoricans,

my apologies for the hiatus here on the blog. Even diligent property searchers need to take the occasional break, and last week was that time for me. But now I’m back so you can expect a flurry of posts in the coming days.

First up, let me start by saying what a great event Inman Connect in New York was.

As might be expected, discussion was dominated by the current state of the economy. Opinions were divided on how quickly society would revert to barter and cannibalism, and Brad summed it up best with his open statement, “Here’s the good news: 2008 is over”. Nevertheless, against the backdrop of bad news there were quite a few folks working on “the next big thing” and there was near unanimous agreement that the current down turn in the property market will force the last sceptics to acknowledge the power of new technologies, be it general internet marketing or more nascent media like twitter (BTW we’re @nestoria – follow us). Most enjoyable for me was the one day Property Portal Watch session hosted by Simon Baker where it was very interesting to learn about the shared challenges of property portals around the world.

The individual panels and sessions of the conference were all of a very high standard, and it was good to see that Europe was well represented. I had the pleasure of being part of a power packed panel discussing “Down and Dirty Web Analytics”. Here’s a photo of me in action:

Inman Connect - Down and Dirty Analytics panel

The session was jam packed and the calibre of the questions (and answers) was very high, which I took as an indicator that more and more of the property industry is realizing a. the web is the future, and b. making effective use of the web is hard work requiring specialised knowledge. Matt Carter provides an excellent summary of the session over on Inman.

As good as the sessions were the key take away for me was the one on one discussions. We met lots of great new people and reinforced some old relationships. And while some of the details of some of the late night meetings are shrouded in a hazy of alcohol, I can say I learned a lot.

Overall it was a great event. Many thanks to the organizers. We’re already looking forward to San Francisco in the summer.

Nestoria Interview – Andy Allan – OpenCycleMap

For our first Nestoria interview of 2009 we’re pleased to have the chance to speak with Andy Allan, one of the creators of OpenCycleMap.org. OpenCycleMap (OCM) is a flagship example of the power of opening up access to geodata. It’s built on top of OpenStreetMap, and was recently commended by the British Cartographic Society. When not working on OCM Andy is a Tech Lead at CloudMade.

1. What’s OpenCycleMap all about and how did you get the idea for it?

OpenCycleMap is a customised online map for cyclists, based on OpenStreetMap data. It shows things that are interesting to cyclists including signed cycle routes, offroad cycle paths, bike shops and bike parking – and of course hills – whilst diminishing other things like motorways that are of little interest. I’d been mapping for OpenStreetMap for about a year when some people were discussing customised maps, and I went ahead and attempted the cycle map in July 2007, and it’s a hobby that’s snowballed since then.

2. What are some of the technical challenges of the project?

The main two technical challenges have been getting my head around how everything works – from spatial databases to geoprocessing to mapnik style rules – and dealing with a huge world-wide project. The cycle map started off UK only, but has steadily increased to cover Europe, and then the whole world. But this takes up huge amounts of disk space, especially for the height data needed for the contours and hill colouring, takes forever to rerender each week, and its popularity sucks up an increasing amount of bandwidth. And if all that weren’t bad enough, the 81,000 OSM volunteers keep on adding even more data for me to deal with!

3. What has been the response from users?

Overwhelmingly positive. It’s continually held up as an example of what’s possible when the underlying OSM geo-data is made available, but as well as being creatively different from a standard web map it’s also pretty useful in its own right as a map for cyclists. By far the best thing is the feedback from other countries, across Europe and around the world, from people who have used and enjoyed it. But the work never ends, since almost all of the praise comes along with a “it would be great if it could also…” line attached!

4. What can we expect in 2009 from OCM specifically and from works built on top of OSM generally?

My plans for OpenCycleMap are fairly straightforward – to work on improving the map rendering even further, adding more detail and brushing up the documentation to entice more people in to contributing. But I’m much more excited about the projects that are taking the maps I generate and building on them – I’ve seen some previews of a great journey planning site that’s about to be released. There’s a few side projects, including cycle-tailored maps for Garmin GPS units and walking route maps that I’m working on in the background, and hopefully everyone will get to benefit from them at some point.

As for OSM generally, I think 2009 is going to be when OSM projects really start catching everyone’s imagination. I’ve seen a growing acceptance of OSM over the last six months in the techy community, and more and more people are coming up with interesting applications, especially for mobile devices, that use OSM by default. Here at CloudMade we’re working on various APIs that’ll make it even easier to develop cool applications, and you’ll hear more about them from us as 2009 progresses.

5. There is an OSM version of Nestoria,and we’ve considered switching fully to OSM in a few well covered areas like Berlin or central London. What’s your advice?

Go for it! You wouldn’t be the first, Flickr! have done similar things for their maps where OSM is better than their other map suppliers in many places around the world, famously in Beijing but also such places as Sydney. Anyone in your position should consider what their customers are wanting from the maps on your site – if it’s just for a vague orientation then there’s not much to choose between different maps other than their cartographic style. But when I’m poking around for a new flat on Nestoria I’m much more interested in all the stuff that only OSM shows, like where the nearest pubs and supermarkets are, whether it’s near industrial areas or open spaces with plenty of paths through them, and for me whether there’s bicycle parking near the train stations!

Thanks Andy. You are absolutely right that home searchers are interested in relevant local content. We’ll keep experimenting during the course of 2009 to try to stay at the forefront of innovation in online cartography. For those interested in OCM you can follow Andy’s progress via his blog – assuming of course he’s not out pedaling.

past Nestoria interviews: Stephan Uhrenbacher, Gary Gale, and Muki Haklay.

Most popular blogposts of 2008

Fellow Nestorfreaks,

allow us to engage in another post of online navel gazing (fear not we’re nearing the end). Today we reflect on our top blog posts of 2008. It’s always interesting in blogging that often topics that seem so important to us, draw less public interest than anticipated, while other topics take on a life of their own. So it’s interesting to look back and see how we did over the year, and see if there are any conclusions to be drawn, that might help us in the coming year. But of course if you have any feedback feel free to let us know directly.

Moving on to the list, the top five by number of visitors, presented in reverse order:

5. It seems the appeal of seeing me in lederhosen at our team summer event was enough to earn spot five on our list.

4. More than a few folks found our innovative launch of single click house buying to be worth reading.

3. Equally innovative (and much more real), our post describing the OpenStreetMap version of Nestoria drew many readers.

2.The launch of our embeddable house price charts earned the second spot on our list.

and the most popular post of 2008 was ….

1. the announcement of our integration of historic house price data on our search result pages.

Good to see the interest in house price data and OpenStreetMap, as we are curently hard at work on a new service (somewhat related to our recent prototype Nestoholic) that will use our house price data and OSM. But more about that in a future post … (and don’t expect many lederhosen pics)

Happy new year to all of you and thanks for reading.