Hopefully, he'll chime in.What software (or website) is he using to produce that map?
Hopefully, he'll chime in.What software (or website) is he using to produce that map?
Steve West has had this whole thing covered for quite some time now. Although I think he needs to upgrade his map since its two years old.
http://www.stevewestdiscgolf.com/About-Us.html
Sorry I omitted that. The state with the least course density (Alaska) is the reddest, and the state with the greatest course density (Delaware) is the greenest. All the others are colored according to their relative density vs. Alaska and Delaware. I suppose I could set it up on an evenly graduated scale, but I haven't done that with the spreadsheet at this point. Maybe I can share an updated version if you want, or share my spreadsheet and let you tinker with it.
Must be becuase that's where Jukeshoe lives.Looks like that puts Northern Indiana as the epicenter of the "shizz".
Definitely looks like ArcGIS or the more professional/powerful versions that ESRI offers.I'd imagine Steve West used ArcGIS or some other type of mapping software that allows mass amounts of data input. Rizbee has done a lot of this, too. Hopefully he can share some of his maps on here.
I've been wanting to figure out a way to show survey data by state, like you see in all those infographics on the internet about who says "soda" and who says "pop". After some research on how to do it in Excel, I finally figured out a way. While doing this, I created a map to show the density of disc golf courses per state, which I've attached as an image. I was kinda surprised to see how well, for example, Delaware, which has only 12 courses, compares against Texas, which has over 300, when you adjust for land area. Check it out and see if you notice anything interesting.
Nice!
What software (or website) is he using to produce that map?