
The MapScaping Podcast - GIS, Geospatial, Remote Sensing, earth observation and digital geography
byMapScaping
Science
A podcast for the mapping community. Interviews with the people that are shaping the future of GIS, geospatial and the mapping world. This is a podcast for the GIS and geospatial community https://mapscaping.com/
Episodes(40 episodes)
Episode 254
Common Space
This episode examines the Common Space initiative, a non-profit project dedicated to building and launching high-resolution optical satellites designed specifically for humanitarian purposes, such as aiding populations at risk from climate events and conflict.
Although there are over a thousand Earth observation satellites currently in orbit, high-resolution imagery remains largely inaccessible to humanitarians, journalists, and civil rights groups due to high costs, restrictive licensing, and the prioritization of defense and intelligence tasking.
Common Space aims to bridge the gap between low-resolution public goods (like Landsat and Sentinel) and expensive commercial options by offering 50 to 70-centimeter re...
Published: Mar 22, 2026Duration: 38m 31s
Episode 253
AI in QGIS
I've been playing around with a lot of large language models lately, and it is absolutely fascinating to watch them work. But what happens when you bring that directly into QGIS?
Right now, AI in the geospatial industry is a lot like a fast, enthusiastic new intern, incredibly helpful, and sometimes completely wrong, but improving at a rate that no human can compete with.
As we hand more of our geoprocessing tasks over to these algorithms, and computing becomes more pervasive, are our own GIS skills becoming obsolete? Or are we just unlocking radically different o...
Published: Mar 5, 2026Duration: 49m 20s
Episode 252
Geospatial Makers Start Building!
Geospatial Product Swiss Army Knife
1. The "Build It and They Won't Come" Trap
We have all seen it: a talented geospatial professional spends months—perhaps years—perfecting a technically sophisticated web map or a niche data service, only to release it to a deafening silence. In our industry, the "build it and they will come" philosophy is a fast track to zero traction.
Precision is the enemy of progress when it is applied to the wrong problem.
Daniel and Stella Blake Kelly explored a remedy for this pattern. Stella—a New Zealand-born, Sydney-based strategist and founde...
Published: Feb 11, 2026Duration: 46m 52s
Episode 251
Vibe Coding and the Fragmentation of Open Source
Why Machine-Writing Code is the Best (and Most Dangerous) Thing for Geospatial:
The current discourse surrounding AI coding is nothing if not polarized. On one side, the technofuturists urge us to throw away our keyboards; on the other, skeptics dismiss Large Language Models (LLMs) as little more than "fancy autocomplete" that will never replace a "real" engineer. Both sides miss the nuanced reality of the shift we are living through right now.
I recently sat down with Matt Hansen, Director of Geospatial Ecosystems at Element 84, to discuss this transition. With a 30-year career spanning the death of photographic film to th...
Published: Feb 3, 2026Duration: 36m 36s
Episode 250
A5 Pentagons Are the New Bestagons
How can you accurately aggregate and compare point-based data from different parts of the world? When analyzing crime rates, population, or environmental factors, how do you divide the entire globe into equal, comparable units for analysis?
For data scientists and geospatial analysts, these are fundamental challenges. The solution lies in a powerful class of tools called Discrete Global Grid Systems (DGGS). These systems provide a consistent framework for partitioning the Earth's surface into a hierarchy of cells, each with a unique identifier. The most well-known systems, Google's S2 and Uber's H3, have become industry standards for everything from database optimization t...
Published: Jan 19, 2026Duration: 37m 21s
Episode 249
The Sustainable Path for Open Source Businesses
The Open-Source Conundrum
Many successful open-source projects begin with passion, but the path from a community-driven tool to a sustainable business is often a trap.
The most common route—relying on high-value consulting contracts—can paradoxically lead to operational chaos. Instead of a "feast or famine" cycle, many companies find themselves with more than enough work, but this success comes at a cost: a fragmented codebase, an exhausted team, and a growing disconnect from the core open-source community.
This episode deconstructs a proven playbook for escaping this trap: the strategic transition from a service-based consultancy to a product-led company.
Through the stor...
Published: Jan 8, 2026Duration: 36m 18s
Episode 248
Free Software and Expensive Threats
Open-source software is often described as "free," a cornerstone of the modern digital world available for anyone to download, use, and modify. But this perception of "free" masks a growing and invisible cost—not one paid in dollars, but in the finite attention, time, and mounting pressure placed on the volunteer and community maintainers.
This hidden tax is most acute when it comes to security.
Jody from Geocat, a long-time contributor to the popular GeoServer project, pulled back the curtain on the immense strain that security vulnerabilities place on the open-source ecosystem.
His experiences reveal critical lessons for anyone who build...
Published: Dec 26, 2025Duration: 34m 29s
Episode 247
Mapping Your Own World: Open Drones and Localized AI
What if communities could map their own worlds using low-cost drones and open AI models instead of waiting for expensive satellite imagery?
In this episode with Leen from HOT (Humanitarian OpenStreetMap Team), we explore how they're putting open mapping tools directly into communities' hands—from $500 drones that fly in parallel to create high-resolution imagery across massive areas, to predictive models that speed up feature extraction without replacing human judgment.
Key topics:
Why local knowledge beats perfect accuracy
The drone tasking system: how multiple pilots map 80+ square kilometers simultaneously
AI-assisted mapping with humans in the lo...
Published: Dec 18, 2025Duration: 32m 43s
Episode 246
From Data Dump to Data Product
This conversation with Jed Sundwall, Executive Director of Radiant Earth, starts with a simple but crucial distinction: the difference between data and data products. And that distinction matters more than you might think.
We dig into why so many open data portals feel like someone just threw up a bunch of files and called it a day. Sure, the data's technically "open," but is it actually useful? Jed argues we need to be way more precise with our language and intentional about what we're building.
A data product has documentation, clear licensing, consistent formatting, customer...
Published: Dec 9, 2025Duration: 45m 39s
Episode 245
Reflections from FOSS4G 2025
Reflections from the FOSS4G 2025 conference
Processing, Analysis, and Infrastructure (FOSS4G is Critical Infrastructure)
The high volume of talks on extracting meaning from geospatial data—including Python workflows, data pipelines, and automation at scale—reinforced the idea that FOSS4G represents critical infrastructure.
AI Dominance: AI took up a lot of space at the conference. I was particularly interested in practical, near-term impact talks like AI assisted coding and how AI large language models can enhance geospatial workflows in QGIS. Typically, AI discussions focus on big data and earth observation, but these topics touch...
Published: Dec 2, 2025Duration: 13m 56s
Episode 244
Building a Community of Geospatial Storytellers
Karl returns to the Mapscaping podcast to discuss his latest venture, Tyche Insights - a platform aimed at building a global community of geospatial storytellers working with open data.
In this conversation, we explore the evolution from his previous company, Building Footprint USA (acquired by Lightbox), to this new mission of democratizing public data storytelling.
Karl walks us through the challenges and opportunities of open data, the importance of unbiased storytelling, and how geospatial professionals can apply their skills to analyze and share insights about their own communities. Karl shares his vision for creating something...
Published: Nov 27, 2025Duration: 42m 6s
Episode 243
I have been making AI slop and you should too
AI Slop: An Experiment in Discovery
Solo Episode Reflection: I'm back behind the mic after about a year-long break. Producing this podcast takes more time than you might imagine, and I was pretty burnt out. The last year brought some major life events, including moving my family back to New Zealand from Denmark, dealing with depression, burying my father, starting a new business with my wife, and having a teenage daughter in the house. These events took up a lot of space.
The Catalyst for Return: Eventually, you figure out how to deal with grief, stop mourning...
Published: Nov 17, 2025Duration: 18m 56s
Episode 242
Scribble: An AI Agent for Web Mapping
Jonathan Wagner, CEO of Scribble Maps, is back on the podcast, and this time we're talking about Scribble—an AI agent he's built into his platform. Not a chatbot, an agent. There's a difference, and we get into that.
https://mapscaping.com/podcast/the-business-of-web-maps/
So far, Scribble has access to 140 tools. It can view your map, select tools, build plugins, fetch data, and handle onboarding and customer education.
But here's the thing—should you care?
I think you should, because we're going to see more and more of these...
Published: Nov 10, 2025Duration: 48m 39s
Episode 241
Mapillary
Exploring the Evolution and Impact of Mapillary with Ed from Meta.
Topics include Ed's journey with Mapillary, the process of uploading and utilizing street-level imagery, and the integration with OpenStreetMap.
Ed talks about the challenges of mapping with various devices, the role of community contributions, and future potentials in mapping technology, such as using neural radiance fields (NeRFs) for creating immersive 3D scenes.
The episode provides insights into how Mapillary is advancing geospatial data collection and usage.
00:00 Introduction to the Map Scaping Podcast 00:57
Meet Ed: Product Manager at Meta 02:09</p...
Published: Oct 27, 2025Duration: 48m 5s
Episode 240
Telematics Data is Reshaping Our Understanding of Road Networks
Telematics Data is Reshaping Our Understanding of Road Networks
In this episode MIT Professor Hari Balakrishnan explains how Cambridge Mobile Telematics (CMT) is transforming traditional road network analysis by layering dynamic behavioural data onto static map geometries.
Telematics data creates "living maps" that go beyond traditional road geometry and attributes. By collecting movement data from 45 million users through phones and IoT devices, CMT has developed sophisticated models that can:
- Generate dynamic risk maps showing crash probability for every road segment globally
- Detect infrastructure issues that aren't visible in traditional mapping (l...
Published: Jan 9, 2025Duration: 58m 52s
Episode 239
Hivemapper
In this week’s episode, I’m thrilled to welcome back Ariel Seidman, founder of HiveMapper. Ariel was my very first podcast guest back in 2019, and HiveMapper has come a long way since then!
We explore how HiveMapper has evolved from a drone-based mapping system to a cutting-edge platform collecting street-level data at a global scale. Ariel shares the challenges of scaling large-scale mapping efforts, the pivot to building their own hardware, and the role of blockchain-based incentives in driving adoption.
Here are just a few topics we cover:
Why HiveMapper shifted focus from dron...
Published: Dec 5, 2024Duration: 51m 29s
Episode 238
Tracking Elephants
Tracking elephants in Southern Africa’s Kavango-Zambezi (KAZA) region, the largest transfrontier conservation area in the world.
Lead scientist Robin Naidoo from the World Wildlife Fund-US explains the complex, cross-border collaboration required to understand elephant movements across vast landscapes and the role of GNSS.
Connected with Robin
https://www.worldwildlife.org/experts/robin-naidoo
Read more information about this study here
https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2664.14746
https://news.mongabay.com/2024/09/jumbo-collaring-effort-reveals-key-elephant-movement-corridors/
Check out https://www.movebank.org/
Published: Nov 6, 2024Duration: 45m 36s
Episode 237
Female Voices in Geospatial
Today's episode touches on some pretty big topics like Imposter Syndrome, Mentorship, Career Progression, Adaptability and Diversity
Today you are going to hear two stories from two very different voices. Two brilliant people who happen to be women in geospatial.
Ta Taneka
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ta-taneka/
Mary Murphy
https://www.linkedin.com/in/mary-murphy-12319433/
You can check out the GIS Directions Podcast here:
https://esriaustralia.com.au/gis-directions-podcast
or search for GIS Directions where every you listen to po...
Published: Sep 25, 2024Duration: 42m 54s
Episode 236
QField
In this episode, Marco Bernasconi, co-founder and CEO of OPENGIS.ch, introduces us to QField, an open-source mobile application designed for field data collection in conjunction with QGIS.
Marco shares his journey in developing QField and discusses its seamless integration with QGIS, allowing users to capture, survey, and manage geospatial data on various mobile devices.
We also discuss the technical aspects of QField, including its user-friendly interface, the ability to connect with external sensors, and the recent introduction of QField Cloud for enhanced data synchronization and management.
Marco highlights the application’s diverse us...
Published: Sep 18, 2024Duration: 49m 7s
Episode 235
Analyst To Engineer
This is the story of Priscilla Cole, and what she did when she discovered that her ambitions were bigger than the tools she was using!
Connect with Priscilla here!
https://www.linkedin.com/in/priscilla-cole-5892549/
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The Way You Talk About Your Skills Is Costing You Money
Geospatial Consulting As A Business And Career
Mid-Life Career Change
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Applying For A Job, Getting Picked and N...
Published: Aug 28, 2024Duration: 41m 5s