Share Your Trips With Schmapplets

Schmapplets is a clever tool that allows users to make customizable maps of places they’ve been or places they want to go. Appropriate for everything from planning a cross-country road-trip; to sharing photos from a recent hike through the Appalachians; to showcasing your favorite fishing holes, Schmapplets mashes together Google Maps, photo galleries, and a text editor and presents it in an easy-to-use interface.

The Schmapplet below is from Venice Carnevale. It spotlights the places Pat visited, some photos taken during the event, and provides space for a review/description of the experience.

The bummer about Schmapplets is that you need to download software to use it. The software is free to install, but with other no-download-necessary mapping/photo- and video-sharing tools available to people, I wonder if this will take off. Still, a very cool concept.

Emotional Maps: a New Way to Navigate the City

While it may seem obvious, it’s worth noting that the best experiences I have while exploring cities around the world are never to do with what’s there — museums, important landmarks, etc — but instead revolve around how the place makes me feel.

One artist is making it easy for travelers like me, by making maps based not on an area’s geography, but rather on the emotions evoked by different areas within an urban landscape.

It works like this: volunteers agree to wander around a city while wearing both a GPS device and a sensor similar to that which is used in lie detector tests. Their thoughts on what they saw and felt when the polygraph recorded a quickened heartbeat are then recorded by the artist, who in turn uses the information to create “emotional maps.”

As you might suspect, a number of marketing and advertising companies want to use the findings to better target consumers, but the most interesting find — at least for me — is that people respond to social interactions far more than any piece of architecture. This means you’re far more likely to connect with a city full of interesting people, rather than someplace that has impressive buildings or attractive landscapes.

Might be useful information for the next time you’re planning that urban getaway, although — at least for the moment — London and San Francisco are the only cities the artist has completed.

TripHub’s New Dynamic Maps Make TripPlanning Even Easier

TripHub is an online group-travel planning resource. Recently, the site incorporated Trip Maps into their offerings, allowing users to map any group activity — from a pub crawl, to a bike race, to a family reunion, to a kayak trip. It’s a nifty way to plan a trip in which multiple people are participating.

As opposed to most map-making sites, TripHub allows users to collaborate on details of the trip (down to the nit-pickiest of things, like Tuesday’s hotel or Thursday’s brunch), invite other people, and even post an event schedule. Moreover, Trip Maps allow you to add items from local search results to the group’s schedule. In other words: no more mass e-mailing attendees whether they’d like to eat Mexican food or nyotaimori.

Though most Trip Maps are viewable by invitees only, you can see how it all works on Sandra’s Big Four Ooooh!, scheduled for Vegas for next February. Don’t knock it; Oprah and I will BOTH be there!

MadMaps: Maps For Back Roads

Oh, what an awesome idea. MadMaps makes maps for wanderers, travelers, daytrippers, and anybody who doesn’t have to get there as fast as possible. Focusing on “what’s to see along the way,” MadMaps details the long cuts, the off-the-beaten-path attractions, the natural wonders, and the historic towns you would otherwise miss when you head out on the highway.

If you’re really looking for adventure, MadMaps boasts a library of scenic day trips, weekend escapes, epic journeys, rally rides, and tour packs. Most of the maps are priced around $6. If you can’t find what you’re looking for… just slam it into neutral, because they’ve got a lot of titles forthcoming.

Get your motor running.

[Via TravelPost]

Wayfaring: A Map-Making Tool For The Rest of Us

Wayfaring lets you create customizable, information-filled maps — with waypoints, notes, and routes — of anything, from the locations of your favorite donut shops, to road trips, pub crawls, hashing routes, secret fly-fishing spots, shipwreck locations, and more.

Wayfaring also lets you search others’ maps; share maps with friends (so they can see the route you plan to travel during your “Hunt for the Best Burger Road Trip” this summer); and even collaborate with widely scattered people on a single map (i.e., we could all mark one map with our favorite burger joints for you to visit).

Once created, you can even embed your maps on an external website. For example, in about 5 minutes, I made this map of my regular running path. I even added a photo on one of the points to show the view of the water.

Slick, huh? (Wayfaring…not my running path.) Try it for yourself; I bet you like it.