notes.husk.org. scribblings by Paul Mison.

2009-09-09

Thoughts On Short Location References

text 11:55:00

Yesterday, I posted Tom Taylor’s pithy comment:

Postcodes are short URLs for space

Tristan Ferne replied on Twitter:

in Japan the phone number is code for physical location and contact link

I’d already started pondering the nation-specific nature of such short identifiers for place. The UK is actually fairly well blessed in this respect: as well as postcodes, there are OS grid references (although they’re somewhat less common and, I’d argue, harder to dereference).

In the US, by contrast, ZIP codes cover a quite large area. There are ZIP 5+4 codes that have a resolution more like that of a full UK postcode, but I don’t think they’re in anything like such wide usage. This perhaps explains why US services have always been well-blessed with address lookups: they’re far more necessary.

With my English-centricity, I don’t really know what the situation is outside those two countries. Tristan’s note is definitely making me wonder if it’s worth researching further. Somehow I suspect both France and Germany have good, granular postal addressing systems that can be repurposed for online usage.

Any more for any more?

2009-09-08

post/182722946

quote 11:00:31
“ Postcodes are short URLs for space. ”

post/182681510

photo 09:12:00
Technology is changing the way we navigate the world, with postcodes supplanting addresses (because they’re less ambiguous for in-car navigation). (via)
Interesting that such pointers are becoming useful for secondary purposes as their primary use (sorting posted items) actually drops off. There’s probably a lesson there for the web of data, but I’ve no idea what it is.

Technology is changing the way we navigate the world, with postcodes supplanting addresses (because they’re less ambiguous for in-car navigation). (via)

Interesting that such pointers are becoming useful for secondary purposes as their primary use (sorting posted items) actually drops off. There’s probably a lesson there for the web of data, but I’ve no idea what it is.

what

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