If you use Microsoft Windows 3.1+ (Windows NT, or soon,
Windows 95); and your interests involve sites that can
be plotted on a map; and you have text or image information
that is associated with your sites; and you wish you had a
simple, easy-to-use (and very reasonably priced) piece of
software that would allow you to show the world what
you've been doing all these years: Read On!
Step One - Acquisition
Unfortunately, MapPad is not utterly without obstacles
or cost. You must get on to the information superhighway
(the Internet) and drive (ftp) down to the National Geophysical
Data Center in Boulder, Colorado
(ftp.ngdc.noaa.gov) and
properly identify yourself (anonymous + your email address
as a password) to get (binary mode of course) your copy
(mappad11.exe in /paleo/softlib/mappad). (If you have
access to the World Wide Web then you can have the
chauffeur take you to
http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/paleo/paleo.html
and follow the side-road marked Free Software!)
Step Two - Setup
Now clear your desk so that you can begin the
installation process. Find or create an empty directory
on your harddisk (mine's called C:\SETUP) and copy or move
mappad11.exe into that directory. Now you have to get to
the venerable DOS prompt, and get into that previously empty
directory you made, and do a little typing (i.e., in the
C:\SETUP directory type mappad11.exe). The result of all
this is that you now have some 20-odd more files in that
once empty directory, but wait, you are not done.
Now get back to Windows, and select Run from the Program
Manager's File menu and this time type: c:\setup\setup.exe
(assuming you followed my example and extracted the setup
files into a directory on the C: drive named \SETUP) and
click the Ok button. MapPad's setup program will ask you a
few simple questions and almost before you know it, MapPad
will be installed. Your Program Manager should now have a
new program group called MapPad with two icons in it: one
for MapPad itself and one for a read-me file that mostly
just tells you to use MapPad's Help to find out more
about using MapPad.
Step Three - Test Drive
Now that the hard part is over, let's see what MapPad looks like
and how it works. Double-click the MapPad icon and behold the Sample
datafile (Figure 1, left, a bibliography from the North American Pollen
Database - NAPD). The Sample datafile was included for you to explore
MapPad's features and capabilities. Let's do that.
MapPad is very simple indeed to operate. Place your mouse cursor
over the map. Now click and drag the mouse to draw out a box. Release
the mouse button. MapPad zooms the map to display the area you outlined.
You can repeat this action to zoom further, or you can click the
Previous button to undo the last zoom. If you click the Initial
button MapPad restores the original map.
If you click on one of the sites shown on the map (this is made somewhat
easier by first zooming), the name of that site appears in the button
that is located over the map. If you then click that button,
MapPad opens up a NotePad-style window (Figure 2, left) with
the text information associated with that site (double-clicking
the site opens the NotePad at once).
From the NotePad window you can add, edit, delete, or print
information about the site. You can also search for or search
and replace text. If there are any images (pictures, sound, movies)
associated with the site you can display them by selecting the image
in the Image menu (see Help for more information on referencing
and displaying images).
Step Four - Personalization
Learning something about the work of the North American Pollen
Database is all well and good, but MapPad was really designed
for you to add your sites and your information to a map. In
the File menu you can select New Datafile to create your own
datafile (give it a path and filename, pick the map you want
to use, perhaps give your new datafile a title). To add one
of your sites to your new datafile, select New Site (Figure 3,
above) from the File menu. Type in the site's latitude and
longitude, enter its name, and click Ok. Your site is drawn
on the map, and an empty NotePad window opens for you to add
whatever text information you like.
If you create more than one datafile (or have traded
MapPad datafiles with your friends) you can switch between
them by selecting Open Datafile from the File menu.
Step Five - Euphoria
So now that you've added your sites to your datafile,
and you've shown everyone at home and at work the results
(and they are impressed), what about the rest of the world?
Well, one nice thing about MapPad datafiles is that they are
just ASCII text files (with a few formatting rules), so you
can e-mail them to almost anyone and they will be able to
read them. You can also print the map (zoomed if you so choose)
with your sites on it to create an overhead; or save it as a
Windows metafile for importation into a graphics package like
CorelDraw to add nice captions or labels.
If at this point you are looking around for someone to thank,
then drop Lou Maher a line
(maher@geology.wisc.edu),
MapPad was his idea. If on the other hand, the unthinkable has
happened and setup died or MapPad is not behaving as advertised,
then send that message to me. (And if you noticed blank space on
the NAPD map where your pollen sites should be, then by all
means contact Eric Grimm,
grimm@museum.state.il.us,
to find out how to contribute your data!)
John Keltner, NOAA Paleoclimatology Program, 325 Broadway E/GCx3,
Boulder, Colorado 80303, U.S.A.
jkeltner@ngdc.noaa.gov
This article first appeared in CAP Newsletter 18(1):18-21, 1995.