Geologist & React
Hey, have you ever thought about how to make those big geological maps load fast on a phone? I’ve been tinkering with ways to slice up huge datasets so they’re still smooth to scroll and zoom, and I’d love to hear how you keep your field data organized. Maybe we can figure out a better way to share those maps in real time.
That’s a cool challenge. In the field I keep everything tidy by tagging each sample with a unique ID and a timestamp. Then I snap a quick photo, log the GPS coords, and write a few notes in a notebook or an app that syncs to the cloud. When I get back to the lab, I load the raw data into a GIS and split it into layers—soil, rock, vegetation—so I can zoom into just what I need without pulling in the whole dataset. For real‑time sharing, I usually push the vector layers to a web map service and keep the raster tiles on a CDN so the phone downloads only the tiles it actually requests. That keeps the map snappy and lets me update the data on the fly without overloading the device. Have you tried using tiled vector tiles? They can be a game‑changer for smooth zooming.
Sounds solid, and yeah, tiled vector tiles are a lifesaver for that kind of real‑time zooming. I’ve been experimenting with Mapbox GL’s vector tiles and the performance boost is noticeable—no heavy downloads, just the data you actually need. Just make sure you keep the schema lean; the more properties you add, the heavier the tiles get. Do you compress them with gzip or brotli? That can shave off a bit more bandwidth.