Today in dodgy #SpatialHumanities #WebArchiving bodges, I'd like to introduce the 'tile suck'.

So if you use most conventional automated archiving tools on a website with a leaflet map on it (in this example a #Curatescape Mapbox map for the @PortsPastPres website), you may notice that they only ever capture the map tiles visible on the screen.

Not good enough, I say! So my strategy is this:

1) Get the biggest screen you can find. Biiiiiiig. (zooming out on the browser doesn't seem to quite work)

2) Open up the map with the tileset that you want to hoover up into your WARC record (probably in Chrome because that's what Archiveweb.page works on). Set your Leaflet or whatever map viewer to full screen. Start your crawl.

3) Zoom around at each level of zoom for areas of zoom and focus on your map. I'm using a point cluster map so I focus on the areas where my points are. The big screen means that whenever you hit an undownloaded tile, it'll pull it in.

@scrivenersmith @amassaro

I am a huge fan of #Curatescape as a platform for teaching. My site Spokane Historical has grown to 700 geolocated stories, all written by my students at #EasternWashingtonUniversity. It's based on #Omeka so it's going to be around. https://spokanehistorical.org/

Spokane Historical

Spokane Historical is a student-driven public history project from the History Department at Eastern Washington University. Spokane Historical is powered by the Omeka and Curatescape platforms. EWU Professor of History Larry Cebula is the editor of the project and is best contacted at LarryCebula at gmail dot com.

Spokane Historical