Announcing the OpenCage Geocoder
I guess it's a two blog post kinda day!
This past weekend was the State of the Map EU event for 2014, which was held in Karlsruhe in Germany.
While nobody from the Nestoria dev team attended, our sister company OpenCage Data was a Silver level sponsor and sent three guys along, including Ed Freyfogle, one of the founders of Nestoria, and Marc Tobias Metten ex-Nestoria Perl hacker extraordinaire.
On top of that they made an important announcement which definitely affects Nestoria: the OpenCage Geocoder API is now live! For the eight (soon to be nine) countries that Nestoria operates in, the OpenCage Geocoder is using our geocoder in the background. It's a pretty nice piece of kit - written in Perl - that we are very proud of.
The challenge of geocoding property listings is quite a unique one. Sure some countries, like the UK, are super easy. But for every UK there's a France (where the agents actively try to obfuscate where the property is) or an India ("opposite landmark x, behind landmark y") or a Mexico (there are at least five Calle 23's in Mexico City!)
Hopefully others will find our geocoder useful, and in turn will give us feedback about how we can make it even better. Best of all right now using the API is completely free, and going forward we have pledged to always provide a free tier of access.
If you're interested in more details check out this video of the announcement from our Geotechnologist In Residence Gary Gale:
More details about the talk and the State of the Map conference itself on Gary's Blog Mostly Maps.
You can read all about OpenCage Data and the OpenCage Geocoder on their blog which is, predictably, at blog.opencagedata.com.
Finally, the Perl module is already available on CPAN as Geo::Coder::OpenCage, so sign up for an API key and give it a go!











