Dual Independent Map Encoding (
DIME) is an
encoding scheme developed by the
US Bureau of the Census for efficiently storing
geographical data. The committee behind the case study that eventually resulted in DIME was established in
1965, although the term
DIME itself was first coined by George Farnsworth in August of
1967. The
file format developed for storing the DIME-encoded data was known as
Geographic Base Files (GBF). The Census Bureau replaced the data format with
Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing (TIGER) in
1990.
See also
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