Katrina Catch-up

Although this blog sometimes succumbs to mission creep, I usually try to keep it on target: Documenting new and innovative uses of Google Earth, as well as the social issues raised by the sudden democratization of GIS tools.

I didn’t blog weather map overlays of Katrina, as that is now a pretty mainstream use of Google Earth, and the obvious place to look for these resources is on Google Earth Community and Google Earth Hacks (I try to avoid me-too blogging). Then I was at a work retreat for a few days, only to find Katrina had turned into a category 5 story in the meantime.

The images from the ground in New Orleans are truly moving. Is there anything worth reporting from the periphery, from the perspective of a Google Earth-centric blog?

Yes, two things: First, Google Earth and its imaging provider Digital Globe, are intent on providing a much accelerated response time for image updates when it comes to mapping significant natural (and man-made) disaster news stories. If this continues, this will turn Google Earth into a much more useful real-time tool than the reference work it amounts to currently.

Second, many news organizations added their own overlays in Google Earth and used them prominently on screen — CNN in particular. The best way to grasp the extent of environmental disasters like Katrina is Google Earth, and now many more people know it.

[Update 2005-09-02: Google has a page up with overlays for Google Earth.]

Mapdex: The Google of GIS searches

Mapdex is sitting on a goldmine — it’s an index of freely available map servers, making it a tremendous resource for the GIS community (especially students). Now Mapdex blog reports

that ArcIMS servers returned in a search are getting KML links, so that the data can be accessed seamlessly in Google Earth.

This makes Mapdex a sort of Google for GIS data searches.

Onwards to Russia

Mosnews sometimes has stories of dubious quality, so it is by no means clear in this story whether their “source” speaks for the Russian Special Services, but he’s quoted as saying that with Google Earth “terrorists will see all that they need to carry out an attack in any part of the world.”

If the source is real, what scares me then is that the Russian Special Services are complaining due to ignorance of a fact that any intelligence service should know: These images have been readily available for ages. Either that, or they just hate openness. Or both.