- iPhotoToGoogleEarth is out of beta. Writes author Craig Stanton, “No fancy new features just bug fixes that have been pointed out by a few users, like avoiding files which aren’t jpegs, and dealing with ones that have funny characters in their names.”
- As if out to prove that there is a blog for everything these days, Road Sign Math finds correlations between the numbers on road signs. Now, they also link the posts to the actual locations of the signs with KML.
- Associated Content latches on to the public’s growing realization that Google Earth makes a first-rate social spying tool, and pens What is Google Earth, and How Can it Be Used to Uncover Military Secrets?
- Import Cartography has some constructive criticism on Google’s regionator toolbox.
- If the case of Google Earth’s aging dataset for the Canary Islands still has you in its thrall, Global Voices has a post that samples a wide range of original commentary translated from Spanish. Was it a conspiracy? Nah…
- Of interest to Belgians: belgeoblog continues to post excellent local content — an overlay of an old map of the completely
destroyed“revamped” northern quarter (post in Dutch), and an overlay showing that King Leopold II was not just genocidal, he was also a real estate hog (post in Dutch).
All posts by Stefan Geens
GameSpy previews Flight Simulator X
GameSpy.com has a preview of Microsoft’s Flight Simulator X, out on October 2, 2006. I like what I’m hearing:
The demo began innocuously enough: on Firminger’s screen was a blue orb surrounded by a visible atmosphere, suspended in a void. Spaceship Earth, as recognizable by most of its inhabitants. Interestingly, what he had onscreen wasn’t a desktop image or a version of Google Earth; it was Flight Simulator X, rendering the planet, atmosphere, and stars in real-time. […]
Geographical details are much more visible: the ground resolutions are significantly improved over its predecessor’s, allowing for the rendering of roads and flora in significantly higher detail: to the tune of 6,000 trees per square kilometer. […]
Via Internet connection, Flight Simulator X will monitor 5,000 real-time weather feeds in order to more accurately render the game’s meteorological systems.
More where that came from. This is still clearly a flight simulator, and a game. The multiplayer options also turn this virtual globe into a world with one shared state (for participants). The big question is, how much of this technology will be turned into a geobrowser? Microsoft certainly didn’t buy Vexcel and GeoTango to make a better 3D game.
Short news: Google Treks; Bahrain PR
- Google Earth CTO Michael Jones is manning a reconstruction of Starship Enterprise’s bridge as part of a drive by Google to recruit engineers from among the ranks of Star Trek fans at a convention in Las Vegas, reports AFP. What’s on the Enterprise’s screens? Fittingly, it’s Google Earth.
- Sneaky: Google calls for feedback from Bahraini users, reports Gulf Daily News. Says a Google spokesman, while trying to stifle a grin at the good fortune of this PR coup:
We have heard conflicting reports about Google Earth access problems for our users in Bahrain and we are looking into these reports to determine the cause and welcome any input from our users there.
It’s safe to assume that by now pretty much everyone in Bahrain wants to try this Google Earth thing, whatever it is, to see what the fuss is about.
- Another virtual globe hits my radar screen: Eingana. Not sure about its chances, as it costs £10 and yet doesn’t have Google Earth’s specs. Short review.
Missed Connexion
Connexion, Boeing’s in-flight broadband internet service, is being shuttered, reports the Wall Street Journal, citing insufficient users willing to pay. That’s a real setback for what I assumed was the unassailable march forward of ubiquitous wifi everywhere, including on planes. I used Connexion on several SAS flights between Stockholm and New York last year and I was immediately smitten — in fact, it was indispensable on one occasion.
It’s also a tragedy for my Google Earth experimentation ambitions. I just recently bought a GPS device with the full intention of making my own DIY live flight tracker using Google Earth, a window seat and an in-flight wifi connection.
How are we going to have Google Earth be the next-generation flight tracker on planes if there is no internet access to feed it? With Google getting into the free wifi business, perhaps buying Connexion on the cheap would be a logical fit: It would give Google-branded free wifi to a grateful yet captive audience of flyers (they’d all need to register with a gmail account, of course) while other passengers would get to stare at Google Earth for hours on end, with nearby plane data provided by FBO, as well as airport approach routes and weather overlays. That’s a lot of free advertising for Google.
(PS: FBOWeb’s flight offerings for Google Earth have expanded greatly since last I checked. This page now contains links to flight plans of planes involved in recent incidents, an hourly snapshot of all US flights in the air, and, in the aftermath of the latest terrorism scare, flight traffic in and out of London airports.)
Short news: KML for the tricorder; 3D camera
- Ah, I get it. Google announces the ability to add KML data to your
tricorderflip-top cell phone at a Star Trek convention. Google Maps Mania has the details. - Digital Urban Environments has yet another clever idea, well implemented. Take a paper cutout model of a skyscraper, scan it, import it into SketchUp, and fold it virtually until you get an actual SketchUp model, textures and all.
- I missed seeing a demo of the 3D LIDAR camera at Science Foo (so much to choose from, so little time). Apparently, they cost $100,000 a piece at the moment, but that price would plummet if there were mass orders. People who did see the demo came away very impressed, so much so that some felt it was an obvious mass technology of the future.
- The free and open-source GeoServer v1.4 is out.
- No SketchUp 3D Base Camp this year for SketchUp users, reports AECnews.com. Only a year ago, this was the do that first started the rumors about a Google-SketchUp hookup.
- GeoRSS Blog addresses the problem of multiple variants of GeoRSS. The upshot: Choose ‘Simple’ or ‘GML’ and stick to it.
From SketchUp to SimCity 4
Another milestone on the way to mirror world – virtual world convergence: On the SketchUp Pro user forum, “starrdarcy” shows us how to turn SketchUp models into SimCity 4 models. The only hiccup: You need to first export your SketchUp model as a 3DS file, and that’s not something the free version of SketchUp does. (Are there free/cheap third-party converters out there?) Also, there is still some tweaking to do to get from before to after — it’s not push-button yet. But the resulting eye candy is glorious:
3D geobrowsers: Yahoo!’s options
Via The Map Room, news that Yahoo! Maps has added high resolution imagery of some 30 non-US cities. A cursory look seems to put the resolution there on par with that of Google Maps.
An intriguing question: Could it really be that Yahoo! is the only one of the top three search engine companies not working on a 3D geobrowser? Unlike Microsoft, they don’t have a flight simulator game to repurpose. There are only three options, then: Either Yahoo! thinks 3D mirror worlds are a fad (something which Microsoft clearly does not, qv. PhotoSynth and the purchase of Vexcel) or else Yahoo! is going to have to get itself the technology somehow.
Barring an in-house effort, I think they would have to license something from Skyline‘s SkylineGlobe, just like France’s GéoPortail is doing for their upcoming 3D content. It wouldn’t even have to be a stand-alone application, as in-browser 3D technology is now “good enough” to portray 3D virtual globes (with a much greater installed base, and no need for downloads). Or maybe Yahoo! would want to own the technology outright… Or might they just go the radical route and build something with NASA’s open-source World Wind?
In other words, it’s quiet over at Yahoo!, and I don’t want to assume it’s because they’re dropping the ball on 3D virtual globes.