All posts by Stefan Geens

GEED is good

Johan Hendriks emails to tell of Orange Tea, a new Dutch website that aims to “become THE most important and up-to-date Google Earth portal.”

To show it means business, Orange Tea has produced a KMZ file with 3D models of all the World Cup football stadiums in Germany. (You have to turn off Google Earth’s Terrain feature to view them, though.)

More intriguing, perhaps, is a demo video of an upcoming product of theirs that visualizes Microsoft CRM data in 3D in Google Earth. (You need to give them your email first, though.)

If you speak Dutch, you can learn more about the company behind Orange Tea: Green Tea, which offers Internet strategizing services, SEO, Microsoft CRM develpment, and something it calls GEED, “Google Earth Experience Dynamics”. As their website has no permalinks for individual pages, I can’t link you there directly, though.

Shorts: Java quake overlays, Arc2Earth update, Second Life mashups

  • Mikel Maron at Brain Off turns post-Java quake aerial assessment images into a layer for Google Earth. (Caution, huge file.)
  • Brian Flood updates Arc2Earth so that Google Warehouse content can be directly imported into Google Earth from the native SketchUp format, rather than have to manually create KML for those objects that don’t already have it.
  • A Flickr – Second Life mashup, with video demo, making use of new API features introduced inthe latest release.
  • Elsewhere, somebody’s hacked Second Life’s new built-in 2D web browser so that it can show actual web content, not just SL’s help section. Convergence continues apace. (Via Clickable Culture)

PC World names Google Earth top software product for 2006

According to PC World, Google Earth is the best software product of 2006. It’s listed 6th overall in the magazine’s 100 Best Products of the Year.

Products one to five? Intel and AMD chips, Cragslist.org, the iPod Nano, and a Seagate portable hard drive. None of those, to the best of my knowledge, have their own dedicated blogs:-)

Note, however, that Microsoft Virtual Earth makes it to the list (#39) whereas Google Maps doesn’t. The review of “Live Local” cites the bird’s eye view feature.

Short news: Civil 3D, GPSoverIP, Tagzania update

  • I must be getting old:
    1. First I didn’t post the Reuters article about Google Earth and H5N1, because I thought it was a republication of Christine Gorman’s article in Time from February that I remembered blogging here. It’s more of an updated version, it turns out. (Discussion at All Points Blog.)
    2. Then I didn’t post the news that Autodesk Civil 3D authoring tool can now export to Google Earth via an extension (in a technology preview), because I thought it referred to the instructions posted three weeks ago. AECnews has more about Autodesk’s apparent change of heart.
  • A German website touts GPSoverIP, a patent pending internet protocol for transmitting GPS data. If I get it right, GPSoverIP eliminates an abstraction layer when communicating GIS data over the internet. The website is none too clear, but one application of it, for a GPS enabled jacket, was shown at CeBIT in 2006. (German speakers can get some more crumbs here.)
  • GeoRezo.net is a French-language geography portal/community site.
  • Excellent: Those javascript-based Tagzania maps that you can paste into your own site now boast an automatic link to the same information in Google Earth, like so:


    Tagzania: Items by Ogle_Earth

    Not even Google Maps has that by default, currently. (Check out the other new customization features.)

  • Declan Butler updates his avian flu Google Earth network link.

Moving right along

For the next 24 hours, I will be moving house, and this blog will suffer directly. In the meantime, here’s an unambitious collection of links:

  • Tintin’s rocket in Google Earth. (Why are the Belgians hogging the news all of a sudden?) (Via Belgeoblog)
  • Amazing. Ars Technica completely fails to undestand geospatial search, as this throwaway line makes clear:

    … Google Earth was very cool, but apart from duplicating NASA’s WorldWind software, how did it help the company’s strategic position? …

  • Google said it would port Earth to Linux. Now we know how — with Wine. (via Google Earth Blog)
  • SOLA G1, the Japanese app for Mac and Windows that converts W3D, 3DS, OBJ and DXF files to KML, makes it to version 1.5. There are even instructions in English! (When you run it.)
  • World Wind Central offers up a comparison between Google Earth and NASA World Wind.

Google Earth Trends (I want)

It occurred to me, after I read about the renewed volcanic activity of Mount Kathala in the Comoros and immediately had a look with Google Earth, that Google’s servers must notice surges in demand for specific geographic areas, and that these in turn would make great fodder for zeitgeist-like reports.

I wonder if usage patterns follow daylight, as awake people search locally. I wonder if league tables of the most popular places are stable, or fluctuate with the seasons. I wonder if sudden localized spikes in demand might not be useful as some kind of alert. And I would love to know what Chinese IP addresses search, or Argentine IPs, or Belgian IPs. In other words, I want my Google Earth Trends.

Visualizing history

Some great uses of Google Earth as a tool for visualizing the past::

  • eclipse.pngI’ve only just now come across a KML file on Google Earth Community by yaohua2000 containing the dated, categorized paths of every solar eclipse of the second millenium (i.e 1001-2000 AD).

    It’s a great tool for historians, because any primary source mentioning an eclipse can easily be dated with it (given a location), or placed (given a date). (Via Google Earth Hacks) (Files for future eclipses have previously been blogged here.)

  • pyrgiz.jpgGoogle Earth Blog points to atf’s transparent model of the Great Pyramid of Giza, complete with all the internal passages. This follows atf’s 3D model of the tomb of Tutankhamun.

    In both cases, the hardest part is navigating to get a good view. I’ve found the easiest way to move in smoothly is to “drag” the red “nipple” in the middle of the navigation panel, just like on IBM Thinkpads. I’m mentioning it only because I know some people who hadn’t noticed it before. Still, these models are pushing Google Earth to uses that hadn’t really been foreseen — which is a testament to the versatility of KML, but it also underscores the need for more versatile navigation controls in Google Earth.