All posts by Stefan Geens

Blue Marble Civilization IV

Off topic, but so on target: Blue Marble Civilization IV — use NASA’s World Wind data replacement graphics for your Civilization IV game.

Perhaps Sid Meier might consider the Google Earth graphics engine for Civ5? :-)

(Via Jahee.com.)

John Hanke Q&A

Google Earth product director John Hanke responds in a Q&A to GIS Monitor about a French security consultant’s report on Google Earth (which GIS Monitor previously reviewed).

I hadn’t seen any real value added in the original French report, but Hanke’s responses do. (Via The Grich).

Patented?!

I was rereading the Earthbooker.com press release this morning, and a phrase at the end stood out:

GlobeAssistant, who’s responsible for the creation of Earthbooker and patented integration with Google Earth, believes that within the next 4 years in 50% of all travel arrangements Google Earth and their technology will be used.

It stood out not so much for the prediction but for the word “patented”. I highly doubt a method based on a process that’s only been around for a few months would already be patented. So is it patent-pending? Or is this press release-ese? Or a bad translation from Dutch? What’s so patentable about a method for depicting a database on Google Earth? Am I missing something?

(On GlobeAssistant’s site there is a more detailed description of the patent: “GlobeAssistant BV uses the patented Altitude Ranking Algorithm to filter relevant data before it is published to the Globe.” Haven’t some of Google Earth’s built-in layers done that since day one? Just asking.)

3dsMax to Google Earth Exporter v1.0

A company called Screampoint now has a utility that coverts Autodesk 3dsMax files to KML.

While converters are getting to be a dime a dozen, (okay, this one’s $30), what intrigued me is the promised upcoming features:

– Screampoint will start to license its extensive library of digital buildings and cities in .kml format

– digital content includes portions of New York City, Las Vegas, San Francisco, Hong Kong and Shanghai

– registered users will be entitled to receive select digital building files