- Glidingcontest.org bills itself as the world’s largest hangliding/paragliding flight archive (though with a focus that is definitely European). With over 46,000 user-contributed flights, that may well be the case. All flights are searchable by location and are available as KMZ files — for example, here are two in Northern Pakistan. (Via Wurznepp)
- Manifold System is a map authoring tool that’s reasonably priced at $245 (though I doubt it really is “the most comprehensive, the most powerful and the easiest to use GIS and mapping system ever created”). Version 7.00, shipped last week, supports Google Earth in a variety of interesting ways, including the ability to let you work with Google Maps content inside the application. There is also a tutorial.
- On SourceForge, Python KML Library: “A Python library for easy creation and manipulation of Google Earth KML and KMZ placemark files.”
- The Earth is Square posts more details on the five Google Summer of Code projects for improving NASA World Wind.
- Revit Building is AutoDesk’s BIM (building information modeling) tool for architects — a SketchUp on steroids (with price to match, at $4,995). Now Avatech Solutions is looking for beta testers for its Revit KML exporter. Developer Matt Mason writes on his blog, “For you Revit users that like to collaborate or just communicate with owners, contractors and others – Earth Connector Revit will be a compelling way to do it!” (The company already has a KML exporter for AutoDesk’s AutoCAD, the Earth Connector, blogged here when it was still in beta.)
- WorldCAD Access coyly lets us know that “a well-known name in the CAD industry will spring a free CAD program on the market. Free, except for commercial use.” We’re not yet allowed to know who it might be, though. Will it be a competitor to Sketchup?
- Are you one of the few people still not working at Google? You’re in luck: They’re looking for a GIS data preparation technician for Google Earth.
- A further tidbit from the ongoing Bentley user conference, courtesy of CAD Insider:
Bentley has swung itself around to align with SketchUp, the 3D architectural program. Bentley can convert SketchUp files (SKP) to MicroStation (DGN), use SketchUp reference files and place SketchUp files as cells.
Which I believe means that you can start your projects in SketchUp and then just switch to Bentley MicroStation if you want to get serious.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
GeoRSS is here to stay
Mikel Maron’s talk at XTech 2006, GeoRSS : Geographically Encoded Objects for RSS Feeds, is now online. It’s a great introduction to what GeoRSS is, in case you haven’t been following closely. In his talk, Mikel looks at the relative merits of different geospatial markup languages:
There are of course other geodata formats in use, which deserve a look as alternatives to GeoRSS. KML is used in Google Earth, and loads of data layers have been published by an active community. However, KML is very tied to its application, with features specifically aimed for 3D spinny globes, and the spec is controlled by a single organization. GPX, for data interchange between GPS units, is again very tied to specifics of GPS units. GML is a feature rich vocabulary for encoding geographic information, but its complexity has been daunting for unversed developers, and its proper use misunderstood. GML is similar to RDF, defining a number of primitive objects that can be assembled into Profiles for particular purposes. In fact, a GML profile for GeoRSS is a result of the new standard.
[Minor fact check: KML support is native in NASA World Wind, and announced for ESRI ArcGIS Explorer.]
(And if that’s not enough standards, Technorati’s Tantek Çelik has proposed the “geo” microformat, based on the vCard format. [Via Geospatial Semantic Web Blog])
Meanwhile, the latest update to Microsoft’s Virtual Earth supports GeoRSS, and so does Yahoo!’s Maps API. Support for Google Earth is currently available through Zoran Kovacevic’s web app.
I don’t think Google has anything to fear from GeoRSS, precisely because it is so simple and modest, aiming just to georeference web content. KML can do far more, but requires a 3D geobrowser. It would be great if future versions of Google Earth let you subscribe to GeoRSS feeds, just like the better HTML web browsers let you subscribe to RSS. As the competition among virtual globes heats up, this will no doubt become a common feature.
Microsoft’s Virtual Earth update is a stunner
Blogging Microsoft Virtual Earth (aka “Live Local”) is not really part of the mandate of Ogle Earth as long as it remains a 2D mapping application, but some aspects of the version that went live last night have a bearing on Google Earth.
- First, the UK imagery: As Ed Parsons and other people have commented, it is superb, besting Google’s in those UK spots I’ve checked — if not in resolution, then in the quality and consistency of the post-processing. It will be interesting to compare future datasets if (okay, when) Microsoft releases its 3D virtual globe.
- The functionality of the scratchpad has improved dramatically. It took me no time at all to annotate a few places, even add an image, and share them publicly as a collection, like so. The scratchpad is nothing less than a geospatial version of Google’s Notebook, and it is so easy to use that my parents would have no trouble att all creating their own mashup and sending a link to friends.
Google has several options available to it as it responds in this competitive space. It could make Notebook geospatially aware, so that you can annotate both URLs and physical spaces in Maps and Earth; it could also leverage Google Base, making it easy for users to save or publish geospatial database objects such as annotated placemarks or georeferenced photo collections from within Maps and Earth (including private collections); or it could repurpose Google Pages, perhaps in combination with Google Base, providing templates that make a user’s collected geospatial content easy to browse by others.
I think this is going to be an interesting summer:-)
Bentley shows off Google Earth integration
Bentley, makers of the industrial-strength CAD and AEC authoring tool MicroStation, are having their user conference, and CAD Insider posts some notes from the event related to Google Earth. First off, CAD Insider has news of the latest MicroStation V8 XM release, which comes with a new feature that has proved popular with attendees:
Define an animation path for use in Google Earth. After a MicroStation model has been placed in Google Earth, a curve drawn is used by Google Earth to pan around the project
Elsewhere, CAD Insider has a Q&A involving Bentley representatives with a sense of humor (“What does XM short for?” “Nothing, it’s just a name.”) where they answer the “Why use Google Earth?” question.
NASA World Wind to-do list, of sorts
What’s in store for the open-source NASA World Wind? The Earth is Square lists some projects people will be working on during Google’s Summer of Code:
- Shapefile improvements
- Student Teacher interaction system
- Correctly Handling Non-Ortho Images
- Support of Adding Imagery into World Wind
- Integrated Browser
Adding imagery and a browser involve World Wind catching up with Google Earth. The other three projects sound intriguing, though.
Geospatial navigation via sound?
Very Spatial checks in on the state of spatial audio, linking to an Engadget post that in turn references a Sydney Morning Herald article on an Australian technology venture called Immersive Communications Environment (ICE). There is much speculation on how this will enhance gaming, but let’s not forget other potential uses: All this mapping and virtual globing is currently off limits to the visually impaired. Back in August last year, this blog speculated on whether spatialized sound might not be a way for the visually impaired to navigate a virtual globe. That possibility now seems closer than ever.
Tour de force
Google Earth was released almost a year ago, on June 28, 2005. One of the very first things I did with it was download Harry Love’s stages of the Tour de France, which ran from July 2 that year. Those files first made me aware of the possibilities for user-contributed mapping in Google Earth. I started this blog soon after.
Fast forward to June 2006. Harry has a new post up about Google Earth and the Tour de France, wherein he suggest plenty of new ways to get involved geospatially. (For starters, you can download the stages from Google Earth Community, courtesy of lucifer666.)