Blogs, photoblogs, RoboGEO, Tagzania and Google Earth

One front on which progress has been a little slow post-Google Earth/Maps is the extent to which blogs have taken up integrating spatial data and its presentation. I don’t mean linking to a KML file here or there, like this blog does, I mean deeply embedding geospatial data relevant to posts into the content management system, or else outsourcing the task to a web 2.0 service.

Photoblogs have been an innovative exception to the rule, perhaps because a photograph is a splendid candidate for geographic contextual enhancement. One of the earliest and best geohacks was the use of geotags in Flickr. Soon someone hacked together an automation tool. Presentation tools evolved, like FlickrFly and the Geobloggers network links.

One challenge remained the work involved in actually linking a photo to its location coordinates. Several software tools have sprung up for linking photographs’ time stamps to GPS devices’ coordinate data for those times. One such application is RoboGEO, and today version 2.1 gains support for KML in various guises:

Export KML, KMZ, KMZ with embedded images, or KMZ with embedded thumbnails that link to full size images on the web. The latter results is very small KMZ file sizes that are perfectly suited for distribution by e-mail.

This eliminates a whole step in another process recently outlined for putting geospatially enhanced photos online. Dutchman William Slabbekoorn described his method on the Google Earth Community BBS for producing his photoblog of “photo tracks” for Google Earth. It involved a nifty little XSLT converter to convert RoboGEO’s output to KML, but that’s now something that version 2.1 handles.

For places, Tagzania yesterday came out with a very cool enhancement, pretty much tailormade for bloggers. It lets you paste any and all bookmarks made in Tagzania onto your own website as a Google Map. For example, here I am now:

Now this might not look Google Earth-related at first sight, but in fact clicking through to Tagzania gives you the option to present the bookmark in a variety of ways — And Tagzania’s Luistxo today wrote that a “fly-to Google Earth” link is in the works. This will make Tagzania even more versatile as a repository for geographic bookmarks. And bloggers really no longer have an excuse not to geographically enhance a blog post if the post is about a place.

Google Earth makes it to version 3.0.0693 Beta

Google Earth Blog: New Beta Version of Google Earth (3.0.0693)

Here are the release notes. As google Earth blog notes, this is a bug-fix release, mainly.

Thinking laterally, again.

How to make an Anaglyph with Google Earth. It always perks me up when someone does something completely new with Google Earth.

anaglyph.jpg

(One of the first cool things done with Google Earth was stereograms, back in July. I then wished aloud for stereograms as a built-in Google Earth feature, so that we could fly in stereo, albeit with our eyes screwed up. But a built-in anaglyph feature, which more powerful PCs surely can handle, would give us a fully fledged Google Earth 3D, just like in the movies. Just like in Snow Crash, in fact…)

[PS: I am outsourcing Wilma coverage to Google Earth Blog and The Map Room. Me, I’m working on getting Bloggforum 3 up to speed. If you’re around Stockholm November 19, do stop by. The new event site should be live in the next 24 hours.]

Geograph does Google Earth

Grasshoppermind points out that the extremely cool Geograph project, which aims to collect photographs of every square kilometer of the British isles, now also provides a KML version of its searches, viewable in Google Earth.

The default “simple” KML download is a straightforward static file, but if you opt for the “advanced options”, you get to download a proper network link, which is great if you want to browse time-dependent results, such as recent submissions.

Notes on the political, social and scientific impact of networked digital maps and geospatial imagery, with a special focus on Google Earth.