Tagzania + Google Earth

I already linked to Tagzania a few days ago — this proudly Basque outfit lets you collect, title, describe, tag, save, edit and copy points of interest (henceforth called POIs) using Google Maps. You can use Tagzania’s own incredibly clean binary list/map interface to do all this, or you can use a personalized bookmarklet in Google Maps to add POIs to your personal collection.

That’s just the start. All these POIs are shared, and you can view them by author or by tag, on a Google Map or as a list. And each author and tag collection has its own RSS feed, to which anyone can subscribe. Update your POI collection and the feed instantly reflects this.

Now for the clincher: Given that geotagged RSS is practically an XSLT transformation away from KML, I asked Tagzania today if they were considering outputting these feeds as dynamic network links for Google Earth. The answer came three hours later, in the form of a KML badge next to the RSS badge. It works perfectly.

Wow. This has turned into quite a day for adding functionality to Google Earth.

How is this better than Virtual Earth’s scratch pad? Let us count the ways. The scratch pad only lets you save businesses you’ve found via Virtual Earth’s search. Tagzania lets you save any POI whatsoever, and let’s you edit it, tag it and share it via RSS and KML. You can access your POIs at all times from any computer connected to the internet. This means that if you spend 4 hours at work marking all the best beaches in Greece, you can inspect them further with Google Earth when you get home, which will gladly fly you from island to island.

Anyone can now create their own personalized sightseeing site in Google Maps, and it will be viewable in Google Earth. Groups of people can collaborate on projects by using common tags. Friends can instantly mark and share tips for shopping. Geography teachers can make lesson plans and share them with a class of Google Earth-browsing students. The possibilities are very broad indeed.

(What about spamming? Tag-based feeds are spammable, as far as I can tell, but user collections should be immune, as long as you subscribe to people you trust. How does Flickr guard against tagspam?)

[Update 08:05 UTC 2005-07-27: Because I cannot tell a lie, and because I don’t want to take credit for other people’s ideas:

Me in an email:

> Did you really do that in three hours, or had you been working on it before:-)?

Tagzania:

No. It was almost ready from day 1, july 20th, just some bugs detected in the performace in Google Earth. Once we corrected them, we made it public yesterday. As a matter of fact, we did it *before* your msg reached us… But, well, the story at your blog is just too good to change that with the truth now:-)]

Return ticket: FlickrFly

You may have played with the dynamic layer that links from Google Earth to geotagged Flickr images. It was one of the first inventive uses of KML markup language after Google Earth launched.

Now you can do the reverse: You can link to Google Earth dynamically from within the Flickr website, letting Google Earth fly you to the spot where your geotagged photo was taken.

Rob Roy, the author of the servlet that makes this possible, explains all on his blog.

I think FlickrFly is a wonderful innovation — it seamlessly integrates Google Earth as a browsing tool, and should lead to many more Flickr users noticing the link, trying Google Earth, and then geotagging their own photos once they realize the benefits it brings.

BBC News on Google Earth

David Burden at Converjed has built a dynamic network link that geolocates current stories of my favorite news source, the BBC World News, onto Google Earth (using an RSS feed and the BBC’s Backstage API).

He adds, “I can really see Google Earth becoming a world browser.” Agreed. And if we could get the BBC to add precise geolocation metadata to the headers of its stories, we would be well on our way to having Google Earth fly us to whatever we happen to be reading about.

(Via Google Earth Community.)

Google Earth + QuickTime VR

I’m a bit late on the uptake here, but I love how this overlay helps enhance Google Earth’s sense of immersion, and it deserves a permanent place on everyone’s Earth. (Well, okay, it’s on my Earth):

Berkeley University’s database of QuicktimeVR 360-degree panoramas from around the globe is now accessible via a downloadable KML file for Google Earth, courtesy of a very enterprising Thomas Rauscher.

Google Earth does a whole lot, but it can’t go the last mile and let us walk around at street level (let’s be reasonable). Quicktime VR, however, does give us that sensation. These two technologies are wonderfully complementary, and make for a killer demo to wow first-time Google Earthlings.

At the moment, the file is static, which means that it won’t automatically list new additions. Perhaps Berkeley can be persuaded to turn this into an officially supported and hosted network link?

(Via @Dawn of the 21st century)

MSN Virtual Earth: Last impression (promise)

Justed wanted to wrap some things up, and then stop blogging Virtual Earth, as we’ve now determined it is not a competitor to Google Earth, and this blog is about Google Earth and its competitors. Here goes:

1) Other sites have noted that with Virtual Earth, driving directions are outsourced to the much less sexy Microsoft Maps site, in contrast to Google Maps.

2) The black-and-white maps are sometimes more detailed than what Google Maps can offer for a certain spot, but are also considerably older, many people have found. When it comes to viewing Apple’s HQ in Virtual Earth, general hilarity ensues (q.v. Google Maps’s version), as the Register first picked up on. The World Trade Center towers are also still standing in Virtual Earth.

3) Virtual Earth lets you use your mouse’s scroll wheel to zoom in and out, like in Google Earth. It’s a nice idea, though the implementation of it drags, to the extent that I never noticed I could do it until I read about it.

4) Finally, Lifehacker picks up on the fact that if you zoom past available resolutions in satellite view, Virtual Earth will go through with the zooming animation before letting you know if can’t get any closer. That should be an avoidable extra step.

And that’s all. Should anyone come up with clever tools for converting Virtual Earth results into Google Earth-compatible KML (and why not?), I’ll certainly blog it.

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