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November 30, 2008

Another 500K Photos for Google Earth

Panoramio icons new in Google EarthThe Panoramio layer (found under the Geographic Web layer folder in Google Earth) was updated this weekend with another 500,000 photos. The last major update was back in September when 1 million photos were added. These photos come from the popular free Google Panoramio web site which lets you upload your favorite photos and map them to the location where the photo was taken. Google then takes photos (which meet the criteria) and adds them a few weeks or months later to the Panoramio layer. According to the announcement on their blog, the Panoramio layer now contains photos up to ID 15,881,277.

The Panoramio layer is a great way to explore places around the world and get a ground-level perspective of those places. Google updated the layer look in August. Popular locations may have dozens of photos from many angles. The Panoramio site even has a cool "Look Around" mode that combines photos from many people to let you look at a site from many perspectives. If you see a site with lots of photos, just click on the photo in its placemark and look for the "Look Around" link (if available).

Posted by FrankTaylor at 9:02 AM | Comments (0)

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November 21, 2008

Google Earth Captures Tsunami Striking Fiji Island

Giant tsunami wave captured in Google EarthIt's a Friday, so I thought I would share with you this interesting find from GEB reader Peter K. It appears Google Earth captured a giant tsunami about to strike this remote island in the Pacific. You can see it yourself right here . No tricks, this is really inside Google Earth! However, this isn't a real wave. Instead this is an anomalie in Google Earth's terrain data. The world is a big place, and 3D terrain data is based on billions of data points and then later processed to remove errors. However, not all errors are properly processed, so you occasionally get anomalies like this. These errors can be reported to the GE Data Error Compendium, and eventually Google fixes them.

Here are some other interesting data errors found (terrain, imagery, and other errors). Some of these errors may have been fixed, but others are still there:

Posted by FrankTaylor at 8:00 AM | Comments (7)

November 20, 2008

360Cities - 3D Panoramas Now Available in Google Earth Layer

The very cool panoramic photo site 360Cities.net now has their own layer found under the Gallery layer folder. The new 360Cities layer contains placemarks to nearly 10,000 full 360 degree panoramas which are viewable inside Google Earth. Here's what 360Cities' Jeffrey Martin has to say about being included as a Google Earth layer:

"This ranks at the top of 360cities' achievements to date. It brings our beautiful content to a whole new audience and it serves as a great showcase for VR photography, which is starting to get the attention it deserves. It's a real honor."

In a recent post, GEB not only shared with you details on what is available from 360Cities, but also produced this video which shows you what the new layer looks like:

Congratulations to 360Cities! I highly recommend you check out the layer for some really unique photography.

There are also two other layers available in Google Earth with very high resolution immersive panoramas: Gigapxl and Gigapan both also found under the Gallery layer. Read more about Gigapxl here.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 9:08 AM | Comments (0)

Somalia Piracy Map in Google Earth

Somalia Piracy in Google EarthThe reports of escalating incidents of piracy off the coasts of Somalia have been getting a lot of attention in recent months. The piracy has been in all the news with the recent capture of a supertanker called "Sirius Star" and hostages of its 25 crew along with a full load of oil (worth over $150 million), and the capture of a cargo vessel and hostages carrying tanks a few weeks ago. Last month, Google Earth Community (GEC) member 'expedition' created a very interesting map for Google Earth showing the region of piracy and detailed placemarks showing the locations of the pirate strongholds all along the coast of Somalia. The file is the product of extensive independent research using maps, charts, and reports beginning in year 1860 through late 2008. Where possible he used the high resolution satellite imagery of the coast to identify actual buildings where pirates are based. Download the piracy map here .

From his post:

"See the building compounds where pirates and warlords cache arms, plan their attacks, obtain ransom, and communicate with the ships they seize offshore. View the actual pirate bases, vehicles, checkpoints, and pirate boats. Locate the precise areas of the sea where vessels are hijacked, and where the pirates drop anchor to hold their crews for ransom. Find secret airstrips where pirate crews get their daily fix of addictive khat leaf stimulant flown in. View the places where commandos have captured pirates fleeing or targeted their land-based resources.... Over 120 updated placemarks. Information and coordinates have been gathered from many news sources, maritime organisations, governments, insurance companies, and mariner reports."

An official international piracy map is available from the International Maritime Bureau which shows the locations of piracy reports in Google Maps for the year 2008 - so far. via GoogleMapsMania.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 8:34 AM | Comments (3)

November 19, 2008

Links: Where 2.0, Weather Buoys, Argentina, Earthscape, MapMyPage, and more

With preparations of our upcoming five year sailing circumnavigation in full swing, I will sometimes get so occupied I can't keep up with all the news. This past week I've missed on a few important bits of news, so here is a catchup post. Most of these were mentioned on OgleEarth during the past week - which also reports on Google Earth-related news.

  • Where 2.0 Call for Papers - Preparation for next year's Where 2.0 event (May 19-21, 2009 in San Jose, California) have now reached the point where they have announced the call for papers.

  • Weather Buoys - Virgil Zetterlind has updated the weather buoy data available for one of the many weather layers available for boaters using Google Earth at the EarthNC site. The Google Earth Buoy observation file is updated hourly and provides access to over 500 active buoy and shoreline weather observations provided by the NOAA National Buoy Data Center.. The new layer is easily combined with existing EarthNC weather and charting features for Google Earth including NOAA Marine Forecasts, U.S. Airport Weather Observations, NOAA Voluntary Ship Weather Reports, NOAA ENC vector charts, and more. Click here to view in Google Earth.

  • Argentina Finally has Street Maps - Argentina finally has some detailed roads in Google Maps as of Monday this week. Gerardo (who lives there and performs the spanish translation for GEB) is thrilled. Several major cities are completed, with Buenos Aires being the most important (with half the population of Argentina living there). But, there are still some areas in the southern region with sparse road detail. It will probably be a few weeks or months before the roads make their way into Google Earth though.

  • Earthscape Fire Photos - Got a message from Tom Churchill over the weekend that some iPhone Earthscape users had taken photos of the California fires (including a firefighter) and posted them in Earthscape. Stefan wrote an excellent write-up about the photos and also how Earthscape's market position has changed since iPhone Google Earth was released. Earthscape also releases KML files for users who post photos. Here is the firefighter's photos you can view in GE. On-the-scene geotagged iPhone photos viewable in GE...a new form of news reporting?

  • MapMyPage - This new site is very fascinating to me. For a long time I've dreamed of geo-blogs which automatically tie into locations allowing you to view them in Google Earth/Maps. This site allows you to simply insert a small bit of javascript code into a page and it will automatically add location links to maps. Developer Brandon Bruce wrote me to tell me about how he even incorporates the GE plugin so you can get the full 3D experience of the mapping locations. But, I first read about this last week at Google Maps Mania.

  • NeoGeo Developer Jobs - FortiusOne is looking for a few good men/women geo-developers who can help them continue their noble goal of developing awesome mapping tools and continuing to add to the GeoWeb. Follow the link for more details.

  • CyberCity and Concept 3D Join Forces - Two of the leading Google Earth 3D model developers have joined forces to collaborate on even bigger 3D projects. Hopefully Google Earth will be populated with even more of their work. Both of these companies have been involved in a number of the biggest 3D model collections seen in Google Earth.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 7:45 AM | Comments (2)

November 18, 2008

Imagine Google Earth with Voice Search

Last night I installed the new "Google Mobile App" on my iPhone to try out the new Voice Search. I was anxious to try it out after first seeing the demo in Google's announcement video, because this seems like one of those defining moments in technology advancement: combining the ease of voice queries with Google searching with results shown quickly on your phone is just amazing. And, it's location aware as well, which has all kinds of implications for the GeoWeb. Just imagine if you could do searching with the iPhone Google Earth application? Watch the Google announcement video to see what I mean:

Google's experiments with 800-GOOG-411 seem to have really paid off with good voice recognition. I had very good success rate with its accuracy - although it still messes up occasionally. What I was really interested in was the possibilities with mapping. You can say "Map <place>" to get an instant map of a place. For example:

"Map of London"
Map of London voice search on iPhone

I hope they voice search enable the iPhone Google Earth application. That would be really cool. And, directions in Google Maps on the iPhone would be really handy. It's such a pain having to type addresses for directions or search for places when in a car - you either have to stop, or get someone else to do it for you. But, with voice search it could be so much easier. Now, imagine adding voice search to the Google Earth on your laptop/desktop...

Posted by FrankTaylor at 8:30 AM | Comments (4)

November 17, 2008

Welcome to Geography Awareness Week

Geography Awareness Week in 3D in Google EarthEach year during the third week in November, the National Geographic and other organizations help celebrate Geography Awareness Week. The focus is to help raise awareness of the importance of geography education. They have a web site called My Wonderful World which provides a weeklong guide of activities and ideas for learning and experiencing education. Of course, included in the activities are some Google Earth files. For example, here is a tour of cultures which is based on a National Geographic publication called Glimpse. And, here is a tour of Global Hot Spots having to do with change in environments, cultures, politics, climate, or population. And there is a tour of geographers on the job around the world.

Google has highlighted Geography Awareness Week as well and links to these same files.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 8:25 AM | Comments (0)

Google SketchUp 7 Released

Google has released a big upgrade to Google SketchUp 7 - their 3D modeling tool. SketchUp 7 is available in a free version, and a Pro version which includes a number of features helpful to professional modelers (such as a presentation tool, more model making features, printing, and e-mail support - see comparison). The Pro version costs $495, but is available for free to educators and only $49 for students.

The free version of SketchUp allows you to create models, upload/download them to/from the Google 3D Warehouse, and place them in Google Earth. The new SketchUp 7 has even tighter integration with the 3D Warehouse allowing you to view and download models directly from within SketchUp 7.

SketchUp 7 also supports a major new feature for Dynamic Components - doors that open, wheels that turn, etc. Unfortunately, models with the dynamic component do not show the animations in Google Earth - yet. We'll probably have to wait for a future version of GE to get that support.

Here's the rather silly announcement video (which covers a few of the new features):

Although there are not substantial new features for Google Earth in this release of SketchUp, any improvements in model making capability will enhance the quality of 3D models seen in GE.

Stefan Geens at OgleEarth was first to report on the SketchUp 7 in my blog roll.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 7:47 AM | Comments (1)

November 16, 2008

California Fires - November 2008

Santa Barbara Fire in Google EarthRaging wildfires in California are once again in the news this weekend. At the moment there are three main fires dubbed the Tea Fire (In Santa Barbara area), Sayre Fire (or Sylmar fire), and the Freeway Fire (near the Chino Hills State Park). There are once again a number of Google Maps My Maps of each fire each showing the area of the fires, and other important information such as evacuation zones/centers, fire stations, road closures, hospitals, animal shelters, and more. Each of these maps can also be loaded into Google Earth where you can see even more useful information such as the 3D terrain, and - by turning on the "Places of Interest" layer folder - outlines of parks, business locations, churches, hospitals, and more.

  • Tea Fire (Santa Barbara/Montecito) - My Map of the fire in the Santa Barbara area. Includes evacuation zone. View it in Google Earth . This map was mentioned at Google LatLong Blog. This is an unofficial map, but pools resources from several local media and official sources.

    View Larger Map

  • Sayre Fire (Sylmar) - My Map of the fire near Sylmar. This map came via ABC channel 7 news. Includes the evacuation area in blue, active fire zone in red. Again, view this map in Google Earth to see more data and a 3D view of the terrain.

    View Larger Map

  • Freeway Fire (Chino Hills) - This My Map shows the fire near Chino Hills and comes from CBS channel 2. Shows the fire, evacuation area, closed roads, evacuation centers and more. View this map in Google Earth .

    View Larger Map

A good list of maps available to this wave of fires can be found at Search Engine Land. The list even includes some maps showing which houses were burned.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 7:41 AM | Comments (3)

November 14, 2008

New 3D Cities in Google Earth: Pittsburgh, Seattle

GEB reader Chuck Alcorn wrote earlier today to let me know Pittsburgh, PA is now available as a 3D city in Google Earth.

Pittsburgh 3D Buildings in Google Earth

After confirming this was true, I did some looking around, and I found at least one other new city - Seattle, WA:

Pittsburgh 3D Buildings in Google Earth

Also, I forgot to mention after the October big 3D city update, that Google also added downtown Miami after they earlier added Miami Beach. The current list I have for other cities where Google has a substantial portion of the city modeled in 3D includes: US: Los Angeles, San Diego, Chicago, Nashville, Philadelphia, San Diego, Minneapolis, Kansas City, St. Petersburg, Jacksonville, Clearwater, Miami, and Miami Beach, San Francisco, Baltimore, Raleigh, Atlanta, Charlotte, Boston, Orlando, Austin, St. Louis, Oakland, Dallas, Tampa, Memphis, and Phoenix. Also, Zurich, Munich and Hamburg in Europe

If you find any other cities where the majority of the city has been rendered in 3D, please leave a comment here.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 2:20 PM | Comments (4)

Famous Tourist Sites in 3D

Christ the Redeemer in 3D in Google EarthGoogle Earth's 3D dataset continues to grow and improve in quality over time. Many of the most famous tourist sites around the world are viewable in 3D. And, if you haven't visited these sites recently, it's worth checking back. Google has been gradually improving the resolution of the 3D terrain around the world. Places like the Grand Canyon, Mount St. Helens, and the Matterhorn are much better than they were when Google Earth was first released. Famous sites like Stonehenge, Christ the Redeemer, Pyramids of Giza, and many others have recently had improved 3D models added. Many of these models are coming from modelers who submit them to the 3D Warehouse and were selected to be included in the Google Earth 3D Buildings layer.

To give you a taste of many of the best tourist sites visible in 3D in Google Earth, I've put together a tour in Earthswoop of some of my favorites. You can view the collection of 3D Tourist Sites at Earthswoop . You will see about 25 locations around the world including: the Sphynx, Big Ben, Big Buddha, Disney World, Taj Mahal, and many others. Have fun on your free world tour!

NOTE: Earthswoop uses the Google Earth plugin. You can search inside Google Earth for almost any of these locations (e.g. "Christ the Redeemer"). You might also get better quality viewing these locations inside the real Google Earth (depending on your graphics card), and especially the terrain if you increase your terrain quality settings inside Google Earth's Options. However, keep your terrain quality lower for normal viewing to keep your graphics speed up.

Related:

Posted by FrankTaylor at 9:45 AM | Comments (0)

November 13, 2008

Browse Google 3D Warehouse in Google Earth

Google has made a major upgrade to their 3D Warehouse Network Link which lets you view 3D models from the 3D Warehouse in Google Earth. After clicking on the link above, you can save the link to your My Places inside Google Earth to keep it handy. It won't take much space when turned off. The previous version of this network link forced you to wait a moment before seeing the available models. This new version uses KML regioning and the placemarks appear and disappear as you zoom in and out very smoothly. Each placemark can be clicked on to view a screenshot of the model, its popularity rating, links to download the model in GE, view more details at the 3D Warehouse, and a link to review the model yourself.

Guggenheim Bilbao Museum in Google Earth

I really like the improvements to this new network link. One thing you'll notice is that a few people have randomly placed models out in the oceans. So, there's a bit of "graffiti" - but, some are kind of interesting or amusing. But, for the most part the 3D Warehouse file can be handy to either see different renderings of the same building, or buildings that haven't been added to the GE 3D Buildings layer yet. An example location is the "Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao " - a building designed by Frank Gehry (see recent post on Gehry). There are several nice models of the Bilbao Guggenheim in the 3D Warehouse, but none has been chosen for the GE 3D Buildings layer yet.

A little footnote: The 3D Warehouse network link shown here only shows models which have been "placed" in Google Earth. There are many more models in the 3D Warehouse than just buildings or bridges which can be seen in Google Earth. Components for engine parts, consumer products, planets, and practically anything you can imagine which could be 3D are in the Warehouse. Most of them don't really belong in Google Earth. At least at the moment.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 9:58 AM | Comments (1)

November 12, 2008

Ancient Rome in 3D for Google Earth

[UPDATE 11 PM: As mentioned in the post below, the layer for Rome is found under "Gallery->Ancient Rome 3D". However, this just loads the placemarks describing the key buildings. First, uncheck the "3D Buildings" layer. In order to see the Ancient Rome 3D models: 1) you have to click on one of the placemarks where you will see three links. 2) Click on the first link - which is the terrain for ancient rome (that hides the modern Rome and raises it above the new city. 3) Then load the second link which loads the 250 most detailed models. CAUTION: these models have a lot of complexity and you may need a newer machine with a fast graphics card to get these to load and update well. I'm sure Google will be working to simplify these models to make them load faster in future updates. If you load the third link with 5000 buildings - don't expect it to load all 5000 buildings at once. These buildings will only show when zoomed in close and only the nearby buildings will appear.]

Ancient Rome 3D in Google EarthFor the first time, Google has published a 3D model of an ancient city as a layer viewable in Google Earth. For decades archaeologists, students, scholars, and architects have studied the history and remains of Rome and worked to understand the city's history. The new layer, found under Gallery->Ancient Rome 3D, depicts Rome in the year 320 AD - at the peak of its development with over a million inhabitants. At this time it was the largest metropolis in the world. The 3D models are actually based on a physical model of the city called the “Plastico di Roma Antica” - created by archaeologists and model-makers from 1933 to 1974 and housed in a special gallery in the Museum of Roman Civilization in Rome. 3D digital models were created based on scans of the physical model. Google joined forces with the Rome Reborn Project and Past Perfect Productions to create the Ancient Rome 3D layer. Google helped convert the models into a format suitable for viewing in Google Earth. According to an interview with Bruce Poulderman of Google, there are about 200 buildings which are classified as "Class I" models which scholars and historians know a lot about and have been rendered as faithfully as possible.

The layer contains more than 6700 3D building models. You can learn more about some of the buildings by clicking on more than 250 placemarks on many of the key sites and the placemark descriptions link to more advanced information including a topographical encyclopedia, ancient literary sources and bibliographical information about each building. The layer's placemarks are available in: English, German, Spanish, Brazilian Portuguese, French, Italian, Japanese, Russian, and Dutch.

See Google's video introducing the layer:

An extra feature in the 3D city is that 11 buildings have viewable interiors - these include: Basilica of Maxentius, Colosseum, Forum of Julius Caesar, Ludus Magnus, Temple of Venus and Rome, Temple of Vesta, Regia, Basilica Iulia, Basilica Aemelia, Curia Iulia, Tabularium.

In order to avoid conflicts with the different modern day terrain and 3D models, Google chose to "float" the Ancient Rome 3D layer above the modern day city by a few dozen meters. You can speed up your performance a bit by turning off the 3D Buildings layer in Google Earth while using the Gallery->Ancient Rome 3D.

To help stimulate educational applications related to the Rome layer, Google has also announced "The Ancient Rome Curriculum Contest". The competition is open to all K-12 educators (US Only) that will challenge teachers to produce lesson plans for their classrooms using the Ancient Rome 3D layer in Google Earth. Lessons for all subjects - from Art History to Engineering to Philosophy - are encouraged, and projects can be submitted in any format (KML, doc, ppt, skp), though KML and Google Doc submissions are encouraged. The deadline for submission is February 9, 2009. Six teachers will win prize packages including a laptop, classroom projector, digital camera, 3D mouse, $500 gift card, and a plaque. Read the web site for more details.

[UPDATE: See also Google's LatLong post, and Stefan has an informative write-up at OgleEarth.]

Posted by FrankTaylor at 6:00 AM | Comments (25)

November 11, 2008

Virtual Globes at AGU 2008 - Science Applications of Google Earth

Virtual Globes at AGU 2008

If you are interested in scientific applications of Google Earth (and other virtual globe technologies), then the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union (AGU) is the place to be. They are once again hosting a series of special sessions called "Virtual Globes at AGU" - with many papers, posters, and demonstrations. In 2006 and 2007 I flew out to San Francisco to attend these sessions and learned about a lot of scientific Google Earth applications (see links below). This year's line up of presentations looks equally fantastic (NOTE: there are four sessions at the top and summaries link to abstracts with more details). Thanks to John Bailey (one of the principle organizers of the Virtual Globes sessions listed on their main web page).

Unfortunately, I'm not going to be able to attend this year. If you plan to attend this year's AGU, have a good grasp of Google Earth technology, and would like to serve as a Google Earth Blog guest writer, please contact me (leave a comment here, or send me an e-mail - see about page). I will publish several posts covering the AGU event. Don't be shy, this is a big enough event that more than one reporter may be needed.

Posts on prior GE-related sessions at AGU:

Posted by FrankTaylor at 8:30 AM | Comments (0)

November 10, 2008

Street View Car Spotted in New Zealand

Street View car in New ZealandOver the weekend, GEB reader Mark Crook in Queenstown, New Zealand spotted a Google Street View car and snapped some photos. Google is really burning up the pavement taking photos all over the world. With Street View imagery available in Google Maps and Google Earth beyond the US now in: France, Italy, Spain, Australia, and Japan.

To see Street View imagery in Google Earth, just turn on the Street View layer. Here are some tips on how to use the interface.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 8:01 AM | Comments (16)

Links: Location OS, GeoEye, Super Tour Mashup

  • Location OS - The introduction of location awareness to the Apple iPhone OS, and Google Android OS, means that phone applications on these systems can have standardized availibility to location. The iPhone released location awareness in their OS upgrade in June 2008. And Android's location awareness was built in with the first phone released - the Tmobile G1. Already there are dozens of applications (if not hundreds) which support, or are built around, the location awareness capability. Applications like geotagging your photos, finding nearby friends for a meet up, finding the cheapest nearby gas station, and more are all available on your phone. According to Google's Geo Team tech guru Ed Stone, Microsoft Windows has announced they will provide location awareness interfaces under the Windows OS. He also hints that Apple may announce such location awareness in the rumored January announcement of a new Apple OS dubbed "Snow Leopard".

  • GeoEye - Satellite imagery provider GeoEye got some major public exposure with a big story in Friday's USA Today. Of course, the paper's angle had a negative slant telling how having these high resolution satellite images (the same ones we've been using in Google Earth for over 3 years) in the hands of the public is "worrying the government". However, the article goes on to explain many of the positive uses of the imagery and makes it plain that this kind of imagery is here to stay. The good news for GeoEye is that it gets their name in the mainstream media in a mostly positive context. via AnyGeo

  • Super Tour Mashup - Another mashup called Gaiagi is using the popular Google Earth plugin milk truck driving simulator, but goes way beyond a simple mod. This mashup lets you do 3D driving tours in the GE plugin in various locations and simultaneously shows your position on Google Maps, shows you Street View imagery, and shows you Microsoft Virtual Earth Bird's Eye imagery all at the same time! I like the way the developer handles the situation if you are using the Mac (or a browser that doesn't support the GE Plugin) - it shows you a screenshot of what you would be seeing and suggests you load the plugin (if you can). This mashup is a great concept, especially with the increasing availability of imagery for all these sources. The developer has already released some tours in Europe as well as in the US. via GoogleMapsMania

Posted by FrankTaylor at 7:25 AM | Comments (0)

November 7, 2008

Google 3D Warehouse Adds Google Earth Plugin

Google Boulder Office in 3D in Google EarthGoogler Mark Limber announces on the SketchUp blog that the Google 3D Warehouse now offers a way to view Google Earth-placed 3D models right in your browser. The Google Earth plugin is a mostly functional subset of the real Google Earth application that runs in a browser. When viewing a model in the 3D Warehouse (which has been placed for viewing in Google Earth), you get a tab above the model snapshot that says "Map". This shows the location of the model on Google Maps. Look for the "Earth" tab (if you have the plugin capability) and it will load the 3D model into the GE plugin. Google Earth is a pretty nice 3D model viewing tool, especially if you're handy with the navigation interface.

The example model given in Mark's post is of the Google Boulder office. This is a new building I haven't seen before. There is an interesting "easter egg" on the back side of the building - there's a "3D" photo of a bunch of Googler's on the roof of the 3D model! See here:

Boulder Easter Egg

Posted by FrankTaylor at 8:48 AM | Comments (0)

November 6, 2008

Links: US Elections, KML Handbook, MetaAtlas, Israel Road Maps

  • Historical US Presedential Elections - Google teamed up with the University of Richmond's Digital Scholarship Lab to create an excellent series of Google Earth historical US presidential election maps . The maps show how the population has voted in past presidential elections from 1980 through 2004, and include election results at both the state and county levels. The maps also include demographic information derived from the 1980, 1990, and 2000 US Census. The placemarks contain the demographic information with nice pie charts showing the data. They also let you see a time animation since 1980. via Google Lat-Long Blog

  • The KML Handbook - As mentioned in August, Google's documentation guru Josie Wernecke has written a book called "The KML Handbook: Geographic Visualization for the Web". The book is now available for pre-order at Amazon and should be shipping soon. via Google Geo Developers Blog.

  • MetaAtlas - There have been many Atlas-like KML files produced showing country-by-country information. See for example a CIA World Factbook collection. Phil Reynolds at the GEC has published a "Meta Atlas " which provides links in each country's placemark to many different datasets of information for each country.

  • Israel Road Maps - Google Earth now shows street maps for Israel if you turn on the Roads layers. This happened a couple of weeks ago at least. I have not yet heard what other roads layers may have been updated/added. Thanks to GEB reader Adar.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 7:28 AM | Comments (1)

November 4, 2008

Google Releases Street View for Washington DC (Just in time for the election!)

Google has released Street View imagery for Washington, DC (also Seattle and Baltimore - see below) just in time for the 2008 presidential election! Here's a shot of the National Monument:


View Larger Map

Unfortunately no close-ups of the White House or the Capitol Building. But, here's a view of the US Capitol Building:


View Larger Map

There is also new Street View imagery for Seattle and Baltimore. Here is the Space Needle in Seattle:


View Larger Map

As usual, the new imagery is simultaneously available in Google Maps and Google Earth. Read here for tips on viewing Street View imagery in Google Earth. The Google Earth viewing is more immersive and you can compare the views to the surrounding 3D Buildings.

Thanks to a tip from GEB reader Kristoffer who was first to make me aware of the update when he spotted the Street View camera icon over DC. And, here is the Google LatLong post about the new Street View imagery.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 2:13 PM | Comments (2)

Carolina Beach Inlet in Google Earth

A couple of months ago, when I was planning to take our sailing catamaran Tahina down to Carolina Beach, North Carolina, I used Google Earth to research the new location before we made the decision to go down. Not only was I able to identify some candidate marinas, but I evaluated access to the ocean, where the bridges and roads were located, availability of stores, weather, etc. We ultimately settled on a recently re-built marina called Joyner Marina in Carolina Beach. They have nice facilities, a fuel dock, a beautiful view of the Inter-Coastal Waterway (ICW), and a great staff.

In order to reach the marina from the sea, there is a nearby inlet called "Carolina Beach Inlet". After some searching I discovered this inlet often needs dredging and you can see in Google Earth that the inlet mouth is not protected by a jetty. This is the reason why NOAA nautical charts do not show depth data for the inlet. The Google Earth imagery for the area is dated 2002. I discovered the inlet is regularly surveyed and maintained by the US Army Corps of Engineers. On their web site for NC inlets, they listed the most current surveys with a series of waypoints for the best route for the Carolina Beach Inlet channel (PDF). When I plotted the waypoints for the Carolina Beach Inlet route as placemarks for Google Earth, I was surprised to find they crossed over the land in the Google Earth imagery! For a moment, I jumped to the conclusion the imagery was mis-aligned (back in 2005 there was a misalignment of imagery in the Wilmington area, which has since been fixed). However, after checking with Google, they confirmed the imagery is not misaligned. So, I checked with other imagery providers and discovered the inlet has actually changed dramatically since 2002. In fact, the northern shore of the inlet has moved north by over 120 meters (400 feet)! I took a screenshot of the USGS imagery from Microsoft's Virtual Earth which is much more recent (I believe late 2007 or early 2008) and overlayed it in Google Earth . Select the overlay and use the transparency slider below the Places pane to compare how the inlet has changed. You can see in the screenshots below the comparison of the route with Google Earth (top) and more recent USGS image (below):

Carolina Beach Inlet in Google Earth verses more recent photo

The Carolina Beach Inlet is best used with fair weather and when the currents are right. It's generally best to use the inlet when the surf is down, at the top of a high tide while the current is still headed in. But, if we need to go out to sea at other times, we can head up to the Masonboro Inlet a few miles north. Masonboro Inlet is charted, and sheltered by a jetty so you can get out under more conditions. You can read more about our first trip down to Carolina Beach here including a GPS track of our path viewable in Google Earth.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 11:00 AM | Comments (1)

November 3, 2008

Frank Gehry Buildings in Google Earth

Pritzker Pavilion in 3D in Google EarthA couple of weeks ago, someone called 'koobcat' started an EarthSwoop tour of buildings designed by the famous arhictect Frank Gehry. Turns out some of his buildings have been modeled in 3D and added to the 3D Buildings layer of Google Earth. His buildings are really unique, and recognizeable with interesting twisted surfaces and shapes. GoogleMapsMania featured the collection this past Saturday which brought it to my attention. I spent a few minutes this morning updating the EarthSwoop collection to add a few more of Gehry's most famous buildings which are available for viewing in GE. I also added thumbnails and brief descriptions to each one. You can either view the Gehry collection in EarthSwoop (if you have the Google Earth plugin). Or here is a KML file so you can view it in Google Earth directly. Either way, I suggest turning on the Panoramio layer so you can see the many photos people have taken of these unique buildings.

By the way, one of Gehry's most famous buildings is the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao. I noticed that building hasn't made it in the 3D Buildings layer yet, but there are at least three well done 3D models in the 3D Warehouse. Hopefully they will add that one soon.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 7:47 AM | Comments (1)

Google Geo Challenge Grants - Up to $100,000

Google really believes mapping technologies are an effective way to communicate important initiatives - like those supported by their Google.Org organization. In fact, they believe it so strongly they are putting up money to prove it. The Google Earth Outreach team collaborated with Google.org to pilot a number of small grants to see what would result. The Dreaming New Mexico project was one result. Now, Google is offering the Google Geo Challenge Grants program to non-profit organizations around the world. Grants are between US$5,000 and $100,000. Learn more and apply here. I highly encourage non-profits to give this a hard look. Not only will you get money to help create the content, but you're likely to get a lot of good public exposure if your resulting map effectively communicates your organization's message.

Posted by FrankTaylor at 7:10 AM | Comments (1)

November 2, 2008

New York City Marathon 2008 in Google Earth

Since today is the ING New York City Marathon, some of you may want to follow along in Google Earth. First, we have a map of the route which comes from MapMyRun.com. If you turn on the 3D Buildings layer you will see many of the buildings of New York, and even the bigger bridges mapped in 3D.

In addition, someone has created a "3D driving simulator" which lets you find shortcuts for the New York Marathon. Better yet, it lets you drive a truck around the Marathon course using the Google Earth plugin. You use the Google Maps window to approximate the route of the marathon, and then drive the little truck in the plugin complete with the 3D buildings. (NOTE: The GE plugin is currently only available in Windows). This simulator is courtesy of the driving simulator demo from the Google Earth plugin gallery. via GoogleMapsMania

Posted by FrankTaylor at 9:34 AM | Comments (0)

November 1, 2008

The Ultimate Where's Wally on Google Earth

Where Wally LogoBorders Books UK teams up with Google Earth, media partner the Daily Telegraph, and Walker Books to take Wally to his biggest game ever. (NOTE: Wally is known as "Where's Waldo?" in North America.) Starting on Monday, November 3rd, the competition will be launched to find Wally in Google Earth.

The competition can be entered online only at borders.co.uk/whereswally. To win, fans will have to follow a series of daily clues to find Wally, hidden on Google Earth in seven different locations across the globe. The first daily clue will appear exclusively in the Daily Telegraph on Monday 3rd November and then a new clue will appear on borders.co.uk/whereswally each day for the following six days.

Anyone who finds Wally's location on any individual day will be entered into a prize draw to win loads of Wally's merchandise. Anyone who finds all seven secret locations on Google Earth will then need to enter all the longitude and latitude references on the Borders website to get to the final round. The winner, drawn at random, will win a fantastic holiday to Wally's secret final destination.

The competition will run from 3rd-9th November only, so get those bobble hats on, don those red and white stripes, and start searching for Wally now.

See the full press release for more details.

It will be interesting to see how the search will be implemented. In past contests, KML network links were used to bring up "hidden" locations and puzzles at select times. The problem is that KML knowledgeable people can generally find the locations pretty easy this way. However, it is possible - if Google cooperates - to hide images in the base imagery of Google Earth. This would make the hunting a bit more challenging. Another way would be to include Wally inside 3D buildings as was done by one modeler seen here.

Related:

Posted by FrankTaylor at 8:20 AM | Comments (3)

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