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#1
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Anyone seen the new feature of Google
maps.google.com search for your favorite airport identifier, then click on the satellite view in the upper left hand corner. Google keeps putting out amazing stuff. Matt -- -- |
#2
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maps.google.com
search for your favorite airport identifier, then click on the satellite view in the upper left hand corner. Google keeps putting out amazing stuff. Google's interface is nice, and I'm sure I'll be using this feature a lot in the future. However, I'd just like to point out that this kind of functionality has been around for almost a decade now at the site terraserver.microsoft.com . I usually use terraserver to get a feel for the surroundings before I fly to an unfamiliar airport. Anyways, I think google's great, and I understand that they're really hot now and therefore get a lot of media attention. For some reason though, all the recent press coverage really annoys me. The cnn.com front page title "privacy concerns as Google unveils satellite map feature" particularly annoys me, since again, this is nothing new - it's just a more user friendly interface. - Ray |
#3
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"MC" wrote in message
... [...] Google keeps putting out amazing stuff. That's just the "old" Keyhole tech, which Google recently purchased. It's neat, but hardly ground-breaking at this point. |
#4
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On Wed, 06 Apr 2005 03:58:45 GMT, "MC" wrote:
search for your favorite airport identifier, then click on the satellite view in the upper left hand corner. It works okay with major airports, but my home field comes up blank. I tried 8B8 (Lakes Region) in Wolfeboro NH and it brought up Lakes Region General Hospital in Laconia across the lake! Good try, no bannana. Then I tried DAW in Rochester, and it gave me a bunch of choices, all of them in or near Rochester. Curious logic: how can it pick the right town out of the entire country and not narrow in on the airport better? Okay, now I try the satellite imagery. It's weird colors, and it fails up when I zoom in real close. It looks a bit like Flight Sim at best. Wouldn't be much help in navigation. When I go to PSM Portsmouth NH I get splendid results, maybe because of the blue of Great Bay. I even see the pond that my neighbor to the north has in his front yard, and the "thatch" on the point of land to my south. I conclude that it's valuable for towered airports, less so for the rest. Thanks for the pointer! -- all the best, Dan Ford email (put Cubdriver in subject line) Warbird's Forum: www.warbirdforum.com Piper Cub Forum: www.pipercubforum.com the blog: www.danford.net |
#5
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The coverage of the country at high resolution is geared more to the
higher density population areas and more to the cities... However, it can be erratic... Our place in Florida on a Key is just offshore from a high density population area, but is imaged in low res only... Can't even pick out individual buildings... Our home and office here in Michigan, in a low density rural area is, however, imaged in high resolution... And I can see that the photo was taken more than two years ago because the neighbors pond is not there - and I can tell that it was taken during the last two weeks of May - or possibly as late as the first week of June - from the crops in my fields... I can see cars on the road, and my wife's Blazer parked outside, and the dumpster in my parking lot, so the resolution is pretty good.. But, if I did not know what her vehicle is I would not be able visualize it from the resolution they are allowing us to see - it's just a white rectangle... For you younguns this is just ho hum, but for those of us who found Thor Heyerdahl's voyage on the Kon Tiki to be spell binding and wanted to be just like him, this is science fiction... denny |
#6
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On Wed, 06 Apr 2005 03:58:45 GMT, "MC" wrote in
:: Anyone seen the new feature of Google maps.google.com http://maps.google.com/ search for your favorite airport identifier, then click on the satellite view in the upper left hand corner. The Acme Mapper is useful for high resolution black and white satellite images: http://mapper.acme.com/ For topographic maps, TopoZone is good: http://www.topozone.com/ Google keeps putting out amazing stuff. Google's Library Project promises to be a giant step forward, if they can get the copyright issues resolved: http://www.print.google.com/googleprint/library.html What is the Library Project? Google Print makes offline information available online. As part of this project, we're now working to digitize the book collections of several major research libraries and make this content searchable through Google Print alongside books provided by publishers through our Publisher Program. But virtually anonymous posting to Usenet through Google Groups invites spammers. :-( |
#7
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MC wrote:
Anyone seen the new feature of Google maps.google.com Nothing compared to http://worldwind.arc.nasa.gov/ A real GUI with which one can pan and zoom in realtime. |
#8
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On Tue, 5 Apr 2005 23:27:55 -0700, "Ray" wrote in
:: I usually use terraserver to get a feel for the surroundings before I fly to an unfamiliar airport. Airports along the California coast can be found on the California Coastal Records Project web site: http://www.californiacoastline.org/c...=0& year=2004 http://www.californiacoastline.org/c...=0&year= 2002 http://www.californiacoastline.org/c...=0&year= 2002 Talk about privacy issues: http://www.californiacoastline.org/s...d/lawsuit.html |
#9
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![]() John Harlow wrote: MC wrote: Anyone seen the new feature of Google maps.google.com Nothing compared to http://worldwind.arc.nasa.gov/ A real GUI with which one can pan and zoom in realtime. It's disappointing that an organization like NASA would develop such a tool and make it operating system specific. The world does not revolve around Bill Gates and Windoze. Mike |
#10
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![]() "Ray" wrote in message ... maps.google.com search for your favorite airport identifier, then click on the satellite view in the upper left hand corner. Google keeps putting out amazing stuff. Google's interface is nice, and I'm sure I'll be using this feature a lot in the future. However, I'd just like to point out that this kind of functionality has been around for almost a decade now at the site terraserver.microsoft.com . I usually use terraserver to get a feel for the surroundings before I fly to an unfamiliar airport. On Airnav.com, each airport listing has the following links: Road maps at: MapQuest MapPoint Yahoo! Maps Google Rand McNally Topographic chart at: TopoZone Satellite photo at: TerraServer I'd rather use AltaVisa and tell Google to shove their PC BS. :~) |
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