Author: James

  • VirtualEarth plug-in for NASA World Wind

    I’ve been getting a couple of people saying I don’t blog about NASA World Wind. Well you are wrong, I did have one post back in July ‘05. cough

    Anyway, since I did get an email from a WorldWind fan about this new VirtualEarth plug-in for World Wind I’ll go ahead and post it. Casey Chesnut has a great write up on how he created the plug-in and how he figured out to serve the tiles. And not only that I’m very impressed. Its fast, easy to use (well the install could work better, but its not hard at all) and allows average users to get more functionality out of World Wind.

    NASA WorldWind VirtualEarth Hybrid

    NASA WorldWind Virtual Earth Map

    I really do need to get back on the World Wind wagon so I’ve created a post category and I’ll try and post some more especially after checking out more plugins.

  • ArcDeveloper.net introduces new forum categories

    Dave Bouwman over at ArcDeveloper.net has announced new choices to the ArcDeveloper forums. The categories include; .NET 2.0 and ArcGIS 9.1, All Things Java, Software Development and Developer Jobs. If you are frustrated with the ESRI Support forums, why not give these a shot.

  • Atlas mashup using the Atlas Virtual Earth map control

    I’ve been playing around with Atlas the last week and having a blast. I still don’t have Visual Studio 2005 on my laptop because we only bought two licenses for this office so far so I’ve been using the free Visual Web Developer Express tool with pretty good results (it is no speed demon I’ll say that though). Anyway I had seen some press about this Atlas Virtual Earth map control in the blogs last week and finally gave it a shot today. I might need to find a .NET host because I can see really getting into these Atlas examples. Others are jumping on Atlas to use with ArcIMS too so there could be some interesting applications in the next few months.

    Running on localhost in all its glory

  • Checking up on the chicken

    It looks like Jeremy is getting some good help from the chicken signed by Scott Morehouse.

    No word on the status of the other chicken and how it is doing.

    Update – Word is that the .NET chicken is on strike.

  • Google Real Estate Beta (and more)

    I’m sure were all waiting for this. Take Google Maps and mix in Google Base and you get Google Real Estate. If you perform a search for “Real Estate” or “Homes For Sale” you get an option to search a zip code for any home for sale. Of course a quick gander at local homes for sale in the Phoenix area shows that Google Base has a long way to go before it can compete against Realtor.com.

    The choices are somewhat limited...

    Update – looks like you can do the same thing with a car search too. I’m guessing we are seeing the integration of Google Base into the normal Google search.

  • ArcWeb Perl Example

    Somehow I think the camel fits Perl very well...Brian Glass released the Perl code for his ArcWeb mapping project a couple weeks ago and I’ve been meaning to post about it. If you’ve been looking for an ArcWeb 2006 Perl example, you should probably download the code. I’m not a huge Perl fan myself, but this example is quite easy to get working.

  • Google Maps API v2 is officially out

    The famous Google logoThe Google Maps API blog announced that the new GMap API version 2 is out today (beta). The GMap v2 has been out for testing, but it is now officially part of the Google Maps API website. There are many improvements including the impressive “Fewer memory leaks” bullet point. cough

    Google now has removed the page limit terms to the API agreement and they are nice enough to now give you a 90 day notice if they ever introduce ads into the API. The upgrade to your code seems as easy as changing v1 to v2, but I’m sure some mashups will have “issues”.

  • Planet Geospatial has a new URL

    spatiallyadjusted.com is hard enough to type without the word planet in front. So I’ve spent the money and got a better (shorter) url. Please feel free to use http://www.planetgs.com from now on.

  • Remembering “Loading”?

    All these great AJAX interfaces makes one forget about how many different ways we provided feedback to the users waiting for the map to load. One of more interesting ones I saw back in the MapObjects IMS days was the Running Dog loading screen. You just sat and watched this dog run back and forth until MapObjects IMS returned your map.

    Boy have times changed since Web 0.2!

    This dog just won't get tired

  • VW with Google Earth navigation demonstration

    OK, I watched the video and it is impressive. The navigation seems much better than I would have thought, though the examples he showed I can already do on my wife’s Acura TL GPS navigation (well all except the satellite photos). But that brings me to a big stumbling block that I can’t figure out how they will address it. How do you handle the satellite images outside of big cities or where the images are completely out of date?

    When visiting my wife’s parents, I know Google Earth has the roads around their ranch (near Austin, TX), but the imagery is horrible. You can barely make out their house on it let along the large tank out front. I’d hope one could turn off the satellite image so it doesn’t distract from the road data. Also what will they do with areas of fast growth such as Phoenix or Las Vegas? A friend has been in his house for almost 3 years and their house still isn’t showing up on the imagery. Sure you could overlay the vector roads (which at least on my wife’s Acura are current), but that would be very confusing to many people.

    Something as simple as the little “Map”/”Satellite” buttons on Google Maps probably would solve the problem, but I’m wondering if this Google Earth Navigation tool is still to much of a distraction for drivers rather than the systems designed for such a purpose. Can’t fault VW for hooking up with Google on this though.

    Google Earth Navigation