Google announced new datasets including demographics, parcels, traffic counts in its for fee Google Earth Pro this month. Why? What market is the company looking capture? Are those data enough? And, do they belong in Google Earth Pro? Our editors explore the new additions.
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by Adena Schutzberg on 06/29 at 01:00 AM |
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Gary Price (ResourceShelf) tipped me off to a new GIS internet Map Service for weather. This one comes out of a partnership between the National Weather Service and Penn State. The article provides little information on the nature of the service:
PSIEE Web enables the weather data through the creation of Internet Map Services (IMS) so they are available to anyone with an Internet connection. These map services allow the served data to be easily integrated into a desktop GIS software package via the Internet with just a click of a button. The team also developed viewing capabilities through Google Earth.
However, a PowerPoint referenced in the article, from the ESRI UC this year makes clear the data is available in ArcIMS Image and Feature Services, but if you dig through it seems that it’s also accessible via WMS. I believe you can access the services here (the article provides no links, so I’m guessing based on the PPT.)
by Adena Schutzberg on 08/10 at 06:51 AM |
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Joe Francica and Adena Schutzberg explore where innovation is occurring in the geospatial marketplace in both geospatially focused professional tools and in the consumer marketplace. There’s interaction between the two markets as well as innovation moving up and down the geospatial user pyramid.
The podcast is 14 minutes long (~ 6 Mb) and was recorded on July 27, 2007.
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by Adena Schutzberg on 07/31 at 06:00 AM |
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I turned that into a question, but it was actually a statement in an e-mail from the folks behind Globe Glider. The message states:
New geobrowser turns Microsoft and Google products into single,
easy-to-use tool
Most important, because Globe Glider is a geobrowser, it gives you a smooth, one-click ride around the world and to all of the information needed on each destination via (your choice!) Google Maps©, Google Earth©, Microsoft Virtual Earth© and Google Street View©.
Something Globe Glider does away with: the minutes, even hours spent hunting-and-pecking your way through today’s search engines, trying to put together a portfolio of travel information.
Two of the Google Earth blogs use terms like “groundbreaking,” “awesome” and “holy grail.”
I didn’t feel that way; I found myself confused and bewildered. I don’t think I’d visit it again for travel planning. I don’t think the problem was the content - it’s from all over he Weather Channel via Yahoo, Rough Guides, some unknown hotel listings, etc. I don’t the problem is technology - it’s a nice mix of using APIs and open source.
The challenge was the four panel interface, the menu bar in the middle, smaller panel (not the main map) and the fact that I had to read the directions to figure out how to use it. I suspect I was expecting too much from the marketing speak; I look forward to the next incremental update.
by Adena Schutzberg on 07/10 at 05:46 AM |
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