Web Info & Tutorials

June 12th, 2006

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, GOOGLE EARTH

Posted by John Hanke, Director, Google Earth and Google Maps



We got so excited around here about the first anniversary of Google Earth that we decided to celebrate a bit early. Beginning today, you can download a brand new version, Google Earth 4. Running on OS X? Feel the love. Prefer Linux? Ditto. Yes, we're releasing simultaneously for PC, Mac (universal binary for full performance on both Intel and PowerPC based Macs) and for the first time ever, native support for popular Linux distributions. And we should say "salut," "ciao," "hallo," and "hola" to our French, Italian, German and Spanish users, because Google Earth is now fully localized for those languages in addition to English. This includes a UI localized to French, Italian, German, and Spanish, as well as local search, driving directions, geo-coding, and unique local information layers for those countries.



Got data?

The streamlined new UI is bound to make you crave new places to explore, so we put together a little update to our database — we increased our global coverage by about 4X. Google Earth now covers more than 20 percent of the landmass of the entire globe with high-resolution satellite imagery (soon Google Maps will too). When we say "high resolution," we mean the good stuff: you can see cars, houses, buildings in more than 200 countries and territories. Not every house is covered, only about two billion of them. That's our best estimate, anyway — that about 1/3 of the population of the Earth can now see their homes in high-resolution. Google Earth has had medium resolution global satellite coverage since the beginning. But that was at 15 meters per pixel. This new global coverage was produced in conjunction with our exclusive satellite partner, Digital Globe, and is at approximately 70 cm per pixel. We have even better data for many countries, up to 10 cm per pixel.



What global insights can this new data produce? Google Earth has already helped save tsunami, hurricane, and earthquake victims, not to mention find a lost Roman villa, track severe storms, discover new meteor craters, track the outbreak of avian flu, visually index magazine articles and photos, host travel videos, redefine the house-shopping process, track airplanes in flight, recognize every Medal of Honor recipient, and many other uses we never expected. Only time will tell what it will bring, and it will only be fully realized when energetic and creative people use powerful tools like KML to exploit the new data and features.



Why not KML in Maps?

We asked that too. KML is such an amazingly flexible way to create and share geographic information - whether it's sharing vacation photos with your friends or publishing important data like the realtime earthquake feed from the U.S. Geological Survey — we thought it would be useful to be able to view KML in Google Maps. So here it is! You can now view KML in Maps by entering the URL for your KML file. To browse hundreds of thousands of interesting KML files, see what the half million members of the Google Earth Community have created.



Feeling inspired?

Google SketchUp and Google 3D Warehouse have enabled creative individuals around the world to model their world in 3D. A new version of SketchUp is available today that enables the export of fully-textured 3D models to 3D Warehouse and Google Earth. This will bring even more realism to the collectively-authored 3D world SketchUp users are creating.



Ready to mashup?

Our legion of Maps API developers asked us to support geocoding. So we decided to push that out today too. Street-level geocoding is now available for the U.S., Canada, Japan, France, Italy, Germany and Spain. Let the mashing begin.

Correction: Street-level geocoding is not available in Japan.



Are you enterprising?

Finally, now there's Google Maps for Enterprise, offering a fee-based service and support for businesses that want to embed a Google Maps experience in their websites or internal applications. It leverages the Google Maps API to enable businesses to map customer locations, track shipments, manage facilities or view any other data source in a geographic context.



Whew. I'm exhausted from writing all of that. Our first year has been a busy one. We hope you enjoy these latest efforts in our mission to geographically organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful.
June 12th, 2006

BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION SET FROM CHRONIC LOGIC

Bridge Construction Set is all about building a bridge that doesn't break, although watching your bridge creation break and plunge a train into the watery depths below can be half the fun. In the Bridge Construction Set you design and build bridges and then stress test them to see how your creations hold up under pressure. If when test vehicles pass over your bridge they make it safely across you know you’ve succeeded. If they plummet into the river you know you need to go back to the drawing board. The robust physics deployed in the Bridge Construction Set let you build a wide variety of bridges that can span the river. The 3D graphics allow you to view your bridge from any angle including a first person train view - its like being strapped to the front of the train when your bridge is first tested (if this happened in real life I think we might have engineers checking all their bridges in a simulator). The Bridge Construction Set includes many types of bridge building levels in varying degrees of difficulty from simple to complex with a tutorial section to get you started. A Level Editor is also included so you can create your own levels and trade them with others.
June 12th, 2006

SCOOBY-DOO! SHOWDOWN IN GHOST TOWN - COMPLETE PACKAGE BY THE LEARNING COMPANY

Uncover the mystery of the Faceless Rider! Los Burritos sounded like a great place to stop for a snack, but Scooby and the gang soon learn that the town is haunted! Help the gang search for clues, but brace yourself for challenging puzzles, wild chases, and even an outrageous pie-throwing showdown. Discover the amazing truth behind the mystery of the Faceless Rider!
June 12th, 2006

EMERGETK - NEW AJAX TOOLKIT FOR .NET

emerge toolkit logo
Ben Joldersma has announced release 0.1 of the Emerge Toolkit, an Ajax web framework targeting C# and Dojo. The current release targets C# 2.0 and Dojo 0.2.2, with plans to update to the latest Dojo 0.3 release by July. Browser support includes Firefox, IE, and Opera, with partial Safari support.

  • Instantaneous, two way communication between server and browser with Comet transport
  • 100% C# 2.0 - Write your application in your favorite CLR-supported language.
  • Build application logic with existing widgets (built on Dojo) or roll your own.
  • Create interfaces in C# or XML, and style them with CSS.
  • Integrated O/R mapper - write your models in C# or XML. Store them in an embedded SQLite database, or soon MySQL or SQL Server
  • Prototype applications rapidly with our Scaffold (inspired by Rails) and other data bound widgets
  • Present data visually with SVG widgets, with plans to use Dojo’s VML compatibility layer
  • Tie everything togther with live data binding services for simultaneous event updates
  • GPL and commercial licenses available.
June 12th, 2006

PLACE A SELF-HOLD AND REDUCE BANKING FEES

Tired of losing a large percentage of every AdSense check to bank processing fees? As I mentioned in my last post, if you're outside the US and receive USD checks, you can let your earnings accrue and then receive larger checks less frequently by placing a self-hold on your account. This will help reduce the overall impact of any check processing fees charged by your bank.



Should you decide to experiment with this option, please keep in mind that changes to your hold status must be in place by the 15th of each month. For example, in order to let your earnings accrue or to remove self-holds for a June payment, you need to make the change by June 15th.

If you haven't done so already, I also encourage you to subscribe to the AdSense Calendar where you can find information about our monthly payment schedule.

UPDATED to include information about AdSense Calendar

June 12th, 2006

PASQUARELLI: CULPEPPER IMPRESSIVE AT DOLPHINS’ MINICAMP

Although still recovering from a horrific knee injury, QB Daunte Culpepper looked good at the Dolphins' weekend minicamp.
June 12th, 2006

FREMONT 5K FUN RUN

The gang

This last Friday I ran my first 5k with a time around 27:40 0:27:29.0 (I can’t seem to find my official time anywhere online I placed 272nd out of a field of 345 or 66th out of 75 for my division). Not too shabby considering I hadn’t ran 3.2 miles in forever and that I rode my bike a bit over 4 miles to get to the race, which wasn’t my wisest decision as of late.

At any rate, the run felt great and we had a great time at Norm’s after the race. Maybe by the end of the summer I’ll do something crazy like a half marathon or a sprint triathlon.

June 12th, 2006

TOUS LES CRANS MNENT LA COUPE DU MONDE

On peut dsormais suivre les grands moments du Mondial en haute dfinition via la TNT ou sur l'cran de son mobile, mais galement sur Internet, gratuitement et en direct, grce de petits logiciels "made in China".
June 12th, 2006

50 AJAX REFERENCE WEBSITES FROM AROUND THE WORLD

Max Kiesler is back with another great (long) list today - this time, it’s a great look at some of the best Ajax resources from around the world (and no, I’m not just saying that because we’re on it). He’s listed fifty of them, and in more than just English too.

As a consistent devotee of the AJAX scene over the past year or so I have hundreds of feeds in my reader. Recently, I’ve had several email requests from readers requesting to know what AJAX websites I visit daily. While I visit any title that interest me, these are the sites I go to consistently.

Included in the list are:

As always, he’s always welcome to additions to the list - it’s all about sharing as much information as we can with everyone that needs it, and providing these resources is a great way to start.

June 12th, 2006

AJAX FEEDBACK MECHANISM

The iBegin blog has posted some information about a handy little Ajax feature they’re offering up to the public for download - an Ajax feedback mechanism.

So a few weeks ago I was thinking how people are using our site, but I have no clue what their feelings are. Are the results good? Great? Craptastic? Repeat visitors are not a good measurement either - I used to visit Toronto.com a lot, but only because they were really the only game in town. Did I like their site? Not really … but I kept coming back out of necessity.

So we set out to build a quick and easy feedback mechanism. A little floater/popup that lets you quickly rate a page. All AJAX driven of course.

The module is simple to use (and alter) to adapt to the look and feel of your site and makes it simple to integrate into your site, especially if you’re using PHP. A script accompanies it to recieve the Ajax requests and plug it into your database to store the results.

You can check out the demo here and or just jump in and download the script.