Jul
15
2009
25

Internet Explorer 6 Mobile on Windows Mobile 6.5 Preview

The new version of Internet Explorer is coming to Windows Mobile 6.5. It featured finger-friendly navigation and a better rendering engine. It is based on IE6.

Written by admin in: News | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,
Jul
15
2009
0

Sana’a and Socotra, February 2009 - the digital trail

It’s been a long time coming, but I have finally managed to process the digital trail of my trip to Sana’a and Socotra in February 2009. Download the KML file (300 KB) containing my photos on Flickr, my panoramas on 360Cities, my GPS tracks for most of the trip, the portion of those tracks on Socotra’s brand new paved roads (something you won’t find on any published map, nor on the satellite imagery currently in Google Earth) and finally, for reference’s sake, individual track points.

Here’s a teaser from Sana’a:

Sana'a: View from a rooftop at sunset in Yemen

Bread suq, Sana'a, Yemen in Yemen

And here’s a teaser from Socotra:

Dragon's Blood trees, Diksum Plateau, Socotra, Yemen in Yemen

Admittedly, the only content with “real” geographical value in that file is the fresh road network on Socotra, but now that OpenStreetMap has hit the big time with its imminent embrace by Yahoo! Maps, I think I will try to submit the road data to both OSM and Google Map Maker over the weekend, and compare the processes. Stay tuned.

Then, coming up next week, the reason I’m in Shanghai :-) I’m heading into to the countryside to see the eclipse in a pollution-free spot, but weather- and cellphone coverage permitting, I’ll tweet it live on @ogleearth, with pics.

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Written by admin in: GIS, News |
Jul
15
2009
0

KML signposts to Google Earth updates are a boon for armchair geographers

By releasing a KML file outlining all the new imagery added to Google Earth in the latest update, Google has greatly amplified the usefulness of its imagery. That’s because isolated image tile updates of remote locations are often requested by satellite imagery customers for a purpose, perhaps because they contain a interesting feature that has recently changed. But finding such new imagery from one update to the next is akin to looking for the proverbial needle in the haystack.

No longer. Now, there is a whole new sport available to us — guessing why a spot in the middle of nowhere just got a shiny new meter-resolution satellite update. After all, some organization paid good money for that tile. (By the terms of the agreement between Google and DigitalGlobe, Google eventually gets to use all imagery taken by DigitalGlobe. There are exceptions — Iraq and Afghanistan are devoid of updates.)

In the briefest of inspections of the new imagery aided by the KML outline file, I zoomed in on South Sandwich’s Montagu Island, wondering why that remote place merited a now highly conspicuous close-up. A click on the accompanying Wikipedia icon answered my question adroitly: The island is volcanically active, providing “some of the first scientific observations of volcanic eruptions taking place underneath an ice sheet.” Sure enough:

montagunow.jpg

Just last week, Montagu Island still looked like this in Google Earth:

montaguthen.jpg

I would never have noticed the difference and learned something new without that KML file.

Now, onwards to tiles in Iran, North Korea, India, Pakistan, Syria, Sudan… Remember, the Israeli air strike on Syria’s mystery nuclear reactor on September 6, 2007 was preceded by a flurry of satellite activity over the region, as evinced by the DigitalGlobe default Google Earth layer outlining its catalogue of tiles (though the most recent ones were not yet available in Google Earth at the time of the strike).

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Written by admin in: GIS, News |

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