![]() It’s available for the Nexus One and most devices with Android 2.1. posted to Fun, Google Earth, Satellite & Aerial, Video | Google Earth for Android The mobile version of Google Earth is now available for the Android mobile phone platform. (Note: it’s not entirely clean.) Via Google Earth Blog. On a related note, Stefan reports that version… posted to Google Earth, Mobile Devices | Earth View in Google Maps Nearly two years after releasing a browser plugin allowing Google Maps API developers to embed Google Earth into a web page, Google has integrated “Earth view” into the Google Maps site itself: “Earth” is now a tab beside “Map” and… posted to Google Earth, Online Maps | Google Earth Guys The shmoo-like Google employees from College Humour’s “Google Street View Guys” video return to image the world for Google Earth from a balloon. The problem, it seems, is that governments and people protesting various boundary and name disputes (Arunachal Pradesh… posted to Disputed Boundaries & Names, Google Earth, Online Maps | Google Earth Updates Google Earth 5.2 was announced yesterday the update adds enhanced GPS track support (viewing the track’s elevation, speed, etc.), an integrated web browser, and improvements to the pro version (CNet, Ogle Earth). posted to Earth Sciences, Google Earth, Mobile Devices | Debunking Google Earth Myths Google Earth Design debunks myths about Google Earth: “Over beers a topic that often came up was misconceptions about Google Earth from those with no GIS or Google Earth experience, so I’ve put together my personal list of myth busting… posted to Google Earth | The Washington Monthly on Google and Disputed Maps Read The Washington Monthly’s article on the troubles Google has encountered when presenting disputed names and boundaries in Google Earth and Google Maps. The overlay view can be toggled between before- and after-the-spill views of… posted to Current Events, Google Earth, Satellite & Aerial | How Often Does Google Update Its Imagery? Google Earth Blog addresses the question: how often does Google update its imagery for Google Earth?… posted to Google Earth, Satellite & Aerial | Oceans in Google Earth for Mobile Mobile versions of Google Earth now have bathymetric and other ocean data: it came with Google Earth 1.1 for Android last month and Google Earth 3.1 for the iPhone, iPod touch and iPad today…. Recently he made headlines because his kite aerial photography of Manihi atoll in French Polynesia, taken last May, has been added to… posted to Citizen Cartography, Google Earth, Satellite & Aerial | Hungarian Toxic Sludge Spill in Google Earth Google has announced that recent GeoEye imagery of the toxic sludge spill in hungary, taken on October 7, is now available as a KML overlay for Google Earth. (Stefan says: “The rest of Google Earth is pretty much the same,… posted to Google Earth | Kite Aerial Photography in Google Earth You may recall that our friend Frank Taylor of Google Earth Blog has been sailing around the world. Yes, trees: species-accurate but not necessarily individual-tree-accurate. The imagery will also be available in Google… posted to Current Events, Google Earth, Satellite & Aerial | Google Earth 6 Google Earth 6, released today in beta, includes improvements to how Street View and historical imagery are integrated, plus 3D trees. The imagery was collected on Sunday and Monday, so this is an incredibly fast turnaround. That sounds like a very good way to peruse all that new imagery from the MESSENGER spacecraft, now orbiting the planet, in… posted to Astronomy, Google Earth | New Sendai Imagery in Google Earth Google has updated Google Earth’s base layer imagery with new high-resolution imagery from the Sendai, Japan area. The effect is redolent of Dali - and it’s what happens… posted to Google Earth, Mapping Errors, Satellite & Aerial | Google Mercury Well, not quite - but you can view Mercury imagery in Google Earth by downloading a KML file. ![]() ![]() Here’s an ESA article on the ash plume… posted to Current Events, Earth Sciences, Google Earth, Satellite & Aerial | When Terrain Layers Get Weird Clement Valla collects instances where Google Earth’s 3D terrain layer doesn’t play well with the satellite and aerial imagery - elevated highways and bridges, for the most part. Here’s Earth Observatory’s satellite image of Grímsvötn’s ash cloud (above) and Ogle Earth’s post about visualizing said ash cloud in Google Earth. Grímsvötn Another year, another Icelandic volcano with a difficult-to-pronounce name.
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