Daily Archive for May 28th, 2008

Google Earth inside your Browser


Google’s 3D data has escaped the client and is now available for your Browser. Today at Google I/O a Google Earth Browser plugin was released. With the plugin it is possible to view Google Earth mashups in the comfort of their own browser instead of having to pull up a separate client.

A small excerpt from the O’Reilly post:

This release does not change Google Maps, the mapping site on Google’s domain; it will not be serving up Google Earth imagery (yet). This release does not change all Google maps mashups into Google Earth Mashups. Instead the plugin enables developers to offer Google Earth imagery to their users very easily. I think it is notable that this is being offered to developers first. Why developers first? For one the plugin is being released at Google I/O, Google’s developer conference. I think that we should expect many developer-only treats today and tomorrow. Second, mashups can really help with distribution and help gain mindshare with those who don’t make it to Google’s sites on their own.

As Paul Rademacher, the creator of the first mashup (Housingmaps.com) and the technical lead on the project, pointed out to me during a call last week “The goal, apart from opening up Google Earth, is to bring Earth to the user. You can’t help but see Google maps when you surf now you’ll also see Google Earth.” The final reason, I am sure, is to keep Google’s main mapping site clean. Google Maps has had a lot of features added lately; they will need to spend some time figuring out a 3D UX.

Here are some sample apps for trying out. You will be prompted to download the plugin:

[via http://radar.oreilly.com/geo]

Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.

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What are popular Programming Languages for GIS Developers?


Dave Bouwman has done an informal “2008 Geospatial Developer Survey“. 320 people took the time and have completed the survey. He has now published some results.

I’ll sumerize some interesting points:

The role of people, who participated:

His statement:

The split across titles was somewhat interesting - almost even between “Analysts who write code”, and those who consider themselves “GIS Software Developers”, with “Software Engineer” trailing slightly. I see this as a progression from “getting things done” coding towards more “built to last” coding.

Primary Development Language:

The idea of this question was to get a feel for what you most commonly work with. “.NET” was the prominent platform with a 61% share.

Here is how the “other” broke out by count of times they were mentioned. As Dave I’m also surprised that there are still people using VB6 and VBA.

Use of ESRI products:

This is an interesting resut showing the dominace of ESRI in the GIS community.

Link: http://blog.davebouwman.net/2008/05/27/GeospatialDeveloperSurveyResults.aspx

Written and submitted from Home, using my 802.11g WiFi network.

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