Tried Google Earth - wow!
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 747
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Tried Google Earth - wow!
I recently downloaded the new Google Earth photo mapping system. Way cool. Not only can you zoom into anywhere with satelite imagery, but then try hitting the "tilt" button to put it into 3D perspective to see the elevation effects. You can fly it along - I took a tour of the Grand Canyon, for example. Buildings sometimes come out a little odd in tilt mode (try the Eiffel Tower), but still, a worthy complement to Fodors addiction.
It is at earth.google.com
It is at earth.google.com
#2
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,936
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Woo Hoo! I downloaded it too--the site was busy other times I've tried to do it...
It's beyond cool! I inputted our address and though it was a few houses off, I could see my neighbor's car in the driveway--that's how close it can zoom in.
I put in my mother's address and there was the gray house I grew up in with the neighborhood tennis courts showing clear as day.
I'm going to try playing around in Australia and Italy next--I may never get another thing done!
It's beyond cool! I inputted our address and though it was a few houses off, I could see my neighbor's car in the driveway--that's how close it can zoom in.
I put in my mother's address and there was the gray house I grew up in with the neighborhood tennis courts showing clear as day.
I'm going to try playing around in Australia and Italy next--I may never get another thing done!
#4

Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 10,611
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I could actually look at our pool at our last Texas house and see the spa--that's pretty detailed!
Looking at DH's last hotel, there was a big plane sitting at the end of the runway. It's still there. Stuck
The skylights we had installed in our casita showed up.
Eiffel Tower looks like a shadow.
Oops...there's a shark off Clearwater Beach!! jk
It took me a while to find the zoom button...there is one, which brings you in much closer.
Looking at DH's last hotel, there was a big plane sitting at the end of the runway. It's still there. Stuck
The skylights we had installed in our casita showed up.Eiffel Tower looks like a shadow.
Oops...there's a shark off Clearwater Beach!! jk
It took me a while to find the zoom button...there is one, which brings you in much closer.
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#10
Joined: Jan 2003
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#11
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,986
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What am I doing wrong?!?!? I've downloaded it, but have tried two addresses and it's so blurry I can barely make anything out. I can see some of the overall shape of my neighborhood, but only because there are three lakes in it that show up as dark spots. I can't see the cemetery nearby or the freeway, let alone a car in my driveway. It's just one big mass of green with a few dark spots.
Does anyone else see it this way, or is there a setting I need to change?
Does anyone else see it this way, or is there a setting I need to change?
#12
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 3,491
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A fantastic program! A few comments:
1. Some areas are photographed in much better resolution than others -- it's more or less hit or miss. I can see a truck parked in my driveway but it's very fuzzy; I can see the shadows of people walking in a local outside mall. The Grand Canyon is awesome at close range, and so is Rome, Sorrento, etc. But when I went to southern coastal NC and to Lake Como (Italy, again), the images were drastically blurry beginning from a rather high altitude. It just depends -- suburbs of major cities are usually fairly sharp, more rural places less so.
2. I wish each image were marked with date and time, but it's clear that some were taken toward sunset, some more toward noon; some in the fall or winter, some in the summer. It's pretty random but soooooooo much fun!
3. I believe that there's a US regulation that says an error must be built in to such imaging for the general public so that it's not as accurate as whatever Pentagon or intelligence has, which would explain why every address I tried (I tried a dozen or so) was off by a few houses or so.
4. Be sure to tinker with zooming in and out, the tilt function, and double-clicking on new locations to watch it rotate the area itself. But be aware that the overlay functions ("airports, hotels, etc.") is even less useful than MapQuest, and less accurate.
1. Some areas are photographed in much better resolution than others -- it's more or less hit or miss. I can see a truck parked in my driveway but it's very fuzzy; I can see the shadows of people walking in a local outside mall. The Grand Canyon is awesome at close range, and so is Rome, Sorrento, etc. But when I went to southern coastal NC and to Lake Como (Italy, again), the images were drastically blurry beginning from a rather high altitude. It just depends -- suburbs of major cities are usually fairly sharp, more rural places less so.
2. I wish each image were marked with date and time, but it's clear that some were taken toward sunset, some more toward noon; some in the fall or winter, some in the summer. It's pretty random but soooooooo much fun!
3. I believe that there's a US regulation that says an error must be built in to such imaging for the general public so that it's not as accurate as whatever Pentagon or intelligence has, which would explain why every address I tried (I tried a dozen or so) was off by a few houses or so.
4. Be sure to tinker with zooming in and out, the tilt function, and double-clicking on new locations to watch it rotate the area itself. But be aware that the overlay functions ("airports, hotels, etc.") is even less useful than MapQuest, and less accurate.
#15
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,936
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I think it differs widely when the images were shot. For example, I looked for a friend's 3 yr. old house and it still showed undeveloped land but when I looked for World Trade Center, NYC I could see Ground Zero (very interesting photo, BTW)
#16
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,936
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Oh, one more thing: If an entire image is blurry, give it several seconds to focus. (and know you can zoom in only so far--ie you're not going to see house numbers or license plates but you'll see other bigger features. I could see my patio, for example)
#17
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,986
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It must just be that the areas I've tried to see (all in Michigan) don't have high-res photos. I've given them plenty of time to come into focus, and am not trying to zoom in far. I can't even tell that there are houses in the neighborhood, let alone tell which one is mine. And the neighborhood is 50+ years old, so I don't think the photos were taken before the land was developed.
#18
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,736
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Downloaded it and it made everything oooh so slow. Had to remove it. Very interesting images. Looked at my house by the water and it shows the roof before it was replaced -- the roof was replaced in 2000. Some of these images must be quite dated.

