Fly
around the world for free! DR. JANAKI TURAGA
JANAKITURAGA@GMAIL.COM
Google
redefines the earth. A review from a common man’s
perspective
The
recent internet mapping interventions by Google and
MSN have significantly changed the mapping world by
bringing high and medium resolution aerial and satellite
maps into the reach of the common map at the click of
the mouse. All you need is a personal computer and a
cable/broadband connection.
Though internet maps were provided earlier by different
players, the interventions of major players such as
Google (http://earth.google. com/)and MSN (http://virtualearth.
msn.com) have consolidated the internet map industry.
Medium and high resolution aerial and satellite maps
are available for non-commercial use freely.
Both Google and MSN provide satellite imagery maps,
of places with street names, locating places. The range
of area for which data is provided by Google is the
world, while for MSN, it is only USA, though it plans
to extend this service to the rest of the world. Of
the two, Google has a wider range of services and facilities,
and products, such as GPS enabled Earth Plus, and for
commercial products. Both the service providers are
in the beta phase and plan to provide varied services
and products to diverse users. With the entry of these
two players, the internet map service industry(map data
providers, technical support and technology base and
the service providers) is in the process of being overhauled,
and consolidated. Google’s Earth Plus can read
in GPS data, and thereby create customized maps.
A significant quantum of data is open for free (as yet)
for diverse everyday uses such as finding directions,
locating exotic places, planning for holidays, sites,
etc.
Besides having opened up the world to everybody at the
click of the mouse, internet map providers have melded
multiple technologies to give high quality maps which
were prohibited and prohibitively expensive in order
to provide near real time maps for every day use for
either free or at a fraction of the cost of the original
maps. These maps are live and technology driven with
maps being generated by GPS for individual users, and
which are customized.
Future trends are demand based- providing real time
maps, adaptable to new technologies for generating customized
maps.
Therefore information is packaged broadly into non-commercial
and commercial. The non-commercial segment is primarily
free and provides data which is basic-such as finding
directions, information about a place, locate your building,
locate a site, etc. which enable a vast number of users
in their daily lives. Such an exercise is based upon
the necessity that only that data which is wired/ mapped
is on the screen. Which means that if you are not wired
or mapped you don’t exist on the map. Secondly,
the challenge that this has for third world countries,
especially India, where urban entities have grown organically
fi nding your building or your site or the best eatery
on the map is going to be a diffi cult task, especially
in the absence of street numbers and even house numbers.
Finding your home/ a home based business enterprise
in Dharavi slum in Mumbai or Munirka Village in New
Delhi is going to be a challenging task, which google
and msn would need to address in the near future. The
changing urban landscapesboth organic and the planned
have for long foxed the urban planners/ municipalities
themselves.
But then, with the increasing demand for real time imagery,
GIS and GPS enabled map service providers can provide
real time pictures of situations such as the recent
fl oods in Mumbai/Ahmedabad in India and
also of other disasters, which enable better provision
of disaster relief with better disaster management.
Readily available basic satellite imagery and aerial
photos data is already being used. TV news channels
are using satellite imagery in their bulletins. CNN
used Google earth imagery in its Breaking News on August
16th, 2005 at 6 pm (IST) to show the site of the West
Caribbean Airways airline’s crash site in Venezuela.
They showed the imagery of the crash site, and gave
basic geographic information of the area based upon
the available visual imagery.
Readily
available basic satellite imagery and aerial photos
data is already being used. TV news channels are using
satellite imagery in their bulletins. CNN used Google
earth imagery in its Breaking News on August 16th, 2005
at 6 pm (IST) to show the site of the West Caribbean
Airways airline’s crash site in Venezuela. They
showed the imagery of the crash site, and gave basic
geographic information of the area based upon the available
visual imagery.
With the availability of satellite and aerial photographs,
a huge market has been opened up, with diverse users
using the data now in the public
domain. The commercial potential of this data is huge
and earth google has multiple products for different
users. While basic data is freely available, multiple
layered data is available for commercial use for a fee.
As of now the products are packaged with multiple users-basic
data users. The hardware requirements are that of the
confi gurations that are normally integral to a personal
computer.
Google’s Earth Plus, available for a nominal fee,
has crossed the boundaries for customized maps as it
is GPS compatible which leads to generation of real
time customized maps.
The key features of Google Earth are: The entire earth
is mapped in medium resolution imagery and terrain data
which show major geographic features and towns etc.,
3 dimensional maps, seamless ‘viewing experience’,
resolution of more than 1 meter. But then, one requires
to be on broadband/cable connection. Dial up modem users
are out. In India as most of the internet users are
on dial up modem, this facility is out of reach. At
the click of a mouse the world is at your use. Restricted
data is now available. New trend-provide hitherto inaccessible
satellite imagery and geographic systems information
to anybody who has a broadband/cable connection. Opened
up restricted data and made it unrestricted. Now in
the reach of the common man.
The mobile food carts/pav bhaji/ chaat/gol gappe wala
which sustain most of urban India’s office lunch
and snack time needs, would go out for a toss, primarily
because they are mobile, and their physical space is
undetermined in conventional mapping methodology. Salivating
food aficionados have gone on expeditions in trying
to locate the best pav bhaji eatery which has often
been elusive. And those who have been there and eaten,
fi nd it hard to give ‘directions’ or to
fix the physical space of a joint which has firmly located
itself in their mental and gastronomic map. Finally
it just boils down to ‘I will take you there’.
But this is where the GPS enabled map comes in handy.
Foodies now can map the most elusive eatery in urban
India thereby making driving directions simple. The
one who has gone there and eaten has to use the GPS
to map the route and share the map with others. And
soon the most elusive eatery would be a thing of the
past.
All
this points to the making of a wired world, and are
we driving owards that?
By making available free of charge basic GIS/Satellite
imagery, India’s national policy of restrictive
map disclosure is now challenged. At medium resolution,
basic data is available to anyone with a personal computer
and a cable/internet connection. And also generate personal
map for varied uses. Literally, the map is in your hands.
And you make your own map. The world is in your hands,
make your own world and your map.
By
making available free of charge basic GIS/Satellite
imagery, India’s national policy of restrictive
map disclosure is now challenged. At medium resolution,
basic data is available to anyone with a personal computer
and a cable/internet connection. And also generate personal
map for varied uses. Literally, the map is in your hands.
And you make your own map. The world is in your hands,
make your own world and your map.
From restriction to unrestricted information. Countries
with policies of restriction of map information and
maps, would now have to address this open access map
information. Despite the decided information advantage
that a toposheet has over a satellite map, the satellite
map scores over the Survey Of India’s toposheet
in providing basic information, which is restricted
to the Indian public for the restricted zone. India
is now opened up to Indians, with the availability of
satellite maps as well as the generation of GPS enabled
customized maps. There is literally no frontier to breach.
The trend of making the latest map information available
has begun and will continue. With the availability of
high resolution imagery, finally the satellites would
fi nally justify their
cost, by making the data available to the common man
of the world.