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Open Source Alternative To Google Earth?

aws910 writes "Today, I fired up Google Earth to find that the 'points of interest' category had been removed, and a single checkbox is in its place. Certain layers are now entirely inaccessible. Google triggered a user revolt, but admitted fault, and promised to restore full functionality someday. In the meantime, I've found a lack of plausible alternatives. Bing seems nice, but Moonlight crashes the browser on any machine I use, and I'd rather use OSS anyway ... which made me realize there doesn't seem to be a good open-source alternative to Google Earth. Am I missing something?"

20 of 190 comments (clear)

  1. NASA's World Wind by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Informative

    World Wind is licensed under NASA's Open Source license. Not sure of the intricacies with it (IANAL) but was developed with the open source community.

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    1. Re:NASA's World Wind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      World Wind is probably the best - there are two versions, C# and Java. C# is more mature, Java version is catching up.

      You can define your own texture/icon layers and with some work also display your own elevation data and 3D models. There are many layers already, such as OpenStreetMap. KML support is in early stages.

    2. Re:NASA's World Wind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Since Wikipedia is down round these parts, here's the actual site:

      http://worldwind.arc.nasa.gov/

    3. Re:NASA's World Wind by marjancek · · Score: 3, Informative

      WorldWind is definitelly the best Open Source option to Google Earth. And even though only NASA's imagery is available, a lot of other sources are available. For isntance, Virtual Earth's imagery can be used for non commercial purposes in World Wind. There's also the posibility for governments to put their imagery for free usage, like in a Slovene project Gaea: (http://www.gaeaplus.si/), which can be tested here (http://geo.xlab.si/pds-0.0.2/gaea?version=sos)

    4. Re:NASA's World Wind by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 2, Informative

      And World Wind existed before Google Earth...
      As one bonus, World Wind does not limit the size of your local imagery cache; you can assign as many gigabytes as you want. World Wind (Windows version) and a selection of cache packs (Landsat and SRTM) can be downloaded from http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=subject%3A%22world%20wind%22, while the Java version can be downloaded from http://builds.worldwind.arc.nasa.gov/download.asp

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    5. Re:NASA's World Wind by marjancek · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sorry, the correct link is this

    6. Re:NASA's World Wind by dbug78 · · Score: 2, Informative

      World Wind existed before Google Earth was called such but Keyhole EarthViewer 3D was 3 years old when NASA made their first release.

      I'm not sure why any of that matters in this discussion, though.

  2. Re:Licensing? Severs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Take a look at Marble from the KDE education project - http://edu.kde.org/marble/

  3. KDE Marble by IYagami · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://edu.kde.org/marble/

    Marble is a Virtual Globe and World Atlas that you can use to learn more about Earth: You can pan and zoom around and you can look up places and roads. A mouse click on a place label will provide the respective Wikipedia article.

    Of course it's also possible to measure distances between locations or watch the current cloud cover. Marble offers different thematic maps: A classroom-style topographic map, a satellite view, street map, earth at night and temperature and precipitation maps. All maps include a custom map key, so it can also be used as an educational tool for use in class-rooms. For educational purposes you can also change date and time and watch how the starry sky and the twilight zone on the map change.

    In opposite to other virtual globes Marble also features multiple projections: Choose between a Flat Map ("Plate carré"), Mercator or the Globe.

    The best of all: Marble is Free Software / Open Source Software and promotes the usage of free maps. And it's available for all major operating systems (Linux/Unix, MS Windows and Mac OS X).

  4. FSF High priority list by Galestar · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.fsf.org/campaigns/priority.html/#gereplacment

    FSF is actively looking for people to contribute to any such project.

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  5. Open Street Maps by Alanonfire · · Score: 5, Informative

    Doesn't have street view or actual photos from what I've seen but its ok. openstreetmap.org

    1. Re:Open Street Maps by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Informative

      That was what I was going to suggest. It's difficult to tell from the original question what exactly the OP used Google Earth for, so finding a replacement isn't easy. If the problem is the lack of a places of interest overlay, then OSM is a good solution; it has a lot of overlays with various bits of metadata (for example, the location of all of the pubs in the area). It's a community effort, so if you have a GPS you can help them improve the accuracy of the maps and you can add your own points of interest. You can also access the raw data if you want to build something on top of it and they've got a nice JavaScript API.

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  6. Re:Licensing? Severs? by ajs · · Score: 2, Informative

    For the most part, GE is not useful for typical end-user activity. It is mostly used to provide a tool for commercial applications of the Google maps data. For example, if you've seen a movie that did the zoom-in or -out between the globe from space and a single house, everything from 100 feet up and further was probably Google Earth. It's also used by law enforcement, NGOs planning access routes to remote locations, real estate, site surveys, etc. See their business use cases for Google Earth for more info.

  7. Re:Licensing? Severs? by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm trying to find out what exactly Google Earth is actually useful for??

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geographic_information_system
    I have a cousin who works for the top GIS company and when Google started doing the satellite view on Google Maps and then released Google Earth, there was a collective "ah shit!" from the industry because Google was giving away their bread and butter for free.

    We take it for granted, but before Google, you mostly had to pay top dollar for a dataset overlaid onto a satellite map because there were no real non-commercial alternatives.

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  8. Google has already fixed it by sunderland56 · · Score: 2, Informative

    The points of interest feature has already been restored: http://www.gearthblog.com/blog/archives/2010/03/the_points_of_interest_return.html

  9. Re:Odd .... by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 1, Informative

    ...lead to an .NET version which has been poorly implemented in Java.

    Uhhh, what? Did you purposely skip over the C# versions, or are you just blind?

    While C# itself isn't open source, it is free as in beer, and software made in C# certainly can be open source. Most people aren't re-writing their compilers just to code an app, and it's available in both Windows and Linux, so I really don't see how your complaint has any merit at all. Unless you're just a .Net hater for fun, which is dumb. .Net works great and takes a huge load off the programmer's shoulders.

    What's your problem man?

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  10. Re:Licensing? Severs? by thecross · · Score: 1, Informative

    A Megasquirt might be able to do that. You could also replace the throttle system with an actual cable, which would also work.

  11. OSSIMplanet, pTolemy3D, Virtual Ocean and more by Lord+Satri · · Score: 4, Informative

    NASA World Wind is the most popular afaik, but there are others, including OSSIMplanet, pTolemy3D, Virtual Ocean and quite a few other ones depending on your requirements.

  12. Re:Licensing? Severs? by ACalcutt · · Score: 5, Informative

    Google Earths main benefit is its KML format. Google documents the KML format very well ( http://code.google.com/apis/kml/documentation/topicsinkml.html ). I use google earth with my wireless network scanner ( www.vistumbler.net ). It has allowed me to do some interesting stuff with the wireless data, for example. - We have a wireless database with over 100,000 Access Points. This creates a 75MB kml files of access points. Google maps is unable to load a KML of this size directly. (see our full KML http://www.vistumbler.net/wifidb/ --> Daemon Generated kml) - I have a feature to export signal history to google earth as a 3d/colored/line above the earth (see http://forum.techidiots.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=33&t=278&start=0&hilit=Signal+Mapping ) - I have a feature called AutoKML which automatically creates 4 kml files. One of track you have driven, one with active APs, one of Dead APs, And one with the current GPS position. With a "Network Link" google earth updates the changes in the kml file at a specified interval and displays them. I can also specify a view height and current location, so I can make google earth follow my current location (and show me the active APs I am detecting). These are only a few examples of what I use google earth for. I'm sure there are much more creative uses for it.

  13. Just one ingredient by xixax · · Score: 3, Informative

    As well as the shiny interface, what makes Google is oodles of current, hi-res imagery and enough grunt to make the same base set of data available to a large chunk of the world's population.

    Taken as a complete product, I can't see anything remotely in the ballpark. FOSS can do software, but data and servers to cough it up is not a software issue. Bing has data, but from what I've seen their data currecny and resolution is trailing Google. Due to the economies of scale involved, catching up would probably need deep pockets.

    Xix.

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