Google Gears Geolocation API
I spotted this on the All Points Blog. Google Gears is an open source project that allows you to run web applications while you’re offline. It basically caches data in a SQLite database and has a local store to cache thi
I spotted this on the All Points Blog. Google Gears is an open source project that allows you to run web applications while you’re offline. It basically caches data in a SQLite database and has a local store to cache thi
Last month I posted about OpenLayers with a Virtual Earth Widget. I had a business need for that one. This one I’m doing just because I darn well can. First things first - you’ll have to reference the Google Maps API, wh
Recently I added some Virtual Earth and Google Maps functionality to one of my sites. This requires loading some hefty JavaScript libraries, which I did in the usual way: <script type="http://dev.virtualearth.net/mapc
* NOBODY READS YOUR HELP DOCUMENTATION * Don't believe me? If you have online help, knock it offline. If you have desktop software with a .chm or whatnot, rename the file or replace it with an empty one. See how long it
Some time ago our team met with a 10 county coalition of emergency response and management groups. We identified two general GIS needs for the coalition: the need for seamless GIS data sets across county boundaries, and
Well, almost. It’s a technology preview release. But according to Mark Brown’s Virtual Earth Blog, it’s here, and it’s pretty good. You can now drop a Virtual Earth .NET control right into your .NET project without havin
I recently came across a need to display a little Virtual Earth map in one of my sites. Specifically, a group of users needed to see some oblique photography. With OpenLayers you can dump the standard VE or Google Maps t
ArcGIS Explorer is not what it used to be. And that’s a good thing. The 480 build has been released (I first heard it on SlashGeo). This is a major update with a lot of new features, tweaks, and bug fixes, but the bigges
Oh, Internet Explorer. I dream one day you will be given corporeal existence, so that I may kill you. In the mean time, however, sites still have to be designed to meet web standards and then hacked for IE. Refusal to do
I recently ran into a little problem with a Windows service. Apache Tomcat, about once every two weeks or so, simply croaks on one of our servers. When I say croaks, I mean croaks: a hit to :8080 gives a fast no-server-l