Google Maps (for a time named Google Local) is a free web map server application and technology provided by Google that powers many map-based services including Google Maps, Google Ride Finder and embedded maps on third-party websites via the Google Maps API. It offers street maps, a route planner and an urban business locator for Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, the United States, and most western European states, and satellite images for the whole world.
A related product is Google Earth, a standalone Apple Mac, Windows and Linux program that offers enhanced globe-viewing features.
Search results can be restricted to a certain area, thanks to Google Local. For example, someone can enter a query such as "Waffles in Ottawa"* to find restaurants serving waffles near the city. This can be used to find a wide variety of businesses, such as theatres, restaurants or hotels.
Like many other map services, Google Maps allows for the creation of driving directions. It gives the user a step-by-step list of how to get to their destination, along with an estimate of the time required to reach it and the distance between the two locations.
Google Maps offers three viewing modes by default: Map (Street map views), Satellite (satellite and high-resolution aerial photographs) and Hybrid (Street maps overlaid on satellite and high-resolution aerial photographs).
The "link to this page" link on each Google Maps map targets a URL which can be used to find the location on the map at a later time. The latitude and longitude can be used as input to NASA World Wind or TerraServer-USA, which in some cases has higher-resolution imagery.
Google Maps provides high-resolution (full-zoom) satellite images for most urban areas in Canada and the United States (including Hawaii, Alaska, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands) as well as parts of France, Iceland, Italy, Iraq, Japan, the Bahamas, Bermuda, Kuwait, Mexico, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and many other countries. Google Maps also covers the cities of Moscow, Istanbul, both of which are considered European and also New Delhi and Mumbai in India.
All the images shown in Google Maps' satellite mode are at least a year old and in some places up to five years old. Despite this various governments have complained over the potential for terrorists to use the satellite images in planning attacks on nuclear power stations. Google has blurred some areas for security (mostly in the United States), including the United States Capitol and the U.S. Naval Observatory (Recently, however, some of these areas have been restored to their original state). Other well-known government installations are visible including the infamous Area 51 in the Nevada desert.
With the introduction of an easily pannable and searchable mapping and satellite imagery tool, Google's mapping engine prompted a surge of interest in satellite imagery. Sites such as Google Sightseeing and Google Globetrotting were established which feature satellite images of interesting natural and man-made landmarks, including such novelties as "large type" writing visible in the imagery, as well as famous stadiums and unique earth formations.
The GIS (map) data used in Google Maps are provided by Tele Atlas and NAVTEQ, while the small patches of high-resolution satellite imagery are largely provided by DigitalGlobe and its QuickBird satellite, with some imagery also from government sources. The main global imagery base called NaturalVue was derived from Landsat 7 imagery by MDA Federal (formerly Earth Satellite Corporation). This global image base provide the essential foundation for the entire application.
The underlying technology used in both Google and Yahoo! maps is available from deCarta (formerly Telcontar)http://www.decarta.com/.
As the Google Maps code is almost entirely JavaScript and XML, some end-users reverse-engineered the tool and produced client-side scripts and server-side hooks which allowed a user or website to introduce expanded or customized features into the Google Maps interface.
Using the core engine and the map/satellite images hosted by Google, such tools can introduce custom location icons, location coordinates and metadata, and even custom map image sources into the Google Maps interface. Some of the more well-known of these "Google Maps Hacks" include tools that display locations of Craigslist rental properties http://www.housingmaps.com/ and local map Chicago crime data http://www.chicagocrime.org/ (or check Misdaadkaart.nl showing crimes of one entire countryhttp://www.misdaadkaart.nl/). The script-insertion tool Greasemonkey provides a large number of client-side scripts to customize Google Maps data, and the mygmaps.com website provides an interface for easily adding your own set of locations and viewing them on Google Maps.
Combined with photo sharing websites such as Flickr, a phenomenon called "memory maps" emerged. Using copies of the Keyhole satellite photos of their home towns or other favorite places, the users take advantage of image annotation features to provide personal histories and information regarding particular points of the area.
In late June 2005, Google released Google Maps API, exposing nearly the entire interface to customization. With a Google Maps API key, the API is free for use on any site that is free to the public. The introduction of the API has accelerated the development of new Google Maps-based applications. Many people have developed mashups using this API. Support from the community is available within Google Groups and through third-party sites such as mapki.
In early April 2005, an alternate view was activated to show Satellite images of the area displayed.
In late April 2005, Google created Google Ride Finder using Google Maps.
In late June 2005, Google released the Extensibility and customization.
In mid July 2005, Google began Google Maps and Google Local services for Japan, including road maps.
On July 22, 2005, Google released "Hybrid View". Together with this change, the satellite image data was converted from plate carrée to Mercator projection, which makes for a less distorted image in the temperate climes latitudes.
In July 2005, in honor of the thirty-sixth anniversary of the Apollo Moon landing, Google Moon was launched.
In September 2005, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Google Maps quickly updated its satellite imagery of New Orleans to allow users to view the extent of the flooding in various parts of that city.
As of January 2 2006, Google Maps features road maps for the United States, Puerto Rico, Canada, Great Britain, Japan, and certain cities in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. Coverage of the area around Turin was added in time for the 2006 Winter Olympics.
On January 232006, Google Maps was updated to use the same satellite image database as Google Earth.
On March 122006, Google Mars http://mars.google.com/ was launched, which features a draggable map and satellite imagery of the planet Mars.
In late April 2006, Google Local was merged into the main Google Maps site.
On April 32006, version 2 of the Maps API was released.
On June 112006, Google added geocoding capabilities to the API, satisfying what it called the most requested feature for this service.
On June 142006, Google Maps for Enterprise was officially launched. As a commercial service, it features intranet and advertisement-free implementations.
The main Google Maps site includes a local search feature, finding businesses of a certain category in a geographic area.
It is currently not known wether or not Google Mars will become a stand-alone program and if said program will include shots of the highly popular martian face or the martian pyramids.
Google launched an experimental Google Maps-based tool called Ride Finder, tapping into in-car GPS units for a selection of participating taxi and limousine services. The tool displays the current location of all supported vehicles of the participating services in major cities, including Chicago and San Francisco on a Google Maps street map.
In December 2005, Google launched Google Transit. This is a beta web application (listed in Google Labs), that plans a trip using public transportation options. It is currently only available for Portland, Oregon in the USA.
Street map overlays, in some areas, may not match up precisely with the corresponding satellite images. The street data may be entirely erroneous, or simply out of date. Google Earth representative Brian McLendon explained :
Google | Geographic Information Systems | Cartography | Virtual globes | Web 2.0 | Google Services | Maps
Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Local | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | Google Maps | กูเกิลโลคอล | Google Maps
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Google Maps".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world