Google Earth Beta for Mac 64
Thijs van As writes "AppleInsider reports that Google is developing a Google Earth version for Mac OS X. From the screenshots it looks similar to the Windows version, which is out since June 2005. The OS X version uses OpenGL rendering." From the article: "Earlier this month, a pre-release version of Google Earth for Mac OS X that uses OpenGL rendering reportedly began making the rounds overseas. The 40MB application packs a hefty set of preferences, allowing users to tweak detail and color, and control the speed of their 'flights.' Google Earth interfaces with Google's Web-based mapping service, Google Maps, in providing local search results and driving directions. However, sources say Google Earth for Mac OS X includes a superior set of satellite imagery when compared to the Google Maps Web service, offering additional clarity and a deeper zoom function."
Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:1, Insightful)
The tabs that haven't been used since 10.2, the cheesy movement controls, the ugly shiny candy headers on Places and Layers...
Well, at least it's not metal.
Re:Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:2)
Re:Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:2, Informative)
The "feel" seems OK, but the look is pretty bad -- the menus are also non-standard, including weird checkboxes, icons, etc.
Hey, it's a beta, so I'm gonna cut it some slack. I haven't seen if Qt/Mac v4 offers better controls, but I'm willing to remain optimistic. At the very least, if they use Qt, we'll see similar Windows, Linux and Mac versions of all the Google apps, all released at similar times.
Re:Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:5, Funny)
I think that's what they meant when they said ugly.
I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:5, Insightful)
Too much focus on pretty can result in the "Hollywood Effect" —beauty without value, or worse, beauty that impacts value... like recent media player designs or the incredibly bad Kai's interfaces of yore. I've had enough of that kind of craziness.
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:5, Interesting)
The strength of the Cocoa and Carbon windowing toolkits has allowed many first-rate applications to be developed without requiring the developers to resort to creating their own (ugly) controls. Windows has been guilty of this on many accounts, and microsoft's only beginning to make up for it with
In contrast, GEarth could operate just fine using standard OS X controls and conforming to the OS X UI Guidelines [apple.com]. Using a standardized toolkit also has many nice perks like that drag-and-drop *always* works.
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:1, Interesting)
The fact is, there is more than one way to be usable. I have no, and I mean zero, problem, us
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:3, Interesting)
But it's completely inconsistent with standard Mac GUI conventions.
It'd be pretty annoyed if click
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with inconsistency is that programs do things you don't expect. If you spend 95% of your time working one way, but have to work a different way for the other 5%, it becomes pretty inconvenient. For instance, most of the time when I'm typing, I'm using my Mac and the cursor selects whatever line is in the middle of the text cursor. Part of my work, however, involves doing an announcement sheet for church every week in Corel Draw on Windows. For some unexplained reason, it selects whatever line is under the bottom third of the cursor. This drives me nuts because my instinct is select with the middle of the cursor and end up selecting the wrong line quite a bit of the time.
It also has a bizarre convention whereby if you drag select from somewhere on a line to the start of it, then make changes to the formatting of the line, it will also select the carriage return on the previous line and apply formatting to it. Consequently I often have to drag select to the 2nd letter of a line, then shift-left cursor select the first letter. After 14 weeks of use, I have come to loath this program because it does not follow the conventions that I'm accustomed to. Arguably, it's just plain bad design, rather than inconsistency, but I think the inconsistency is still a factor.
Indeed I did. I apologise. Thought you were talking about clicking a window in the foreground application. My bad.
That is indeed annoying. Trying that out in other apps, however, clicking a button in a background application activates the button, so the problem would seem to lie with an inconsistency with the GIMP, rather than bad OS X GUI design. One more mark against inconsistency ;^)
Can't in 10.4.3 either, which I'm fairly happy about. Wouldn't want to lose sight of my menubar. It's fairly full. It's only a wee bit of vertical space, especially compared to the resolution of modern screens. Though if you're using multiple monitors, then you only need a menubar on one screen and can avoid them entirely on others, thereby saving space.
True, but document windows all seem to have them, which irritates me greatly in Windows. Though the inconsistency in multi-document and single-document interfaces annoys me more. And the inefficient taskbar. And the way that opening multiple files belonging to one program sometimes loads the files into separate windows in one instance of the application, while launching several instances of the application in other cases. And not being able to open a bunch of files by double-clicking on a selected group. But I'm getting a bit off-subject here. I find Windows stressful. It just gets in the way so much.
Only really works
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:2, Insightful)
I see your point, though this doesn't affect me the way it does you.
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:2)
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:1)
Likewise.
Wait a second... this is Slashdot! You guys can't have a civilized discussion where you respect each others' differences! We won't stand for it!
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:2)
This eventually leads to bad reviews, negative word-of-mouth, and less sales. I would say inconsistency affects an app's usability a great deal.
Myself, I would choose interface compliance over feature bloat.
Re:I really don't care what it looks like... (Score:1)
Re:Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:1)
Who cares? One less reason to use the PC!
Now if you can only enable monospaced text editing in GMail, Google, I'll be your friend for life.
I don't know... (Score:1, Flamebait)
10.2? (Score:2)
Re:Fell off the ugly tree and hit every branch. (Score:2)
google earth beta download (Score:5, Informative)
Re:google earth beta download (Score:4, Informative)
One other Google port that would be nice. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:why did they choose windows first, instead... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:why did they choose windows first, instead... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:why did they choose windows first, instead... (Score:4, Informative)
Google didn't develop it from scratch. They bought up a company called Keyhole. Google Earth is basically a free version of Keyhole's $400 product, which is now "Google Earth Pro".
They bought it. (Score:1)
Re:why did they choose windows first, instead... (Score:2)
torrent please? (Score:1)
Re:torrent please? (Score:1)
For similar functionality with more focus on sci (Score:5, Informative)
They now added satellite photos feature so makes it more cool.
It is installed on many schools,universities but doesn't make it "boring". Especially on hurricane season.
Check yourself
http://www.earthbrowser.com/ [earthbrowser.com]
Re:For similar functionality with more focus on sc (Score:4, Interesting)
Another interesting program is Celestia [shatters.net]. I haven't tried any, but there are apparently lots of available high-resolution images available for various parts of the Earth as well as higher-resolution images for some of the other planets. The controls for moving around aren't intuitive, but it is a lot of fun to go zooming around the galaxy (and even some nearby galaxies, rendered as grayish-looking 3-d blobs).
Does it require 10.4? (Score:1)
Re:Does it require 10.4? (Score:1)
Here is another download link: rapidshare [rapidshare.de]
download (Score:5, Informative)
If you want to download it, here it is. [macupdate.com]
Google Earth for Mac (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:live.com anyone? (Score:3, Insightful)
flash based google earth (Score:1, Informative)
http://www.flashearth.com/ [flashearth.com]
NASA WorldWind and alike on MacOS X (Score:5, Interesting)
If you're serious about geospatial, you might be interested in joining us [slashgisrs.org]
What took so long? (Score:2)
I guess its possible that if the Windows version is using DirectX and the "other" versions are using OpenGL, that could be the cause for delay. However, I think QT might abstract the GL library anyway?
Well, its about time anyway.