Recently, Google announced an additional feature to their popular Google Maps service: Google Maps Earth View. The new feature brings together the software-based Google Earth with the website-based Google Maps. I quite like the potential that this feature offers.
Google Maps Earth View requires the installation of a small plugin to enable it to function on individual computers. Once installed, a person can ‘fly’ around a city, looking at a landscape of buildings and hills that is rendered in 3D in varying degrees of accuracy.

Render of Sydney, NSW, Australia, showing the Opera House and Harbour Bridge.
So far, detailed CBD Earth renders been added to the maps of Brisbane (Qld.), Melbourne (Vic.) and Sydney (NSW). A small amount of 3D rendering has been applied to maps of Adelaide (SA), Cairns (Qld.), Canberra (ACT), Gold Coast City (Qld.), Hobart (Tas.), Launceston (Tas.), Perth (WA) and Wollongong (NSW).
Google Maps Earth View is a fun website to use, but the difficult directions control panel makes navigation a challenge sometimes. In the window above, you can watch a 5-minute video presentation that I have created, demonstrating some of the features and problems.
Alternatively, you can watch a high-resolution version of the video on YouTube.

Render of Brisbane, Qld., Australia.
Because it is in its infancy, the amount of rendering is minimal, But in time, it will be possible to travel around Australia and the world, looking at the various sites.
On an international level, particular detail can be seen in the renders of Tokyo (Japan), Washington D.C. (USA), Paris (France) and London (UK). One of the funniest renders is of the Kim Il-sung monument in Pyongyang, North Korea, which is very reminiscent of Flat Stanley!

Parliament House in Canberra, ACT, Australia.
No doubt many people will enjoy this website as it grows and develops. You can access the website via http://maps.google.com.au and the plugin can be downloaded from http://earth.google.com/plugin/.






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