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July 5, 2007

Inside Google Earth

RealityPrime has an article about the technology behind Google Earth. The author is Avi Bar-Ze'ev, co-founder of Keyhole, the company that built Earthviewer, later renamed as Google Earth. This is only the first part of the article that deals with how the 3D Earth is drawn on your screen and, even if it requires some knowledge about 3D computer graphics, it's an interesting read nonetheless.
There are two principal differences between Google Maps and Earth that inform how things should ideally work under the hood. The first is the difference between fixed-view (often top-down) 2D & free-perspective 3D rendering. The second is between real-time and pre-rendered graphics. These two distinctions are fading away as the products improve and converge. But they highlight important differences, even today.

What both have in common is that they begin with traditional digital photography — lots of it — basically one giant high-resolution (or multi-resolution) picture of the Earth. How they differ is largely in how they render that data.

1 comment:

  1. That was a great read. Make sure to make another post when Part 2 of How Google Earth [Really] Works comes out, please. I want to read that, too.

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