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Tuesday, 16 October 2007

Raising the limits for KML on Maps

Posted on 16:42 by Unknown
Posted by Nigel Tao, Software Engineer, Google Maps

There's so much of the world to see, and sometimes it just doesn't all fit onto a map at once. Previously, people have written custom Mapplets or Maps API pages to visualize their dense geographic databases, and that's still what we'd recommend if you are a web developer and want the full interactivity of JavaScript. If you don't need that functionality, however, Google Maps now offers a better view of KML files of similar density and richness, especially when they contain <NetworkLink>s whose servers' results are tailored to the part of the world that is in view. For example:

  • The photos from our friends at Panoramio can be viewed via the same KML file you could use in Google Earth, or
  • you can watch the Wikipedia articles added to Placeopedia, or similarly see the areas noted in Wikimapia, or
  • browse the volcanoes of the world, courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution, or
  • pick from Travel and Leisure's top 500 hotels of the world.

If you like these examples, try the 'Save to My Maps' link, just under the 'My Maps' tab, to keep them around so you can do things like view Panoramio photos while searching for hotels near a potential holiday destination.
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