Kinect

Batch Geonews: Debacle over OGC and the GeoServices REST API Standard, OpenLayers vs Leaflet, More Geo from Google I/O, and much more

The recent geonews in batch mode, covering a larger timespan than usual.

On the open source front:

On the Google front:

On the Esri front:

In the everything-else category:

Slashdot discussed a few minor geo-related stories:

In the maps category:

Saturday Geonews: TileMill 0.4.1, Esri FileGeodatabase API 1.1, GIS with Google Earth, Layar Vision App, and much more

Here's the recent geonews in batch mode. Yes, on a Saturday! I'll be away for the next three weeks and dare delay my family's departure to feed you with these.

From the open source front:

From the Esri front:

From the Google front:

On the Microsoft front:

In the miscellaneous category:

In the maps category:

Kinect Hack Builds 3D Maps of the Real World

Slashdot is running a story named Kinect Hack Builds 3D Maps of the Real World.

Their summary: "Noted Kinect-tinkerer Martin Szarski has used a car, a laptop, an Android smartphone and the aforementioned Xbox 360 peripheral to make a DIY-equivalent of Google Street View. The Kinect's multi-camera layout can be used to capture some fuzzy, but astonishingly effortless 3D maps of real world locations and objects. As we saw in Oliver Kreylos' early hack, you can take the data from Kinect's depth-sensitive camera to map out a 3D point-cloud, with real distances. Then use the colour camera's image to see which RGB pixel corresponds to each depth point, and eventually arrive at a coloured, textured model."

You can also head directly to the original blog entry on the hack.

Friday Geonews: 3D Paris, 400M ArcGIS.com Maps, Russia GeoPortal, Top 10 of 2010, Kinect AR, and much more

This is more of an "end of year" geonews in batch mode! Everything pertinent found in the last two weeks that we haven't shared yet. I wish you an excellent holiday break. We'll be back in January. You can still send in your contributions.

From the Google front:

From the ESRI front:

From the open data / open source front:

From the Microsoft front:

In the miscellaneous category:

In the maps category:

And the almost-off-topic link of the week, an amazing 4-minutes animation of the last 200 years of global history

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