Earth Earth API Elevation API environment epungo Estonia Europe Fab Friday flash Fusion Tables GAE games GDAL Gears geo Geodesic Lines Germany Gibraltar GIS Global Economy gme Google Analytics Google App Engine Google Earth Google Earth API Google I/O Google Maps Google Maps API Google Maps Engine Google Places API.
By Ross-sanmeet I have been following the podcast for the last 3 months and found this to be a useful resource for anybody looking to explore various jobs to make an informed decision about his/her career. This will be helpful not only for the working people looking to change careers or fresh graduates who are seeking jobs but also college students who may be unclear about their career path. I was able to leverage the talks to identify the jobs that would match my skillset, helping me focus my efforts on the right jobs.
Zs Us: Analytics To Earth For Mac Mac
I already shared this resource with the leadership in my graduate school and they have decided to share it with over 1000 students in the entire school. The founder has done a great job in pulling together people from various fields to build a comprehensive collection of podcasts that offer information in great depth across multiple industries and job profiles. By magnificentgrandeur What a simple yet brilliant concept - interview folks in various career paths and understand how they got to where they are today and what their job entails. Personally, I have seen many of my friends and relatives struggle with 'what next?' As they complete their education or even after years of experience in a field (myself included).
This is an amazing way to hear first-hand what a career path might look like before taking the plunge, without all the networking, cold-calling and research needed to find out more. And Sonali's clear and in-depth interviewing approach makes this a must listen!
Thank you for such a great podcast!
We've made a change to the NORAD Santa Tracker this year. In years past, we've created a.kmz file that users could download to watch the Big Man in Red travel around the globe on Christmas Eve using the Google Earth desktop client.
This year, we're not offering a Google Earth client file. Instead, we're using the Google Earth Browser Plug-in, aka the Google Earth API, to embed the NORAD Tracks Santa Google Earth experience - replete with terrain relief, 3D buildings, and tilt-pan-rotate-zoom navigation - into a page on the NORAD Tracks Santa site. To get the Plug-in, visit and download Google Earth 5.1 - the Plug-in has been bundled with both the PC and Mac clients. The Google Earth Plug-In offers a couple of tantalizing advantages over the client-based experience:.
Users can stay on the site. Because the Google Earth experience is now embedded on a web page within the site, users don't have to leave the site for 3D tracking. So, if they would like to return to the NORAD Tracks Santa Google Map-or any other page-it's just a back-button click away. It's 'automatic.' The NORAD Tracks Santa project is visited by users from all over the world with a wide range of technical skills and connection speeds. Last year, users were prompted to install Google Earth, download the.kmz file, then open the.kmz in Google Earth. For some less-than-technically-savvy users, this 3-part process was confusing and difficult.
Using the Plug-in is much easier; if users have the lightweight client (aka, the Plug-in) installed, all they have to do is visit the NORAD Tracks Santa Google Earth page, and they'll see Santa in 3D. If users don't have the lightweight client installed, the Plug-in viewport displays a clear and easy prompt to start the, after which the 3D tracker activates.
Zs Us: Analytics To Earth For Mac Free
Elsewhere on the technical front, we've ported the 2-D tracking map to the new Maps API v3, our lightweight JavaScript API, and created two custom OverlayView extensions for it. The 'cloud overlay' shows Santa spreading his sparkle and snow over his recent stops, and uses the to create cross-browser compatible blurs and shapes. The 'smart infowindows' open in the direction of least resistance (above/below/left/right), to minimize map panning as the user browses around Santa's many stops. Feel free to use these in your own maps. On December 24th, visit and click on the link.
It's going to be (choose one):. Groovy (retros). Wicked cool (east coasters). Off the hook (gen Zs).
Plugged-In (developers) Don't miss it. Posted by Jeffery Martin, Business Product Manager.