Gabriel Ambuehl wrote: > On Monday 27 November 2006 16:45, Jeff Andros wrote: >> the Google maps website does list a linux version, but it lists a pentium >> class processor as a system requirement, I wonder if we could get google to >> do a custom compile onto our hardware, seems like their style > > Google Maps is a webapp no? And if you mean Google Earth, that's such a > resource hog that it barely works on my 1.6Ghz Notebook with Nvidia 5200 GO > card...
Exactly - the application Google Earth gobbles 3D graphics resources like mad. (3d chipset, cpu, math) Does beautiful things with them, and I'd love to have a handheld zoomable satellite-imagery globe, but unless rendering is offloaded to a server somewhere (and I suspect Google would have to do that) I don't see it running too well. Don't get me wrong, I'd buy a Neo just to have handheld linux wireless GoogleEarth with GPS. But apart from the resource requirements (both in horsepower and bandwidth) there's also serious UI concerns that would need to be addressed. A gesture-oriented interface is a great match for Google Earth, but a 2.8" 640x480 screen is far from optimal... Pared down to view-only with gesture controls, and pop-up menus and toolbars for things like waypoints and searches, it could work. But it would require significant effort from some coders at Google/Keyhole to make it happen. (the idea of GoogleEarth travel/directions animations synced with GPS data is exciting) Now Google Maps is just web-access. Needs Javascript and Java, IIRC, with a modern browser, so you can drag and zoom and what-not. I've crafted links in a wireless tower monitoring program that pulls the GPS data from the radio and opens a browser window looking at satellite pics of the tower vicinity via Google Maps. j _______________________________________________ OpenMoko community mailing list community@lists.openmoko.org http://lists.openmoko.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/community