On Sunday 04 June 2006 17:09, GWMobile wrote:
> Heh, there's an idea :-)
> If it was getting live updates from the web would that count as a web
> application?
That would be a web application but it's not a "web browser"!
3. PROPRIETARY RIGHTS
(a) You are only licensing rights to use the Softwar
Heh, there's an idea :-)
If it was getting live updates from the web would that count as a web
application?what about running on a webserver on your own machines in
java?
On Sun, 4 Jun 2006 10:38 am, Josh Babcock wrote:
> Pigeon wrote:
>
>> Currently they do not allow any non-web applicatio
On Sunday 04 June 2006 15:59, Josh Babcock wrote:
> Pigeon wrote:
> > Currently they do not allow any non-web application use the google
> > map data/images. Not sure about google earth but i imagine similar terms
>
> So what you are saying is that we need to re-implement fg in javascript?
>
>
Pigeon wrote:
> Currently they do not allow any non-web application use the google
> map data/images. Not sure about google earth but i imagine similar terms
So what you are saying is that we need to re-implement fg in javascript?
Josh
___
Fligh
On Fri, 26 May 2006 18:28:44 +0200, Mark wrote in message
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I don't know if it's possible, but as far as license issues - that's
> the show stopper.
> However, if you are still interested, take a look at NASA's Worldwind,
> which is comparable to Google-earth.
> All of their
I don't know if it's possible, but as far as license issues - that's the
show stopper.
However, if you are still interested, take a look at NASA's Worldwind,
which is comparable to Google-earth.
All of their imagery is definately in the public domain and using this
would be possible.
http://worldw
Hi all!
I'm figuring out how to extract google earth imagery to map the current
scenery in FGFS.
Would it be posible?
What about license issues? Anyone knows how can affect this to the fgfs
license.
Thank you.
--
Gonzalo Aguilar Delgado - Ingeniero en Informática
[ Seguridad & Medios
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