On IE 8, 15,000 is pushing the boundaries of what you can render using the
HeatmapLayer, but of course, please give it a go and see for yourself!
HeatmapLayer does not work on IE 7.
On Friday, August 24, 2012 5:25:29 AM UTC+10, Adam Hooper wrote:
>
> What are the practical limits of the HeatMap
I think you'll find it hard to do this for one big reason: a pixel is not
the same thing as a point. A LatLng represents a singular point in
space-time, but a pixel has both height and width dimensions. To illustrate
the problem, at zoom level 0, the entire earth is 256x256 pixels. This
means that
What are the practical limits of the HeatMap layer? I have about 15,000
data points and I want to support IE8 and, if it's realistic, IE7.
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On Aug 23, 6:25 am, Adam Jenkins wrote:
> What are the changes in 3.10? There's nothing in the changelog and I can't
> seem to find anything anywhere about it.
Usually when a new release "comes out" it is basically the same as the
previous version. New changes will be made in the "Experimental"
r
Hi,
I'm trying to make it easier for users to add overlays to the my web app,
and to do this I need to have an accurate lat/long point of the div
corners. Complicating this is the fact I've added the jquery rotate
library available on google code.
So what I do now is get the top, left, right
What are the changes in 3.10? There's nothing in the changelog and I can't
seem to find anything anywhere about it.
On Wednesday, 22 August 2012 00:53:37 UTC-3, Chris Broadfoot (Google
Employee) wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> We recently released a new minor version of the Google Maps API. This
> means
I guess this is an ancient thread but I'm glad I finally found it, because
I also encountered this puzzling limitation. Caching the data wasn't
really an option for my needs, so I worked within the confines of the rate
cap by limiting my request rate with JavaScript's setTimeout:
// Global var
The changelog hasn't been updated yet, has it?
On Tuesday, August 21, 2012 8:53:37 PM UTC-7, Chris Broadfoot (Google
Employee) wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> We recently released a new minor version of the Google Maps API. This
> means that the versions are now:
> 3.10: Experimental
> 3.9: Release
> 3.8