Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Google Earth 5 beta

It's been a long time since I last used Google Earth. I first discovered it two or three years ago, and loved it. You could go anywhere on Earth, and see all kinds of landscapes. Occasionally I would look for a famous monument, or simply trek through the countryside in some far away country.

Eventually I stopped using it, and uninstalled it. Today I suddenly felt like visiting the beauty of New Zealand (after watching The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King yesterday - it was filmed there), so I downloaded Google Earth again and installed it.

I was impressed with the new features available. Admittedly, I haven't used Google Earth for a while, so some features might not be exactly new. What is definitely new is the ability to explore the ocean floor.


The feature I love most is the Sky feature. It allows you to see the stars and other heavenly bodies visible in the night sky. I've always loved stuff about constellations (Japanese cartoons are full of them, and I'm currently back to watching I Cavalieri dello Zodiaco), zodiac, astronomy, etc.


Another thing I really like is the Mars feature. As if Google Mars wasn't brilliant enough already, you can now fly over the surface of Mars in Google Earth.


Yet another feature that is new to me is the Sun feature. This shows the sunlight and shade on the globe, and you can drag a time slider to actually see the shade moving across the globe.


Finally, this is an old feature, but still worth mentioning. It's always nice that Google Earth lets you view buildings in certain cities in 3D. Being able to see any place on Earth is already great, but seeing tall buildings in all their majesty is a definite plus over seeing them on a flat photo surface, their height being hinted at only by the amount of shadow they cast on their surroundings.


Well, that's it. This wasn't exactly a review of Google Earth; it's more like a 5-minute account of the new features I noticed while quickly revisiting this masterpiece of a program.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Microsoft 'Songsmith'

An article by Slashdot has a few links about 'Songsmith', a program from 'Microsoft Research'.

A shame for any software company.

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Vista kills Disk Defragmenter

This is what the Disk Defragmenter looked like in XP.



This is what it looks like in Vista.



I do not even need to explain why the Vista version totally sucks. You have no idea what's going on behind the scene, nor do you have any hint as to how far the defragmentation has progressed and how much longer it will take.

As one of my best lecturers once said, a good program needs to be verbose, and that means that it keeps the user informed of what it's doing.