Pamela,
 
Somebody from Google Maps Enterprise emailed me a short while ago,
apparently following up on a "first email" that they sent me (at work) and
which I never received.  I asked him to send again... he said he did.... and
still nothing.  So, we're working that out.
 
Meanwhile, regarding your question about refreshing the entire page:   I
need the map itself to remove all objects, reread the XML file, and
redraw... at a user-defined (a la cookie) refresh rate.  I did it this way
originally two years ago in sort of a "test version" we had...which got
sidetracked and forgotten.  And since we're now readdressing things, I had
not changed that core design.    
 
I'm assuming from your question that there must be a way for me to do this
without refreshing the page, eh?   Just some sort of command to remove
everything and then an Ajax call to reload the XML?    
 
Frankly, all this Javascript, XML, etc. has ZERO to do with my regular
day-job, so I must confess that I've simply been modeling my Google
Maps-related code on code that other people have posted publicly.... and I
haven't found anything yet where somebody does an "erase, reread, redraw" at
regular intervals.
 
 
Thank you,
 
Dave 
 

  _____  

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of pamela (Google
Employee)
Sent: Monday, December 08, 2008 4:31 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Question about rate of queries involved with google maps use


Hi Dave- 

Why are you refreshing the entire page? The typical architecture would be to
refresh just the content on the map, perhaps by adding new markers or
changing marker positions. That would be a completely client-side operation
and issue no queries to the Google servers.

Regarding enterprise - please email me your contact info if you still
haven't heard from them.

- pamela


On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 2:51 AM, dr4296 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:



Greetings All!

OK, I'm still waiting for somebody from Google Maps Enterprise Sales
Team to get back to me from my initial contact / form submission
attempt from almost two weeks ago.  (I just resubmitted the form
again, in case they somehow didn't get it the first time.)

Anyways, I was wondering if anybody knows or has studied how
frequently and in what situations a Google Map application will
actually query back to Google's servers... especially given the fact
that I know the client browser will cache up a lot of the data?

The application I've got basically loads a single Google map and then
will autorefresh itself every, say, 90 seconds (although that can be
adjusted).   OK, with the initial load, I know we're going to fetch
how-ever-many map tiles from Google... and we're going to fetch the
javascript files from Google that make the map "work".... plus any pin
images we may need.

But, after that, if we just autorefresh the page, the browser
shouldn't actually have to query Google again for anything, should
it?  Shouldn't everything still be in the cache?

At what point do browsers decide to go try to fetch new info?  (I know
you can set this in a page header for the webpage that CONTAINS the
Google Map... but I would think the map itself would be "treated
differently" ??)

I realize that if a user zooms out or in, then we're going to have to
fetch a new set of map tiles.   And of course, that would get cached
by the browser too, at least for a while.

I'm trying to get a better understanding of how often a single user of
my application might actually be querying Google for information....
because I think I've read that Google Maps Enterprise charges a base
fee, but then additional fees if the number of queries you make
exceeds a certain level.    That got me thinking:  "what constitutes
one query?"    Well, probably the fetching of a single file?  Or maybe
the fetching of a single set of map tiles?   Not sure.

If anybody can shed a bit of light on this subject for me, I'd greatly
appreciate it!  It would help me prepare for talking with the folks at
Google Enterprise, plus it would help me come up with some sort of
"expected usage" estimates on my end.


Thanks!

-= Dave =-










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