On Apr 5, 4:46 pm, AcidHorse <[email protected]>
wrote:
> > To AcidHorse:
>
> > Your non-standard zoom levels appear to be for AOL tiles.  AOL uses a
> > Euclidian projection.  Google uses a Mercator projection.  The math is
> > very different.
>
> http://maps.google.com/mapdata?Point=b&;
> Point.latitude_e6=39334438&
> Point.longitude_e6=4210405032&
> Point.iconid=51&
> Point=e&
> latitude_e6=39334438
> &longitude_e6=4210405032
> &zm=3000&w=600&h=400&cc=&min_priority=1
>
> AOL????????????????????????
> I fail to see anything dealing with "AOL" in that printed url.
> and the image returned after following that url has "Google" and
> "TeleAtlas" printed on it.
> Where did AOL come into this situation???

Your zoom levels are not related to each other by exact powers of
two.  Virtual Earth, Google & Yahoo use essentially the same tiling
system - Mercator projection with tile sizes expanding by powers of
two.  AOL is the only major provider with zoom levels similar to
yours.  AOL uses a Euclidian projection.  If your zoom levels are not
powers of two, you cannot use shift operators.

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