Gosh in the ten minutes since this started guess what popped up?

Analysis in GE?
http://paginas.terra.com.br/informatica/sgrillo/googleearth/index.htm#GEBarsGraph

Changes they are a comin...

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Neil Havermale
Sent: Friday, June 23, 2006 12:28 PM
To: Bill Thoen; Juan José Del Toro Madrueño
Cc: [email protected]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [MI-L] Google Earth Frustration

Bill -

I am surprised in your depreciation of "eye" candy.  What is going on via 
Google Earth, IMHO, is simply things are changing and changing very fast for 
desktop GIS. While GE is certainly the most articulate on a B/C level at the 
current moment of "eye candy", you can not ignore the participation of National 
Geographic, Sketch-up, and the spatialization of the WEB via geoRSS and other 
like geoTAGS. These things are increasingly accessible and most importantly in 
near real-time everywhere! Its weird but for some reason I remain open that the 
emerging .NET-ization of MapInfo Pro may actually find a way to leverage it's 
cartography and spatial abstraction analysis in a hoped for easy to use way - 
like posted to overlay GE?  Therefore my banging on the GE2MIP threads.

Aw heck, if wishes were fishes....

Neil
Aka MidNight Mapper

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bill Thoen
Sent: Friday, June 23, 2006 11:55 AM
To: Juan José Del Toro Madrueño
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MI-L] Google Earth Frustration

On Thu, Jun 22, 2006 at 06:59:38PM -0500, Juan José Del Toro Madrueño wrote:
> I don't know if this happened worldwide or just here in Mexico but, as some
> of you may already have noticed, Google Earth has just added high resolution
> imagery to new areas; the reason of this post is actually is a frustration
> feeling and I'll explain this; as I was preparing a document where I was
> trying to sell high resolution Imagery to a Municipality here in Mexico I
> found out that Google Earth now has it in Quickbird Imagery; I know that in
> GE (free version) you can't do ANY analysis to these images and that if they
> bought from me the actual imagery they would have tons of benefits; but try
> explaining that to a Municipal president who has a "Free" software  that is
> "giving" him the same images I was trying to sell the for "Free"; almost
> impossible.


I reckon you're going to have to re-evaluate what you sell. If your
potential client only wants the "eye candy" of a whizzy image, then Google
has just eaten your lunch. (and proabably a few dinners too.) You can't
beat "free." 

Now you're going to find out what "tons of benefits" is worth as you try to
market the value of image analysis. Raw GIS data are a commodity, and the
price has been dropping ever since the late Scott Elliot of Wessex cut the
price of Census-derived data, royally pissing off both MapInfo and ESRI.
No longer able to squeeze their golden goose selling easy-to-acquire data
to an ignorant public, this eventually forced these GIS companies to
develop MUCH better data sources and data analysis tools leaving the low
hanging fruit to the hobbyist mappers and GIS start-ups.

Forget data. The bigjobs have got that market pretty much rolled up.
Concentrate instead on what you can do to turn data into information.
That's where the golden goose is now. And unfortunately, some poeple who
would have paid for it once, only want to look at the pictures, and now
Google has got 'em.

- Bill Thoen
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