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[personal profile] cos
I'm typing this entry on the flight home, while enjoying one of my favorite new tech toy discoveries ever!

On the flight out to California last week, I looked forward to looking at Google Maps after I landed, to use their nifty new easy-panning satellite view to identify things I'd seen from the plane. I made mental note of features I wanted to identify, and approximately where they were. After I landed, for example, I was quite pleased to locate this lake and funny landbridge, just west of Granby and Simsbury, CT (where [livejournal.com profile] fyfer and my ex Leah were from).

Shortly before the flight back home today, I had a thought: When I pan around Google's satellite view, it feels like it's caching what I look at. When I scroll into new areas, it loads from the net, and when I scroll back to places I've just looked it, it doesn't go to the net again until I zoom. Could I preload my flight route, before getting on the plane?

I can!

Usually I rely on memories from the ground. I know most of the roads, and remember the general shape and color of the land - where the mountains are, the farms, the major lakes and rivers. I can estimate location pretty well by looking at the clock, knowing that most flights go about 500mph (460-530). This method works pretty well for identifying roads and cities, and for knowing more or less which state I'm over. But there are always plenty of features I wonder about. Now, instead of trying to figure it out later, I can follow along on google as I fly.

(one thing that would make this work much better, is if google supplied a map scale, so I could estimate how far to scroll in areas where there are no obvious markers like lakes or cities)

This is a particularly cool area to fly over. [Added after landing: I was on the right side of the plane, with a great view ot the huge mountains in the southwest corner of Wyoming, and the Flaming Gorge national recreation area. I've driven I-80 across just north of those mountains a couple of times; I've never been to Flaming Gorge. We passed just north of the upper tip of the lake, where it splits, so I got a close-up of the whole thing.]

This makes me so happy!
Date: 2005-04-27 05:35 (UTC)

This is offtopic...

From: [identity profile] the-ogre.livejournal.com
...but it was good to see you, even briefly, on Saturday night.
Date: 2005-04-27 06:19 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] summerrose.livejournal.com
That's so neat. How do you figure out what areas you need to load before the flight?
Date: 2005-04-27 07:16 (UTC)

Re: This is offtopic...

From: [identity profile] surrealestate.livejournal.com
Why does this connection not surprise me...

I'm looking into a trip out west in June, btw.
Date: 2005-04-27 08:10 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] fyfer.livejournal.com
Oh! It's Barkhampstead resevoir, which is in Hartland, one town west of Granby. I misremembered and thought you'd said north of Granby, not west (I hadn't looked at the map link you sent before), so I was thinking of the lakes in the "notch".

The resevoir was a popular place to go hang out and drink. It was pretty damn rural. I didn't spend much time exploring around there, though.
Date: 2005-04-27 15:30 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] ellipticcurve.livejournal.com
Wow! How terribly cool. Thanks for the tip!

I always like to know what I'm flying over. Makes the trip WAY more interesting.
Date: 2005-04-27 18:44 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] fyfer.livejournal.com
On the return leg of my first trip back to Boston after moving here, I realized the plane route was about exactly the route I had driven. I looked down over Arizona and recognized the small road we drove up to reach the north rim of the Grand Canyon. It was a really cool feeling.
Date: 2005-04-27 18:47 (UTC)

From: [identity profile] fyfer.livejournal.com
I'm pretty sure that's the dam where the road crosses.

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