CityDashBoard TalesofThings MapTube
Qrator Tutorials About Digital Urban
MRes ASAV SurveyMapper Contact Us

2007-02-22

Google Maps Image Cutter Software Released

CASA is proud to announce the release of the Image Cutter software for Google Maps. Written by Richard Milton, as part of the GeoVue project, Image Cutter is an application designed to take any image or a digital photo and cut it into tiles which are subsequently displayed on a Google Map. Using this tool, large images can be published on the web in a format that allow the user to pan and zoom using the standard Google Maps interface - as illustrated in the working example below.



Although publishing large digital photos is the most obvious application, this technique can be used for annotated maps of an area that are not to scale e.g. directions for how to get to the office.

Download version 1.0

10 comments:

  1. Ugh, that looks like a banal solution for a problem that has already been solved. See Zoomify and other solutions. eg:
    http://digitalarts.mindsocket.com.au/tokyo_pano/

    Do the actual gmap images still get loaded behind the overlays, causing an unnecessary bandwidth hit?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous11:04 AM

    Thanks for the comment - we obviously know about Zoomify etc but we wanted a quick easy plugin free way to simply use the google map interface with photos.

    I think it works well to be honest and as a free tool not sure it can be called banal.. still each to their own.

    It also does not, of course, download the google map images in the background as that would be a waste of bandwidth.

    :)

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous9:05 AM

    On my my iMac 800 Mhz G4 with 10.39 with the latest java installation:

    1) Program starts without error
    2) When searching for a large .jpg I found that I was unable to access files on external hard drives
    3) When the file was moved to desktop I selected it and nothing happened - as in the program did not begin to load .jpg (9,000x6,000)
    4) Opened the file again, nothing happened
    5) Closed program, tried new .jpg, still nothing happened.
    6) Opened program again, selected small .jpg (900x600) and the program acknowledged it
    7) The picture did not show up on the screen but the name of the file and it's pixel size shows up on the bottom
    8) Hit create, did not change default number of tiles, and clicked start, then finish
    9) Folder created with the name of the file + tiles
    10) No tiles present in folder
    11) HTML file created

    I hope this helps!

    I currently use Zoomify, but agree that there is a need for a Gmap interface for viewing large images.

    Please do not post this comment, as it's for the developers. My e-mail is down!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous10:02 AM

    The application should work on a Mac as it's written in Java, but without a Mac to try it out on, we had to release it untested on that platform. My guess is that the memory allocated for the Java Virtual Machine that the application runs in isn't large enough to cope with the image you are loading. What you need to do is run the application from the command line. I would explain how to do this if I could, but I haven't used a Mac for years, so I have no idea how to do it. The readme file contains the necessary command line with options to increase the available memory. If you want any additional help, email me on support@casa.ucl.ac.uk

    ReplyDelete
  5. This is great software! Finally I have a way to show my large panoramic photos online in full detail with free software in an interface that is widely recognised.

    Here's my first go: http://neil.creek.name/panoramas/fortyfivemp_creek-061116-217-pano.html

    I understand that this is a 1.0 release so features are minimal, however there are a couple of things I'd love to see added soon:
    - The smaller than 100% tiles have the 'shimer' characteristic of nearest neighbour resampling. Woul dit be possible to add an option to use bicubic sampling for the resize? This would mean much higher quality previews.
    - For images that do not wrap, could it be possible to have a checkbox that would prevent wrapping and limit the scrolling to the edge of the image? For now I've had to put a black border around my pano to keep it isolated from its wrapper partners.
    - Can we get the html generator to optionally create a 'map overview' box for navigating the image when at 100%?

    Great work, I look forward to future versions!

    ReplyDelete
  6. I'd like to do a nice big backflip on my earlier comment. :p

    I see now that there are real benefits of this tool over a plugin based one, and it's not as hacky as it first seemed.

    So, apologies for the knee-jerk reaction. :)

    - Rog

    ReplyDelete
  7. Anonymous5:21 PM

    What a fabulous little application. Worked a treat on my Macbook. Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  8. I love it... It's Magic! But. It doesn't work on my 30000x30000 image which I reeeeally need cut up. It seems as if there is a limit of about 10000 pixels square that this map cutter can handle. Any tricks as to how I can cut up my map? The map I need cut is actually 32768x32768.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Love this app but sadly it can't handle my 32768x32768 map. Any suggestions would be appreciated. I really need this map cut up without sizing it down.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anonymous10:19 AM

    same as Schot. Very good application but how to handle *very* large images?
    another point: TIF files are not supported :-(

    ReplyDelete