Categories

Advertising
Affilate Programs
Arts & Entertainment
Business
Communications
Computer-technology
Computers
Construction
Culture-and-society
Disease & Illness
Education
Electronics
Employment
Entertainment
Entrepreneurism
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Fitness
Food & Beverage
Gambling
Health
Health & Fitness
History
Hobbies
Home
Home & Family
House And Home
Insurance
Internet
Internet Business
Internet-Business
Internet-marketing
Kids & Teens
Legal
Loans & Mortgages
Magic
Marketing
Medical
Men-issues
Miscellaneous
Motivation & Self-Help
Network Marketing
News & Society
Parenting
Personal-development
Pets
Politics
Press Releases
Product Reviews
Public Relations
Publishing
Real Estate
Recreation & Sports
Recycling
Reference & Education
Reference-&-Education
Reference
Relationships
Religion-and-spirituality
Reviews
Science
Self Improvement
Shopping
Shopping & Product Reviews
Social Issues
Society
Speaking
Sport
Sports & Recreation
Technology
Travel & Leisure
Uncategorized
Vehicles
Womens Issues
Writing And Speaking

Your Basket


Article Basket

You can put articles in your basket and download them in your favorite file format for offline reading



Hits (120) | Add to Basket | Send a friend | Download As | Printer Friendly

Everything You Need To Know About Satellite Navigation

by dps247 on 2007-09-23

We?ve all had those moments where we wander outside and stare up at the stars, looking for comets or satellites and wondering what we look like from space. If that bright star were actually a martin spaceship, could they see us from there?

Though Teraserver was one of the first sites to do so, now a number of different mapping sites are able to show you what your house looks like from space. By compiling images from a number of different satellite passes, usually from USGS mapping satellites, they are able to give a composite satellite map of the world we live in. Google Maps, Mapquest, teraserver, and a number of other mapping sites all use this satellite imagery; sometimes working off of the same images and sometimes using different satellite passes. The quality can vary depending on location and satellite coverage; while in one area you may be able to see individual cars parked in driveways other areas, especially rural areas, may not be covered as well. Depending on the area you may only be able to make out major roads and geographical features and not be able to make out individual houses or roads.

Satellite maps are interesting tools since they give you a bird?s-eye (or martin?s-eye) view of our homes and other areas of interest. Most satellite map providers have links to points of interest like the Hoover Dam or the Statue of Liberty. It?s often interesting to see how big (or small) these features actually are when compared to the surrounding landscape. Google Maps even has an overlay feature where drawn street maps can be laid directly on top of the satellite map, giving users a clear idea of what they?re looking at and how the area in question is located relative to nearby towns and roads. This can be particularly helpful when looking in an area without many obvious geographical features like lakes and rivers.

Satellite maps aren?t only interesting diversions; they can be great for planning everything from road trips to backcountry excursions. Though they shouldn?t serve as substitutes for a good road map if you?re driving or a topographic map if you?re hiking, satellite maps can give an alternative, advance perspective into unknown territory. Many hikers and backcountry skiers have found them indispensable for providing another mode of getting information about unknown backcountry mountains and passes where the topographic maps may not tell the whole story.

About The Author: