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April 14, 2008 9:00 AM PDT

Google mapping spec now an industry standard

Posted by Stephen Shankland
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Members of an industry group called the Open Geospatial Consortium have approved Google's KML technology as an open standard for describing some geographic data.

KML is used to manage the display of geospatial information in Google Earth, the company's software for flying over the surface of a virtual globe. With its 3D coordinate-based system, people can create models of city buildings, draw a line showing where they hiked, or overlay their own custom place names on a generic map.

Google hopes standardizing KML will help mean broader use for the map description language, but already even rivals such as Microsoft have embraced it. This view shows Microsoft's Live Maps with a KML overly describing Glenn Canyon National Recreation Area.

Google hopes standardizing KML will help mean broader use for the map description language, but already, even rivals such as Microsoft have embraced it. This view shows Microsoft's Live Maps with a KML overly describing Glenn Canyon National Recreation Area.

(Credit: Microsoft)

Google already shared its KML format openly, and others had used it in software products, but Google now hopes that its status as an official standard will decrease barriers to further adoption.

"What OGC brings to the table is...everyone has confidence we won't take advantage of the format or change it in a way that will harm anyone," said Michael Weiss-Malik, Google's KML product manager. "The goal is to prevent market fragmentation," in which different technology uses different standards.

File formats may sound mundane, but they can give strategic value to those who control them as a gateway to the data held by people and companies. In one high-profile example, open-source allies launched an attack on Microsoft's Office stronghold with the OpenOffice.org software, which could mostly read Microsoft's file formats.

One front in that war was an effort to set OpenOffice's file formats as an industry standard called ODF (OpenDocument Format), a move Microsoft countered with its own OOMXL effort, which Google opposed.

It didn't seem like there was powerful reluctance to use KML. For example, the latest Virtual Earth and Live Maps technology from Google rival Microsoft can use KML to let users export user information to navigation devices. And the Microsoft site can overlay KML files from the Internet onto its Live Maps--here's a (slow-loading) link to one from the National Resources Defense Council that describes expected effects from global warming to various national parks, along with the park boundaries.

But standardization will make KML more palatable, Weiss-Malik said. "Governments like to say they can publish to OGC KML instead of Google KML," he said.

And he expects to see a new era blossom of personal map publishing, all powered by KML. "We're just starting to see the birth of map publishing," he said.

KML stands for Keyhole Markup Language. It initially was developed by Keyhole, the satellite imagery company Google acquired in 2004. Keyhole's technology was built into the Google Maps site and the Google Earth software.

The standard, which geographic information system (GIS) software specialist Galdos Systems helped bring to the standardization process, is based on KML 2.2. The official KML standard can be downloaded from the OGC Web site.

Originally posted at News Blog
Stephen Shankland covers Google, Yahoo, search, online advertising, portals, digital photography, and related subjects. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered servers, supercomputing, open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 8 comments
Microsoft...
by lmasanti April 14, 2008 12:30 PM PDT
Microsoft... began using "standard" Java to begin modifying it into
other language getting time to destroy its enemies....
Reply to this comment
good point, but...
by Shankland April 14, 2008 1:02 PM PDT
Sun needed Microsoft as a Java partner far more than Google needs Microsoft as a KML partner. Google Earth has more influence than Microsoft's Virtual Earth.
View reply
We have been doing this for over a decade
by Manhattan2 April 14, 2008 12:51 PM PDT
Google is slowly catching up to what our team of engineers has been working on for years. In fact we can remember visiting the KeyHole booth at Comdex years ago thinking to ourselves how far behind they were. Time is Critical! If Google, Microsoft, or Yahoo want to see where mapping is headed you have to look at it using 4D logic! It is a 4D planet! We will be opening up our research and database soon, we promise!
Reply to this comment
Who do you work for?
by Shankland April 14, 2008 1:19 PM PDT
Whose team of engineers is so far ahead of Google? You've piqued my interest with the time dimension, but you're going to have to be a bit more forthcoming if you want to convince us all that you're in the vanguard.
View reply
Correction about Live Maps "slowness"
by quikboy2 April 16, 2008 6:05 PM PDT
Take a look at Steve's (works as program manager for VE)comments about CNET and their mention of Live Maps's "slowness":

"The CNET author comments that the map loads slowly in Live Maps. To compare I loaded the same KML file in Google Maps and it was indeed much quicker (15 seconds and 5 seconds respectively). But then I noticed something interesting - on Google Maps the polygons representing the parks didn't load at all. Live Maps took longer as it was reading, parsing, and displaying the entire KML file. Its nice to see Live Map's KML support coming along as quickly as it is! Our work is definitely not done as we e still have a lot of KML workitems on the backlog ... expect even more improvements and better KML support in our upcoming releases."

It may be slow, but it loads up the whole thing!
Reply to this comment
Link to his blog where I got it from right here
by quikboy2 April 16, 2008 6:06 PM PDT
Forgot to mention that : http://virtualearth.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!2BBC66E99FDCDB98!14516.entry
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