Forum Moderators: open
Here's my situation:
I have a collection of maps - some are hand-drawn, others are like old etchings and lithographs. On them are markers for historic buildings, landmarks, "something important happened here" spots, etc. The task at hand is to figure out the latitude & longitude coordinates for places on the maps.
I was dreaming that I could somehow overlay these scans on the NASA Worldwind globe, stretch and warp them to fit terrestrial guidelines (coasts, lakes, rivers) until they fit snugly over the real earth. Then by clicking the dots on the map overlay, WorldWind would tell me the Lat&Long.
Has anyone here tried anything like this before?
Now I have about 250 of these maps covering over 7000 places, for which I need to overlay, stretch to fit, and plot the coordinates to put into a database.
Anyone know a student who needs a job?
I can give you an address in Germany of someone who might be interested in doing it as a service, but I guess even in a globalized age that would be overkill.
As for the geography students, really I just want some extra-cheap labour on a project which has an almost-zero budget but future commercial intent. If some kid spent days overlaying and plotting placeholders as a school project, I'd feel guilty buying the data from them unless I could afford to give them minimum wage for the effort. Which I can't right now.
So obviously the problem isn't the student who may be willing to do it, it's me and my exploitation guilt. I need to overcome that guilt. :)
When I place a spot on the globe, it's mapping the lat/long with a few dozen decimal places. There's no way my source material is that accurate, so I fear it may be misleading giving a latitutde of 38.82883726348N, when my margin of error is so immense.
My data will be nice for making tourism maps with big icons. But if someone uses my data with a personal GPS trying to find the spot down to the closest meter, they'll probably be WAY off.
The difference between Keyhole/GE and NASA/WW? Is it so great that my spots will be off by more than 0.5km? I hope not! Errors in accuracy are going to be put off by my source material more than the globing tool I use.
This can all be summed up by a disclaimer... my data is useful for approximate positioning only...
On A sidenote: now that you are determined to go with Google Earth, you should consider publishing an add-on, so your content can be explored "offline" (offline is not quite the correct word when dealing with Google Earth, but I think you know what I mean). The new National Geographic overlay is a very nice example of what I mean (and funny enough they display YPN ads in there).
They might have changed it though in the meantime. Our esteemed member JenStar has a screenshot: [jensense.com...]