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World Locations

Posted: 07.07.2004, 19:35
by kevnar
Is there a file which includes more of the world's locations, up to and including very small towns if you zoom in close enough?

Also, is there a feature in Celestia to arbitrarily punch in a geopositional coordinate and spin right around to that location? There are websites which allow you to look up your GPS information based on your postal/zip code. I'd like to take a look at the sky from above my house (virtually speaking that is).

Thanks for your help.

Posted: 07.07.2004, 19:59
by alphap1us
Hello kevnar,

The most complete set of Earth locations that I know of are at http://celestiamotherlode.net/catalog/earth.html

You are looking for the last entry before the last section. "Earth Location File"
I hope this will be enough for you.

Under windows, select "Goto object" from the naviagtion menu. Then you can enter Lat/Long co-ordinates for any planet, including earth.

Cheers,

Joe

Okay, now what.

Posted: 07.07.2004, 20:20
by kevnar
I downloaded the thing and copied it to my Extras folder. Is that right? What do I do now?

Sorry, I just started with Celestia yesterday. I'm not exactly brain-dead, but I do appreciate a little help.


Edit:

Sorry, never mind. I just had to restart Celestia, and they all showed up. Thanks a bunch.

Now if only someone could point me to a comprehensive list of what directories to put all of these surface, normal, spec, and bump maps I'm downloading. The readme files included aren't always very "verbose".

Posted: 07.07.2004, 21:21
by selden
Please take a look at the Web page http://www.lns.cornell.edu/~seb/celestia/addon-intro.html

Please let me know what needs to be added.

Posted: 11.07.2004, 23:31
by Redfish
If only there were a file with the country names...

Posted: 11.07.2004, 23:36
by selden
It doesn't include names, but country borders are available at http://www.lepp.cornell.edu/~seb/celestia/hutchison/borders.html

Posted: 11.07.2004, 23:38
by t00fri
Redfish wrote:If only there were a file with the country names...


It's so easy: just learn a little PERL, and write a 5-line script to be applied to the original Earth-Gazetteer data. There is almost everything contained that anyone might dream to extract one day.


Bye Fridger