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User Guide

Sharing Places Information

The section describes how you can share placemarks, shapes, and folder data with other people - including both users and non-users of Google Earth. You can share your places data by:

Note - You can also share places information with other Google Earth users via the Google Earth Comunity BBS website. For more information, see Sharing a Point of Interest.

Emailing an Image

At this time, emailing a Google Earth image on the Mac is available only through the Mail, Entourage and Eudora applications. You can email the current view of the earth shown in the Google Earth 3D viewer as:

When you email an image, a JPEG file is automatically attached to an outbound email message. When you email the view as a KMZ, a KMZ file is automatically attached to an outbound email message. To email an image:

  1. Do one of the following:
  1. In the Select Email Service window, choose your default email program or your Gmail account. If you use your Gmail account, you will be prompted to sign in if you have not already.

    Before selecting your email service, select the Remember this setting... check box if you want to use the same email service every time you email a view. You can always change your email preferences later by selecting Tools > Options > General (Windows/Linux) or Google Earth > Preferences (Mac) and clicking on the General tab.
  2. Wait while the Google Earth software sends the data to your email application. A new email window appears with the image file. (This can take a few seconds.) The image is a JPG file of the current view in the 3D viewer.
  3. Fill in the recipient's email address and any other information in the body and send the email.

When you email an image, the quality of that image is identical to the quality available for the Save Image feature in Google Earth.

Emailing Places Data

Note - On the Mac, you can only email through the Mail, Eudora and Entourage applications.

In addition to emailing a view as a KMZ file to other users of Google Earth, you also can email places data in two other ways:

To email places data:

  1. Do one of the following:
  1. In the Select Email Service window, choose your default email program or your Gmail account. If you use your Gmail account, you will be prompted to sign in if you have not already.

    Before selecting your email service, select the Remember this setting... check box if you want to use the same email service every time you email a view. You can always change your email preferences later by selecting Tools > Options > General (Windows/Linux) or Google Earth > Preferences (Mac) and clicking on the General tab. Wait while the Google Earth software sends the data to your email application. A new email window appears with the KMZ file. (This can take a few seconds.)
  2. Fill in the recipient's email address and any other information in the body and send the email.

Things to consider:

Troubleshooting Email Issues

Note - On the Mac, you can only email through the Mail, Eudora and Entourage applications.

If your email application does not respond to the Email View command, you may need to set the default email program. To do this in Windows, open the Control Panel from the Start menu and select Internet Options. Click the Programs tab, select the default email program that you use from the E-mail drop-down list, and click Apply. You should now be able to send a view with your email application. To do this on a Mac, open Mail. Click Mail > Preferences. Pick the email application you'd prefer as your default email handler.

Sharing Data Over a Network

In addition to saving placemarks or folders to your local computer, you can also save place data to a web server or network server. Other Google Earth users who have access to the server can then use the data. As with other documents, you can create links or references to KMZ files for easy access. Storing a placemark file on the network or on a web server offers the following advantages:

Note: Before you can create a network link to an item in Google Earth, you must first store that place data on a server.

This section covers the following topics:

Saving Data to a Server

To make your placemarks or folders available to other people via a server, you need to first save the file to the appropriate location.

If you want users to be able to open KML and KMZ files from a web server, you may need to add MIME types for the server. These are:

Opening Data from a Network Server

If you are working in an organization where place data is saved to a network that you have access to, you can open that data in the same way you would open a saved KMZ file on your local computer.

About Network Links

The network link feature in Google Earth provides a way for multiple clients to view the same network-based or web-based KMZ data and automatically see any changes to the content as those changes are made. A network link allows for content publishing in a manner similar to web page/web browser content delivery:

The following figure illustrates the parallels between web-based content and KMZ content via a network link using Google Earth.

Parallels between web-based content and KMZ content via a network link using Google Earth

Creating a Network Link

Before you can create a network link, the content you want to link to must exist on the network or web server that you are linking to. If you are authoring the content, see Saving Data to a Server for details about saving KMZ files to a web or network server. If you are only linking to the content, be sure you know either the network location of the file or the URL if it is located on a web server.

  1. Choose any one of the following ways to start:
    • Select Network Link From the Add Menu. Select Network Link from the pop-up menu.
    • Right-click (CTRL click on the Mac) on a folder in the My Places Panel. Select Add > Network Link from the pop-up menu. When you add a network link in this way, the selected folder is automatically set as the container for the network link.

    The New Network Link dialog box appears. Enter the name of your link in the Name field. Enter the full path of the KMZ file in the Link field, or browse to the file location if the file is located on a network. You can use a URL to reference the KMZ, such as http://www.test.com/myKMZ.kmz. The 3D viewer immediately flies to the default view for the linked data.
  2. Enter descriptive text or HTML.You can enter this data in the same way you would for a regular folder. See Editing Places and Folders for more information.
  3. (Optional) Click the View tab to change the default view that this network link presents to users. Click Snapshot current view to use your current view in Google Earth. If your network link has more than one placemark, click Reset to display all these placemarks to users.

Note - The text you enter in this description is your description of the link only and is not viewable by anyone else linking to the KMZ file. Only you will be able to see the description you enter here (unless you email your link folder to other people). This is similar to creating a bookmark for a web page and then adding a descriptive note about the bookmark.

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