There is an Open Source GIS available, called GRASS: http://grass.itc.it >From there you might find links to geographic map data. It has nothing to do with GNOME however, though it runs fine on all *n*xes. Unfortunately I don't know anything about the project at this stage, but will be finding out more within 6 months when I do a semester course in GIS. It would be good to see something like this ship with Linux distributions in the future, and provide some level of integration with desktops apps... On Mon, 2004-05-17 at 13:48, Hakon Gunsen wrote: > Hello, > I'm wondering whether there are plans to establish a > geographic-map-browser application for the GNOME desktop? > Geographic maps are such common information sources with a constant > demand for it in many different contexts. It could also be used by > other applications (like Evolution Contacts, XTraceroute, weather > report, GPS program, educational programs). > Of course, the biggest problem would be how to get qaulity map data. > It's probably quite expensive merchandise, but at least wouldn't it be > possible to gather data for a basic world-continent model (possibly > with country borders too) to start with? > As alternative to local storage, data could be fetch over network by a > server of choice. I don't know though if there's an open file format > that can do that. > Storing city locations wouldn't be a problem, since those are only > coordinates that are known. > I think a map browser would be a nice complement to other accessories > like gDict and the calculator. > > Hakon > > > > ______________________________________________________________________ > _______________________________________________ > gnome-list mailing list > gnome-list@xxxxxxxxx > http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-list _______________________________________________ gnome-list mailing list gnome-list@xxxxxxxxx http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-list