google earth

Best of 2005

It is that time of year again to highlight what was great and free. This year’s picks contain some perennial heavy-hitters and some newcomers that reflect exciting new trends.

As a new addition, I’ve added runners up. There were just too many too many to chose from.

Best on the Web: Firefox, Opera

Firefox released its first post-release update and stays on top of the browser market. We love the full keyboard access. Opera – sleek and fast – became free sans ads. Can’t say we’re anything but thrilled to have another free choice.

Freeware Classic: OpenOffice.org, NVU, Inkscape

With the new features and stability, we can forgive OpenOffice.org for the slight delay on 2.0 (Remember 1.1? No? That’s ’cause it never made it to Mac). NVU hit 1.0 the same year Adobe buys Macromedia, I smell Dreamweaver alternative. Inkscape improved, but we hope next year will be bigger for this budding vector drawing application.

System Extension: Konfabulator/Yahoo Widgets, Tiger’s Dashboard

Widgets are great. Yahoo for Konfabulator and shame on Apple. Whatever your choice, widgets are the way to bring web-based info to your desktop.

Best Plugin: Grease Monkey

If Firefox let you take back the web, then Grease Monkey will whip it into submission. This Firefox extension has received all kinds of press – both good and bad. This user script manager lets you reshape nearly all aspects of what your browser displays.

Best Cross Platform App: iTunes + Podcasting

Podcasting went huge this year, and while Apple was late, iTunes 5 brought podcasts to the masses. Now there’s a fine selection of commercial and indie ‘casts organized in a way only Apple can.

Best Mac Switcher: Google Earth

The year almost got by without an earth-shattering port from Windows. Then the beta leaked… If you have it you know, and if you don’t you can rest assured it is in the works. The beta requires Tiger.

Best Web Service: Writely, Google Analytics

AJAX is cool, but Writley has shown how powerful it can be. This free web word processor promises to show that the end of the desktop is nigh. Google hit it big this year with something that’s been around for years but now is free – killer web stats.

Best Mac-Only: Adium, Camino

With the power of Gaim, the slick interface of a true Mac application and a community full of add-ons Adium has set itself apart as the best choice for multi protocol chat. With its new Gizmo plugin done, and Google Talk voice integration in the works, Adium promises to become the voice chat app of choice as well. And we have to give props to Camino, the Mozilla browser with Aqua flair. Thanks in part to this project, I think it is safe to say that the best variety of quality browsers are on the Mac.

What a year!

Brian

Google Earth + Google SketchUp for OS X

Google Earth 4.0 (beta)

The world of Google Earth has grown quite a bit in the last year or so. The free application is much more than a satellite image browser. Overlays and network data feeds have turned the application into a 3D, tweak-able and live application.

googleearth Google Earth + Google SketchUp for OS X

Google Earth has always had cool fly-bys and aerial imagery. Now that imagery is much higher resolution. 3D additions like city-scapes and downloadable markers make things more interesting.

You can even track live flights, get real-time weather conditions and more. I think its safe to say Google Earth is the best way to waste away a Friday afternoon since the you got the internet at work.

Google SketchUp

The first stop in adding 3D to your Google Earth is to download the 3D Warehouse Network Link. Once loaded into Google Earth, this overlay will place markers across the globe linking to downloadable 3D imagery.

Where do these great image-covered polygons come from? And how do I get in on the fun? Since being acquired by Google, SketchUp – a 3D authoring application has become free.

sketchup Google Earth + Google SketchUp for OS X

If you are a 3D pro, it may not be what you are used to. And if you’re not, the tools will require some patience – at first. SketchUp is a fast and relatively easy to learn 3D design tool. There’s a generous load of free objects pre-made for you, and more on the web.

Not a huge surprise, but SketchUp makes it easy to add your model to the world – turning it into a 3D overlay placed on your spot right in SketchUp. Want to share your creation? Email the overlay file to friends. Want creepy strangers lurking outside your virtual house? Post it to Google’s online 3D Warehouse.

Who needs Second Life when you can build your own stuff right here on Earth?

Brian

Google Earth + Google SketchUp

What’s even better than super high-resolution satellite photos of your house and stratospheric zoom-ins? How about 3D rendered structures, complete with texture modeling.

With the advent of SketchUp you can go beyond browsing the Earth and begin adding your own 3D creations. A giant apple squashing the city of Redmond? You got it.

Get the links and the lowdown in this week’s Freeloader Friday.

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