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jwardbond 8 hours ago [-]
Very cool. The satellite views are awesome! I clicked around for 20 minutes and still felt like there was so much more to explore. Thoughts:
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Unless there is a soviet military installation in Southend, Saskatchewan, something is seriously funky with the "military installation" layer.
It would be nice if clicking didn't lower the zoom level. It's fine to zoom in and center, but having it zoom me out every time I click something was annoying.
rakeda 7 hours ago [-]
Military installations currently need to be sanitized and cleaned out. Will be working on later today. The source is unreliable and much of the data can be stored internally instead of public dataset.
noAnswer 3 hours ago [-]
I know it's "just" AI but one could think there is a forkable project out there. I have seen like tenths of projects like this. OPs explanation is different though. Usually the line is "inspired by movie".
rakeda 2 hours ago [-]
There might be, but that would be missing out on half of the fun. Plus the real development challenge wasn't the frontend, but the database strategy, caching strategy, and edge availability. As with all my projects they serve as a way for me to learn.
robby1110 3 hours ago [-]
I really like this. Is this just pulling from free data sources? Wonder if you could also hook it up with a maps provider to show real terrain
rakeda 3 hours ago [-]
Yup, if there is a bit more support ill begin to add in the mid-tier paid services, but I feel like its in a good spot for now. Working on terrain right now!
BobMontgomeryJr 1 hours ago [-]
horrible UX on tablet-have-to-turn-sideways-or-window-clipped. Get the basics right. Globe slice in vertical-stripmap? drifts uncontrollably. can't set roi nor reposition nor minimize nor resize any of the three panels. tremendous amounts of wasted space - all the time. map legends overlay map undismissibly. great eye-candy first glance;
rakeda 3 minutes ago [-]
Thanks for your feedback Bob, the website is currently optimized for viewports smaller than 1920x1080p but I do plan support for the future.
bigjick 1 hours ago [-]
wow - very impressive, visually pleasing
one UX improvement I feel would make it nice is the mouse wheel zoom in to be smooth, atm it jumps from one zoom level to the next, if it could pan in and out that would make it feel more immersive in a subtle but pleasing way
rakeda 4 minutes ago [-]
Thank you for the advice, will incorporate smoother zooming, theres a trick between feeling snappy and responsive and smooth but sluggish.
sleepytimetea 5 hours ago [-]
Very nice...the maritime vessels view seems very sparsely populated...especially in the Strait of Hormuz.
rakeda 4 hours ago [-]
Satellite GIS for all vessels is pretty pricey. Waiting to see this project grow before investing in that realtime data. For now we have coastline GIS for vessels.
brailsafe 8 hours ago [-]
Cool, but the UI could use more vibing. Seems unusable on mobile because it's not responsive and the controls can't be hidden or collapsed
rakeda 7 hours ago [-]
Mobile has been a common complaint that I have received. Planning on conquering this soon! (90% of all initial traffic is mobile).
dwa3592 9 hours ago [-]
This is amazing. I have been exploring open public datasets for some GIS projects. How are you dealing with any rate limits for how much you can pull from these public servers?
rakeda 9 hours ago [-]
I'm routing and caching a majority of the data into my own database so that all usage and rates are through my service. There are some client based api calls that are made (mostly around existing enrichment) but 95% of traffic hits the db my workers populate.
daviding 9 hours ago [-]
Very impressive! What's the stack used?
Also, is there a way to stop the 'Satellite Inspect' dialog from coming up when clicking around the globe? It obscures a bit of the map.
rakeda 9 hours ago [-]
On it right now, should see the change live in 10 minutes!
Was supposed to only show when imagery was selected.
hsuduebc2 2 hours ago [-]
V2 rocket owned by Israel in Poland kinda surprised me. But I understand. I'm currently working on data heavy platform. The most menial task is to clear data to be usable. Keep up the good work!
gavmor 4 hours ago [-]
I wonder if Mollweide or Atlantis projections wouldn't be more performant?
rakeda 4 hours ago [-]
It was less about performance and more about the visual storytelling. The globe itself isnt actually a 3d model, all of this are rendered in three.js as two dimensional wraps, but the performance is hit with the amount of data.
ionwake 4 hours ago [-]
I spent about a decade building a game that looks remarkably like this, I for one think this looks fantastic. Took me years of working with old 3d libraries and networking... and it never was finished....
Its incredible what can now be built with a little good ai tooling, just awesome.
EDIT > This is my favorite post this year (after Mythos) on HN good job
rakeda 4 hours ago [-]
That is high praise. Thank you.
miniman1337 7 hours ago [-]
really great stuff on here, exploring any of the layers makes me want to learn more about it, maybe finding a way to link to relevant wiki articles for some of the data layers would be neat.
rakeda 6 hours ago [-]
Some layers have additional enrichment, data linking everything internal external is a major goal for the project!
fsuts 4 hours ago [-]
Very cool
What’s the tech stack?
rakeda 3 hours ago [-]
From what I put on reddit:
"The globe itself is just a black ball that hides anything behind it. On top of that we draw the grid (lat/lng) by looping through coordinates and connecting dots on the surface (same math youd do for platpoints on a map, just wrapped around the sphere). The coastlines and borders come from free geo data files and just drawn on the sphere, anchored.
The atmosphere and a majority of the affects are just tiny shaders (maybe 10 lines of code each) which gives it a strong 3d affect.
Everything else, data points, flights, events, is just coordinates associated with database entries and drawn ui components.
So if you tried it before and went down the rabbit hole of 3D and triangulation, you were probably overthinking it the same way I did at first. The wireframe aesthetic actually works in your favour because you never have to fill anything in"
---
Unless there is a soviet military installation in Southend, Saskatchewan, something is seriously funky with the "military installation" layer.
It would be nice if clicking didn't lower the zoom level. It's fine to zoom in and center, but having it zoom me out every time I click something was annoying.
one UX improvement I feel would make it nice is the mouse wheel zoom in to be smooth, atm it jumps from one zoom level to the next, if it could pan in and out that would make it feel more immersive in a subtle but pleasing way
Also, is there a way to stop the 'Satellite Inspect' dialog from coming up when clicking around the globe? It obscures a bit of the map.
Its incredible what can now be built with a little good ai tooling, just awesome.
EDIT > This is my favorite post this year (after Mythos) on HN good job
What’s the tech stack?
"The globe itself is just a black ball that hides anything behind it. On top of that we draw the grid (lat/lng) by looping through coordinates and connecting dots on the surface (same math youd do for platpoints on a map, just wrapped around the sphere). The coastlines and borders come from free geo data files and just drawn on the sphere, anchored.
The atmosphere and a majority of the affects are just tiny shaders (maybe 10 lines of code each) which gives it a strong 3d affect.
Everything else, data points, flights, events, is just coordinates associated with database entries and drawn ui components.
So if you tried it before and went down the rabbit hole of 3D and triangulation, you were probably overthinking it the same way I did at first. The wireframe aesthetic actually works in your favour because you never have to fill anything in"