
A preview of the World Wind Java SDK was released on during Sun Microsystem's annual JavaOne conference. This refactoring exercise allows World Wind to be accessed via a browser as a Java Applet.

This makes World Wind itself a plugin so that it can be used as interchangeably as possible (i.e. This new version has an API-centric architecture with functionalities 'off-loaded' to modular components, leaving the API at the core. A new SDK version of World Wind has been developed in Java with JOGL referred to as World Wind Java. The original recipe for World Wind was restricted to Windows, relying on the. Plug-in developers can add features to World Wind without changing the program's source code. Plugins are small programs written in C#, VB or J# which are loaded and compiled by World Wind at startup.

The resolution inside the US is high enough to clearly discern individual buildings, houses, cars (USGS Digital Ortho layer) and even the shadows of people (metropolitan areas in USGS Urban Ortho layer). X (DirectX 3D polygon mesh) models and advanced visual effects such as atmospheric scattering or sun shading. Other features of World Wind include support for. This is an example of how World Wind allows anyone to deliver their data. World Wind provides the ability to browse maps and geospatial data on the internet using the OGC's WMS servers (version 1.4 also uses WFS for downloading placenames), import ESRI shapefiles and kml/kmz files. Five million placenames, political boundaries, latitude/longitude lines, and other location criteria can be displayed. Users interact with the selected planet by rotating it, tilting the view, and zooming in and out. All these worlds are available in the File menu. The latest version (1.4) developed mainly by open source community members from World Wind Central/Free Earth Foundation had its premiere on February 14, 2007.Īpart from the Earth there are several worlds in World Wind: Moon, Mars, Venus, Jupiter (with the four Galilean moons of Io, Ganymede, Europa and Callisto) and SDSS (imagery of stars and galactics). World Wind was released for the first time in 2004 by NASA.
