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| The Magazine for MapPoint mapping software |
RSS Feed URL : http://www.mp2kmag.com/rss/articles.php Category : Software Total Views : 56 |
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MapPoint MP2K Magazine is your source for independent news and information about MapPoint technologies and products and is home to the popular web forum for MapPoint users and developers. MapPoint 2009 MP2K Magazine is now taking orders for MapPoint 2009. See ordering page for more details and shipping information. Programming MapPoint in .NET The new book Programming MapPoint in .NET is now in stock and shipping from MP2Kmag. Order your copy and receive free USPS Priority shipping. Shape Name Utility The Shape Name Utility is a simple utility developed by Richard Marsden that allows a user to examine
and/or change the names of MapPoint shapes. This article describes the
code and how it works. Roll Your Own Commercial Routing System with MapPoint Matt Fritz shares his experience developing a routing application including discussion of MapPoint's strengths and limitations. The articles includes several screenshots illustrating the various components of the routing application. GPS and Other New Features in MapPoint 2009 Originally written for Laptop GPS World,
this review of MapPoint 2009 focuses on users of GPS navigation. If you have
questions about other aspects of this product, please address them to
Map Forums.
"Excel Basics to Blackbelt": A Reference Text for MapPoint Integration Dr. Elliot Bendoly shares information about his new textbook which includes information about integrating Excel and MapPoint. Routene Excel and MapPoint Update John Sewell introduces and explains the features in the latest version of Routene, an Excel spreadsheet for of physical supply chain and logistics applications. A full version of Routene is now available for purchase. Using Virtual Earth with OpenLayers This article by Richard Marsden shows you how to create a Virtual Earth base layer in an OpenLayers application. OpenLayers is an open source Javascript project which receives the layer map data from one or many different sources including WFS, Yahoo, WorldWind, Google, TileCache, TMS, and GML. A Simple Add-in for MapPoint API Beginners Richard Marsden's latest article shows step by step how to create a MapPoint COM Add-in using Visual Basic to draw
circles around pushpins. Includes complete source code and screenshots.
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Random News Feed |
Welcome Back Regular Meetings Resume & Getting Ready for Mars!
Summertime is winding down, pools are closing, students are going back to school, and the skies are beginning to clear up! Which all means that we are back on schedule for our regular TriState Astronmers Club meetings held on the third Wednesday of the month. A Blast From the Past "Summertime’s Planetaries" by C. J. Warner - TSA
Before summer gives way to fall, a word should be said on the many planetary nebulae that abound in the Milky Way.
In September, the drier air masses from Canada provide excellent viewing of the Milky Way which, as Jim Taylor noted in the August 1987 Newsletter, stretches continuously from Cassiopeia in the northeast to Scorpius in the southwest. Embedded in this soft, starry river in the sky are hundreds of planetary nebulae, which are small but relatively bright in overall surface brightness, This fact provides the amateur astronomer a multitude of mysterious objects to view, similar to one of the most fascinating object in the heavens, the Ring Nebula of Lyra. Neutrino Astronomy 2 he Earth's atmosphere and other aspects of the earth's environment block most electromagnetic radiation from space, except visible light, certain infrared frequency and radio waves. To overcome this problem of ground-based observation, astronomers turned to space to widen their spectrum of wavelengths by using satellites, probes and orbiting observatories way above the Earth's atmosphere. But these methods offer only a small window on the full spectrum of events in the universe. However, with the discovery of high energy neutrino particles, (a direct messenger of some of the most violent physical processes in the universe, like blacks holes, neutron stars, active galactic nuclei and others) we will be able to open the window much wider. Our Friendly Skies by Rod Martin, Planetarium Resource Teacher
and Andy Smetzer, TriState Astronomers
Visible Evening Planets
JUPITER and VENUS are bright in the west early in the month.
MARS rises in the east late in the evening.
Visible Morning Planets
MERCURY is low in the east before sunrise early in the month.
SATURN rises before morning twilight.
MARS is high in the southern sky at morning twilight. Star Cluster NGC-6231 By Jim Taylor - TSA
On the cover of this Newsletter is a sketch of the brilliant star cluster NGC-6231 that I made some time ago. It is located just north of Zeta Scorpii, close on the southern horizon; Zeta is the bright star at the bottom of the sketch. This 3.5-magnitude star is an optical double, blue and orange, with a separation of about 7 arc-minutes, which is what attracted me to the area in the first place. But upon viewing the star cluster, I forgot about Zeta, for it is truly magnificent. |
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