3D World Atlas

3D World Atlas is a virtual globe program developed by the Cosmi Corporation. At Version 2.1,[1] it is one of the leading atlas programs, along with other 3D atlas exploring programs such as Google Earth .

3D World Atlas
Developer(s)Cosmi Corporation
Stable release
2.1
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows
TypeVirtual globe

History

3D World Atlas was created by the Cosmi Corporation in 1999. It was programmed by Ron Paludan and the research was done by Eve Paludan. Information came from the 1999 World Factbook by the Central Intelligence Agency and the US Arms Control and Disarmament Agency.[2]

Features

As an atlas software, the 3D World Atlas has many features. These include, but are not limited to, world maps on a 3D globe, thousands of tables and charts, national flags, and a world clock.[3] The software also includes distance measuring and in-depth information on every country, including independence days, government types, and such.[3] There are many tools you can use on the program. These all perform basic tasks helping the viewer in understanding the world.[3] A zoom feature allows you to zoom into countries, and lists major cities, a print option allows you to print the current display of a page, and a find button allows you to find any city, country, river, lake, or continent within seconds.[3]

Other features include the ability to copy the current view onto the clipboard, where it can by displayed by pasting it on an image program such as Microsoft Paint, thematic maps, charts, and clocks that all allow you to customize the area, an "Earth shadow" feature which creates a shadow on the Earth if you are on 3D, and a 2D feature that allows you to see the Earth from a map perspective. The program also allows you to retrieve the coordinates of any point on Earth by hovering your mouse over the location you wish to know.[3]

Awards

3D World Atlas won the "editor's pick" from online software reviewer Software Informer.[4]

gollark: Well, I did that, and people didn't like it.
gollark: Okay, what if I just make `xdy` its own magic special token, and implement a regular arithmetic parser.
gollark: Never mind, this is æ.
gollark: Yes, I saw, I am trying to see if I can steal code from it.
gollark: ... yes.

References

  1. 3D World Atlas About page
  2. 3D World Atlas acknowledgement section
  3. 3D World Atlas
  4. "3D World Atlas Awards". Software Informer. Informer Technologies, Inc. Retrieved 30 December 2010.
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