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 REVIEWS 05 / 02 / 04
 

Misty Hill 3D Mapping - First Look

Misty Hill Terravisual Mapping - First Look

Price: £25.00

Weight: Erm it's a CD

Features: 3D photomap captured using airbourne radar, and boasts up to fifty centimetre vertical accuracy complete with interactive viewer software, perfect weather guaranteed. Requires PC with Pentium (4) or AMD Athlon, 500 MB of RAM, 64 MB graphics card. e.g Nvidia Geforce 4MX420, 24* CD-ROM drive, Windows 95, 98, 2000. XP or NT.

Fantastically detailed and accurate, perfect weather conditions and visibilty.
Limited interactivity with GPS or route-planning software, plus only a few areas covered so far.


The Concept Think a 3D map-come-piccy on your computer that you can swoop over, dip into, use to plan routes or reminisce over old ones and you're halfway there. You too can be a helicopter or a bird flying over your favourite mountains.
Features Based on enhanced fifty  centimetre resolution full colour aerial photography with up to 50cm terrain accuracy. Viewer allows you to zoom, rotate or pan across the map.


In Action by OM member Alex Ford

A new thing which I had not even heard of until it fell through my letterbox and onto my PC screen is Misty Hill Terravisual Mapping. It says it's a "Fully Interactive 3D Digital Air Photo Map". Hmmm...no interaction with GPS, no route planning overlay, no printing, a map covering just 36km square...Oh and a high end PC needed to run it on! I thought it was a misprint when it said a 64Mwot-not video card and 500, yes 500M do-dahs of RAM. But no. I tried it on my paltry 256M machine and it died. In a sort of faux Monty Python way it said "go away or I shall taunt you some more".

I was forced to visit my sister to use this software (that's not come out right has it? I ALWAYS enjoy visiting her AND my mother on a wet Sunday afternoon, always I tell you!)

Ok, so here I go, Misty Hill Digital Air Mapping in a nutshell: Limited use, very small practical purpose, and £25 for what is basically a CD with just 4 pictures on it...BUT...bloody lovely.

It is so absorbing. I spent two hours just flying about over the Snowdon Horseshoe! I could actually follow the course of the walk from the screen. From the start at Pen-Y-Pas, where you could even see the cars up to the summit where the monstrosity of the cafe was clear. The paths were easily visible, and you go right in close or right up and take an eagle's eye view. You could see the path snaking its way along up to Crib Goch. It's so nice.

Recognise this? You should. Clue, that's a railway running along the bottom of the screenshot...

My brother-in-law is disabled and he said it was the closest he'll ever get to being up somewhere like that and at times it felt like he was there...the sweeping pans across the mountains, the flying
in and out of the corries. I know I am getting all, well, ga-ga, over this but it is superb.

There is potential for it to be really useful mind you - imagine sitting there thinking of a walk with an OS map in your left hand, the pc with that running in front of you and a guide book on your right hand side. The possibility is that you could walk a route before leaving home and have a proper look over the terrain that you will intend to cover. Ok the resolution isn't superb when in close, but you can get the feel for the ground.

For instance, you can't see the general blockiness of the climb from Snowdon up to Y Llewidd but you can see it's a steep pull and that the track down from Snowdon to it isn't clear and is steep and looks quite nasty. You can also get to see just how narrow Crib Goch is. My brother-in-law just shook his head at the idea of going along that.

So what problems does it have? Well, it could do with a "reset" button. If you get all tied up with the controls, which can take a few attempts to get used to, you can end up inside a mountain or under a lake, and getting out is a right pain. So a reset button would be nice to bring you back to a present position over the terrain. It could also do with an overview map showing where the picture map links to the next are - at the moment the only thing you have to help you work out what's on each map is a bit of a blurb, which is useless unless you know the names of the features in the area.

But these are niggles! They pale into insignificance when you start to fly about the mountains going anywhere you want, flying in and out, up high and down low. You can pan and zoom, gain altitude and rotate - and all at the same time (if you have enough hands - or someone to help and hold the mouse!). It must be seen to be believed. It's lovely it's amazing, it's worth upgrading my PC for! Anyone know how much a new video card and some RAM is?

Verdict

Limited practical use, but fantastic entertainment and great potential, in conjunctiion with a map, for visualising landscape before you hit it. We had a gas with this, though it in its current form, there's no interactivity with route-planning software or GPS. For a small demo that will give you a very limited idea of the potential of the far more powerful actual product, check out the web site below, where you'll also find a list of the relatively small number of areas covered so far.


Misty Hill Web Site



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