Shock - some innovation in mapping which doesn't come from Google! Head over to this aerial photo of Westminster Abbey and mouse over it. This trick appears to be the dynamic updating of the CSS clip property, so it'll work in most modern browsers.
By the way, I'm singing Evensong there today at 3pm with the Friends of Morland Choristers Camp if anyone wants to stop by. The anthem is "Greater Love" by Ireland, and the Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis are Bairstow in D.
Posted by gerv at April 9, 2005 09:31 AMThat's been there for a long time, but it certainly is cool. It's just a pity that the map and photo sometimes don't line up properly, and that you lose a lot of the detail in the maps once you leave London.
Posted by: Neil T. at April 9, 2005 10:47 AMHeh, the first time I read it I thought it said: "if anyone wants to stop me".
Posted by: Martijn at April 9, 2005 11:40 AMI was showing this to people at work a couple of days ago in a round of 'who knows the best DHTML sites?'. As Neil said it's been there for a while, but it's still very cool.
Posted by: Robin at April 9, 2005 11:59 AMWhat annoys me about Multimap is that their arial photos used to have a lot more detail. Now they've reduced the resolution and started selling the higher quality versions.
Posted by: stonedyak at April 9, 2005 12:48 PMNeil T. is right about the loss of detail in the maps. Right now, I'm here:
Doesn't look like there's a lot going on does it?
However, switch to the aerial photo view and you can see I'm actually in a building:
Posted by: Alex Bishop at April 9, 2005 02:28 PMVidur Apparao used the same trick many years ago for his amazing Skeleton CSS demo.
Posted by: Daniel Glazman at April 9, 2005 03:42 PM