I think that is what he means. Say you live along the border of Kansas and Oklahoma, you click on the map in that area and it shows which beams are hitting that area.
Not exactly what I had in mind, but that would be helpful. I guess it might take a separate page for each spotbeam satellite, but maybe not.Not really sure exactly what you mean. More of a region type US map broken up into say 6 or 7 chunks showing all the beams in that area?
Not exactly what I had in mind, but that would be helpful. I guess it might take a separate page for each spotbeam satellite, but maybe not.
Where do I find the spot beam coverage map for 129?
What OSU said.Well speak up on what you had in mind
osu1991 said:I think that is what he means. Say you live along the border of Kansas and Oklahoma, you click on the map in that area and it shows which beams are hitting that area.
What OSU said.
I was visualizing a specific geographic location with spotbeams listed, not a region. But I don't know if that's possible with current technology and site resources. Or maybe something like antennaweb, with a zipcode entry for input, and spotbeams as an output.Ok, I take it as a clickable map that brings up that region with all the beams. Like I said above.
Well speak up on what you had in mind
I don't mean to beat the horse too much but what *I* had in mind was the Google Earth KML files. Would be a lot easier than to code a clickable map of the spotbeams for the web.