Marble (software)

In this article, we will explore and analyze the impact of Marble (software) in various contexts and situations. Marble (software) is a topic of great relevance and interest to many people today, since its influence covers areas as diverse as daily life, culture, history, science, technology, politics and much more. From its emergence to its evolution today, Marble (software) has left a deep mark on the world, generating debates, reflections and significant changes in different areas. Throughout this article, we will closely examine the different aspects that make Marble (software) a fascinating and important topic, as well as its implications in the contemporary world.

Marble
Developer(s)KDE
Initial releaseNovember 2006 (2006-11)
Stable release
24.12.0[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 12 December 2024 (12 December 2024)
Preview release1.5.0 (February 6, 2013 (2013-02-06)) [±]
Repository
Written inC++ (Qt)
Operating systemUnix-like, Windows, Android
Available inMultiple languages
TypeVirtual globe, route planning software
LicenseGNU LGPL
Websitemarble.kde.org

Marble is a virtual globe application which allows the user to choose among the Earth, the Moon, Venus, Mars and other planets to display as a 3-D model. It is free software under the terms of the GNU LGPL, developed by KDE for use on personal computers and smart phones.[2] It is written in C++ and uses Qt.

Marble is intended to be very flexible; beyond its cross-platform design, the core components can easily be integrated into other programs. It is designed to run without the need for hardware acceleration, but it can be extended to use OpenGL. An important user-experience objective being that the application start fairly quickly, it ships with a minimal but useful off-line dataset (5–10MB[citation needed]).[3]

Contributors have added support for on-line mapping sources such as OpenStreetMap and the ability to interpret KML files. Marble also provides route planning capabilities.[4] A navigation mode called MarbleToGo was developed as part of Google Summer of Code 2010.[5][6] It was later partially rewritten and renamed to Marble Touch.[2]

Geothek is a fork of Marble adding a statistics module, pixel maps, and a 3D view. It is developed and used by Austrian publisher Ed. Hölzel as atlas software for classrooms.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ "v24.12.0".
  2. ^ a b Nienhüser, Dennis. "Introducing Marble Touch". Archived from the original on 2011-11-29.
  3. ^ "Chapter 1. Introduction". KDE.
  4. ^ Nienhüser, Dennis (2010-07-24). "Worldwide and Offline Routing". Nienhueser.de. Archived from the original on 2010-07-29. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
  5. ^ "Show Student Project". Retrieved 2010-10-25.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Srivastava, Siddharth. "GSoC: MarbleToGo (Navigation Mode)". Blogspot. Retrieved 2010-10-25.
  7. ^ "A look at Geothek 1.1 Digital World Atlas". 2010-08-07.