If you are a programmer you will probably be fascinated by the topic of Network Links. If you understand basic HTML/XML you can easily get started by saving a simple placemark you’ve created as a KML file (not the default KMZ), and looking at the resulting text file. For KMZ files without images, the file size will be much smaller than the equivalent KML file. That way you can share these details without having to reference the files through some link to the Internet. One of the more powerful features of KMZ is that it allows any images you use – say custom icons, or images in your descriptions – to be zipped up within the KMZ file. It is the default format for KML because it is a compressed version of the file. You can learn about KML from the KML Tutorial, or get the full details from the KML Documentation. ![]() If you understand HTML/XML you will have little problem understanding the syntax of KML. KML stands for Keyhole Markup Language (Keyhole was the name of the application before Google bought it and added their own features and larger databases). ![]() I won’t go into detail here, since there are excellent reference documents available from Google (see below). So, what are these KML and KMZ files anyway? They are Google Earth’s file format for storing placemarks, network link information, and much more.
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