Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Now that you've got a Google Earth map its time to embed it in your Google
Site
Then you upload your map's kml file to the web-- we will do this by uploading it
to the Files page in your Google Site
Go to your File page and click +Add Files. This will give you a Browse box. Find
your kml file in your computer and click Upload
Once you have your Google Earth kml file uploaded to
your File page it is available for you to use in gadgets that
can be embedded in Google Sites-- you use the file's
URL when it comes time to embed the gadget.
http://code.google.com/apis/kml/embed/embedkmlgadget.xml
Scroll down to Copy Link Location and click on it-- you got it
This will be the URL that you will use for your Google Earth map-- this is
what you will paste into the gadget in a couple more steps
Now its time to find the gadget that you will paste this kml file's URL into:
● Go to your Map page in your portfolio
● Get in Edit mode
● Click on Insert>More Gadgets
● Then choose Add Gadget by URL (it is circled below)
In the KML or My Maps URL box you paste in the URL from
your Google Earth map (the one that you added to your File
page a couple of steps ago)
You will see the usual grey box for the gadget while you are in Edit mode,
but once you Save you will see your map. The cool thing is that the
Google Earth map is interactive-- you can zoom and move around in the
map and open the map marker balloons that you created. Its like having a
window into your Google Earth embedded in your e-portfolio.
If you want a bigger map, go to Edit mode and delete the Tips in the right hand
sidebar. Then click on Layout and make the page a single column (this
removes the Right sidebar and gives you more space). Now you can make the
map as wide as the page.
To make your map larger, get into Edit mode and
click on the Google Gadget. This gives you a
formatting toolbar. Click on the little Gear button
(circled below) to get the Properties menu.
Make the Width 100 Percent (not 100 Pixels!) so that it
will always be as wide as your page, no matter how wide
(or skinny) you make the page.
Make sure that you write a few sentences explaining
what the map shows us and why you made it.