(Backup your registry first if you are unsure about messing anything up) Uninstalled the old version I was attempting to get workingÄeleted the old registry folders remaining I managed to get Earth working, minus Street View. It confirms the end of support for older versions. There's not much else to do this time of year! I found this after spending most of yesterday on a solution. Thank you Mike and Elizabeth for your replies. You'll ALSO need a pretty good, high-speed broadband connection for it to do anything more than appear 'sluggish'.! A Core2Duo will NOT 'cut the mustard' with this thing its hardware/processing requirements are, quite frankly, bloody ridiculous. The only folks I know who get anything like a decent experience with it are running 8- or 16-core i7s/i9s, with powerful Nvidia RTX 2xxx-series GPUs. It also needs pretty powerful hardware, as well my own, quad-core Pentium 'Gold' G5400, running at nearly 4 GHz, with all 'mod cons', struggles with it.and that's with 32 GB of DDR4. And unfortunately, only recent releases support all this stuff.and I'm pretty certain XP is no longer supported. The best of these is probably SRWare's 'Iron' browser whatever you use, it must support WebRTC and make use of hardware acceleration derived from a discrete graphics card. Google's ultimate aim is to have everybody using the new Google Earth Web browser 'app'.and it will ONLY work in Chrome, too (or a Chromium-derived 'clone'). It has two components the user desktop 'client', and the matching server-side component.and the two have to work together (and these always have to be matching versions, too). Google Earth is a little bit different to most applications. We had to update to newer versions in Puppy Linux a little while back for the same reason. ![]() ![]() I think you'll find that Google have 'switched off' the servers for this version, in line with their 'sunsetting' policy.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |