Becausethe original poster is the only one that can mark a reply as helping or solving their question. So, at the time of the reply, the OP determined it answered their question. Additionally, posting here does not get information to Apple. This is a user to user support forum and Apple does not participate here for information. The way they get information from users is with the feedback link. If you wish for Apple to see your comments/complaints/suggestions about their products, use the feedback link here, Product Feedback - Apple and you can report mapping issues directly from the Maps app.
iOS15 shows an older version of satellite pictures. Comparing to Google maps or Apple Maps on older devices with previous iOS versions shows are current version of satellite maps. Glitch needed to be fixed?
If you use Studio, Mapbox GL JS, or the Mapbox Mobile SDKs, you are already using the Styles API. This documentation is useful for software developers who want to programmatically read and write these resources. It isn't necessary for you to read or understand this reference to design or use Mapbox maps.
You will need to be familiar with the Mapbox Style Specification to use the Styles API. The Mapbox Style Specification defines the structure of map styles and is the open standard that helps Studio communicate with APIs and produce maps that are compatible with Mapbox libraries.
To use Mapbox Standard, you need to use GL JS v3 or newer on the web and on mobile Mobile Maps SDKs v11 or newer. Unless another style URL is specified, Mapbox Standard is the default map for these SDK versions.
The underlying paradigm to the Standard style is different from other Mapbox styles. Layers in Standard are not modifiable asides from the predefined configuration options. Mapbox manages the basemap experience and only surfaces key global styling configurations - in return, you get a carefully designed, cohesive visual experience and an evergreen map, always featuring the latest data, styling and rendering features compatible with your SDK.
Search. The provider allows you to narrow down the search for free satellite imagery by area, date, and cloud cover percentage. All the found tiles can be conveniently previewed one by one or all at once.
EOSDA LandViewer is a GIS database with an easy-to-master interface that gives free access to the most widely used open-data satellite maps, offers free previews of high-resolution satellite imagery, allowing you to select and order only the ones you require, and features extensive analytic tools.
Imagery. EOSDA LandViewer offers miscellaneous global satellite imagery. You can get the most recent free satellite images from Landsat 7, Landsat 8, Sentinel-1, Sentinel-2, CBERS-4, MODIS, aerial data from NAIP, or historical satellite imagery from Landsat 4 and Landsat 5.
Search. The search for free satellite topographic maps is simple and straightforward: once you set the Area of Interest using one of the multiple options (including file upload), select the type of sensor, and pick the dates. Additionally, you are free to apply cloud cover percentage, solar elevation, and AOI coverage percentage filters. Make sure to save your Area of Interest and subscribe to new scenes to get notifications about the newest satellite images, free of charge, available for your chosen territory.
Imagery. Currently, the provider brings to users the most up-to-date free satellite imagery from all active Sentinels: radar data from Sentinel-1, optical multispectral Sentinel-2 data, Sentinel-3 land products for environmental monitoring, and atmosphere and air quality data from Sentinel-5P.
Analysis. The Browser provides a free visual representation of the search results. It also has several features to facilitate spatial analysis. Some examples are pinning specific locations, measuring distances between two points on the map, and comparing two photos.
Imagery. EO Browser holds around a dozen medium- and low-resolution free satellite imagery sets, including complete archives of all the Sentinel missions, Landsat 5-8, MODIS, Envisat Meris, Proba-V, and GIBS products. Sentinel Playground, in turn, contains a satellite imagery mosaic of the globe derived from Sentinel-2, Landsat 8, MODIS, or DEM.
Download. With Sentinel Playground, you can obtain parts of the mosaic (JPEG); EO Browser enables the downloading of full-resolution photos in various formats (JPEG, KMZ, GeoTIFF) or separate bands and band combinations.
EO Browser is an easy-to-master web service with a decent selection of free medium-resolution satellite imagery. One of its advantages is the ability to analyze and visualize data. Sentinel Playground is more of a free service for having fun exploring and sharing fragments of the satellite imagery mosaic of the world.
Download. Depending on the dataset, free satellite imagery download may require a few extra clicks to approve certain applications. Also, not all the free data from the provider can be previewed prior to saving to the PC.
Search. This free catalog is simple and laconic. The search can be conveniently limited to specific countries/areas, dates, or cloud cover percentages. You are free to preview the found tiles on a map, both separately and all at once.
Imagery. The spatial resolution depends on the area, and the most precisely captured regions are Las Vegas, Nevada, and Cambridge (15 cm). Free up-to-date satellite images from this provider come from Landsat-8 as well as aircraft, drones, kites, and balloons.
Search. The program allows entering the geographic location and hovering the mouse to zoom. Some satellite maps offered by the provider may be decades old. You can also see a 2D and 3D representation of Earth for free.
Analysis. To make up for the absence of analytical tools in Google Earth, the provider offers a separate platform, Earth Engine, as a free resource to the academic, research, and development communities.
The free software provider belongs to the NOAA Office for Coastal Management and gives access to satellite imagery of the coastal regions of the contiguous United States, Alaska, Hawaii, and the territories.
Imagery. Free of charge, the user can choose between three satellite data types: imagery, land cover, and elevation/lidar. The data is sorted out by provider, year (ascending or descending), and dataset name. Free imagery is available in infrared and natural color.
Imagery. Some free datasets of the provider are derived from POES and GOES (Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite and Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite, correspondingly). Other popular satellite systems made available by the provider include the Global Navigation Satellite System, the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program, Radarsat, and some others. Users are free to select resolutions (e.g., 1 m or 4 m).
Analysis. For data extraction, users are free to choose the output format, bands, channel number, resolution, map overlay, and bit/pixels. Order status can be tracked in the navigation panel and with email notifications from the provider.
The registry of AWS resources enables users to view or share available datasets from various providers as well as apply them in various fields of interest. Most datasets are maintained and provided by third-party providers.
Imagery. Free spatial collections originate from different types of satellites (Sentinel-2, Landsat-8, NEXRAD, GOES-16 and 17, CBERS on AWS, and many others). The platform highlights usage examples referring to agriculture, disaster response, geospatial technology, and more.
Search. In the registry of providers, for certain tags, you can find as many as 80 free satellite imagery datasets in various formats. For example, Sentinel-2 products include multispectral mosaic data (GeoPackage or MapCache SQLite files) or GeoTIFFs (RGB or RGB/NIR).
Download. If you want to download free satellite imagery from one of the service providers on the list, go to the specific product. In the case of Sentinel-2 cloudless, select the area and get a picture in a new window, which you can save on your PC or send to a mobile device.
With the help of this service provider, users can check the current situation regarding weather, storms, and wildfires or date back to 2000 or later (depending on the location), setting the year, month, date, and time.
Search. The most up-to-date free satellite maps come from NOAA GOES, JMA Himawari-8, EUMETSAT Meteosat, GIBS, Suomi-NPP, MODIS Aqua, and Terra. Historical archives of the provider are credited to Bing and Esri. To search for a location, you just need to enter it in the field.
Analysis. The provider offers no specific features for imagery analysis apart from sorting out map labels, live and daily satellites, daily fire spots, or storm tracks. There is an option to measure area and distance on the map and zoom to the center, as well as to pass to your location, all for free.
The product is designated to help rescue missions manage disasters and respond to emergencies. It is a reputable provider of free information on natural calamities like hurricanes, typhoons, wildfires, floods, explosions, and earthquakes, with brief descriptions and photos.
Search. Searching by events and dates is possible by clicking or swiping the timescale. Most of the photos are available in standard geospatial projection, including those of the Arctic and Antarctic.
Analysis. The provider gives you a plethora of overlays, base layers, and additional map layers for multiple modifications to check air quality, dust storms, droughts, floods, vegetation, ash plumes, and shipping, among others.
Imagery. It has a 30-m horizontal resolution (hence the acronym AW3D30). The free satellite imagery provider is built on over 3 million images obtained with the PRISM tool onboard DAICHI, the Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS, for short). The mission lasted from 2006 to 2011.
Download. The free satellite imagery of the provider can be loaded via the link to the dataset; registration is required. The original DSM files are displayed in the GeoTiff format, which can be further converted to SRTM HGT.
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