Generals Maps Download

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Hilma Klingaman

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Aug 3, 2024, 4:00:15 PM8/3/24
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World Builder Information
Resources for the World Builder program, which allows you to create maps for C&C Generals and Zero Hour. Includes frequently asked questions and tutorials on how to create your own maps using World Builder.

Official World Builder Manual for C&C Generals
Electronic Arts' official C&C Generals World Builder manual (Adobe PDF Document)

Mapping and Scripting Tutorials
Tutorials for creating your own maps and scripts using World Builder.

World Builder FAQs
Frequently asked questions about World Builder; contains information about how to troubleshoot common application errors.

Maps & Mods Forum
For discussing your C&C Generals or Zero Hour map. A place to ask and learn from the pros.

This category includes maps that typically portray the physical environment and a variety of cultural elements for a geographic area at a particular point in time. The maps in this category show a geographic area larger than a city or town and do not display a subject that is part of one of the thematic categories.

Grid-cell length & grid-cell area maps.
The grid-cell length and grid-cell area maps are used in LISFLOOD model to accurately compute the areal sums over grid-cells (e.g. the upstream area of the river when areas of all connected grid-cells are summed together or the rainfall amount over a certain grid-cell). If projection properties are in meters these maps become optional.

To create the grid-cell area, the ee.Image.pixelArea() function in Google Earth Engine can be used, that computes the value of each grid-cell in square meters considering all curves of the Globe, and specify the needed grids resolution (e.g. 1 and 3 arc min) along the longitude in meters.
Grid-cell length is computed dividing grid-cell area by its resolution along the longitude in meters.
Note: The pixel area and pixel length maps are given to the whole domain (i.e. not applying the ocean mask map).

Modesto Junior College now offers searchable interactive maps. Learn about our services, amenities, parking and other features around campus. Find the building, office or school you're looking for right on your computer or phone.

MJC now offers a Virtual Campus Tour. Explore MJC East and West Campus from home or on your phone. Use the Virtual Tour to discover spaces such as classrooms, laboratories, service areas, and more. Tour on your time, it's available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Persons with a valid handicap placard, under Section 22511. 5 CVC, may park in designated disabled parking stalls, or staff or student parking stalls if no disabled stalls are available. You may not use areas that are not indicated as parking areas. If you have a short-term disability, you may apply for a short-term permit at a Health Services office which will allow you to park closer to your class.

Visitor parking is available to persons that are not students, staff, faculty or guests of YCCD. Visitor parking is only available at spaces marked with a green curb. Visitor Parking is for 30 minutes only.

Complete copies of MJC's Parking and Traffic Regulations are available at the Campus Safety Office, the Business Office, and the Office of the Vice President of Student Services, Morris Building, 212.

Not all maps at the UI Library have been cataloged, however, so a paper index, located in the map room, can help you find even more maps. If you have a specific geographic area in mind (Europe, Costa Rica, or Idaho for example), the paper index can point you to the drawers where those maps are located. The index can also help you find maps on specific topics (natural resources, transportation routes, or demographics, for example). Just ask a reference librarian if you have questions about using the index.

GEBCO produces and makes available a range of bathymetric data sets and products. This includes a global bathymetric grid; gazetteer of undersea feature names, a Web Map Service and printable maps of ocean bathymetry.

Seabed 2030 is a collaborative project between the Nippon Foundation and GEBCO. It aims to bring together all available bathymetric data to produce the definitive map of the world ocean floor by 2030 and make it available to all.

The deepest depth measured so far in the oceans is around 10,920m in the Challenger Deep, part of the Mariana Trench, in the Northwest Pacific Ocean. For comparison, Mount Everest is around 8,850m high.

Since 2004, the Nippon Foundation/GEBCO Training Program has trained students from around the world in seafloor mapping through a one-year postgraduate course held at the University of New Hampshire, USA.

GEBCO's aim is to provide the most authoritative publicly-available bathymetry of the world's oceans. It operates under the joint auspices of the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) (of UNESCO).

Welcome to the VTrans Mapping Section's town highway map repository which contains the latest town highway maps plus a variety of older town highway maps for research purposes. From here you can search for maps by county, town, or year.

Learn more about the City of Oakland's Planning Code, Zoning information and maps, the General Plan and related Elements, and neighborhood plans and policy projects by following any of the links listed above.

The Texas State Archives Map Collection contains original maps, reproductions, and compiled maps (which incorporate information collected from various sources) covering the period from the early seventeenth century through the late twentieth century. These maps have been accessioned by the State Archives from a number of sources, including other state agencies, libraries, schools, businesses, and individuals. Please visit Maps in other TSLAC Collections for a list of our collections which include maps that may not be listed within this database.

Not all maps within our Map Collection have been digitized. The entries for maps that have been digitized will also include a small image of the map (clicking on this image will load a full size image within your browser), a link to download an image of the map, the image file size, and the date the map was scanned.

This topic describes the life cycle stages that Google Maps Platform productsand features may move through, such as the launch stages Experimental, Preview,and General Availability (GA), or end-of-life stages Deprecated andDecommissioned. Features in non-GA stages are tagged as such in thedocumentation with icons and notes.

Experiments are focused on getting customer feedback about a prototype. They arenot intended for production use or covered by any SLA, support obligation, ordeprecation policy and might be subject to backward-incompatible changes.Experimental releases are generally suitable for use in test environments onlyand typically last up to 12 months, but this may vary.

At Preview, a product or feature is ready for testing by customers beforeadopting it for production use at GA. Preview offerings are often publiclyannounced, but are not necessarily feature-complete, and Google provides no SLAsor technical support commitments for these. Unless stated otherwise by Google,Preview offerings are intended for use in test environments only. Subject to theterms described below, features in Preview are typically expected to reach GAwithin 12 months, but this may vary.

General Availability products and features are "production ready," though notalways universally available. Some GA releases may only be available to alimited group of customers. General Availability releases are covered by theGoogle Maps Platform Terms of Service,including theGoogle Maps Platform SLA andGoogle Maps Platform Technical Support Services Guidelines,where applicable. Google typically supports General Availability products andfeatures through APIs, SDKs, and the Google Cloud Console, except in unusualcircumstances where providing one or more of the foregoing capabilities isunreasonable in the context of the particular product or feature.

Some products or artifacts, such as client SDKs and the Maps JavaScript API, deliver pre-GA releases under industry-standardstability levels, such as "alpha" and"beta" channels. See the Maps JavaScript APIVersioning topic as an example. Also,Google Maps Platform SDKs for Android and iOS may use version numbers thatcontain an industry-standard stability level such as "beta" in the versionnumbering, such as v3.1.0-beta.

Some products and features that were released prior to the introduction of"Experimental" and "Preview" may be labeled with legacy launch stages such as"Early Access," "Alpha," and "Beta." Those legacy terms will continue to be usedfor the duration of those launches. In general, Early Access and Alpha aresimilar to Experimental, and Beta is similar to Preview. Any use of an EarlyAccess, Alpha, or Beta is subject to the terms and conditions defined in theGoogle Maps Platform Service Specific Terms.

Marking an offering deprecated indicates that the product, feature, or versionshould no longer be used. For more information, see the "Deprecation Policy"section of theGoogle Maps Platform Terms of Service.Features and products in the Google Maps Core Services listed at -platform/terms/maps-deprecation are subject to the Deprecation Policy.

Except as otherwise noted, the content of this page is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License, and code samples are licensed under the Apache 2.0 License. For details, see the Google Developers Site Policies. Java is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates.

The General Plan is the blueprint for land use in unincorporated Sonoma County. It includes maps that show where agricultural, residential, commercial and other land uses will be located, and a series of policies that guide future decisions about growth, development and conservation of resources.

Statutory authority for a general plan is expressed in Title 7, Division 1 of the Government Code of the State of California. Article 5, Section 65300 et seq. requires the County to adopt a comprehensive general plan to guide its future physical development. The plan may recognize local conditions in a format that is appropriate for the local agency. Although the General Plan must address a number of different subjects and elements, the County may choose the degree of specificity and level of detail that is appropriate for its circumstances.

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