



Choose Run, and the KML file will be created, and opened in Google Earth automatically if the checkbox at the bottom is set. Check the box next to Make Grid, select the line color, and then the number of lines or the distance between lines (in kilometers). Save them as a KML file (not KMZ), and open them in GE-Path. Suppose you enter two points in Google Earth, and want to create an equally-spaced or constant-distance grid between the points. Here’s the program interface:Īnd here are a few examples of its use. GE-Path allows you to take point data, either from a KML file, a spreadsheet, or entered manually, and create paths and polygons from them. In his post, he describes another great Google Earth utility from the same author that I was also planning to post on, and here it finally is. Frank over at Google Earth Blog was nice enough to link to my post last week about GE-Graph.
