Louis R wrote:It's a noble work, indeed, but, unfortunately, premature since careful inspection shows that the ends of that MTT map don't match up or overlap and it ends on different parallels north and south. I won't swear to it, but I don't think either side reaches its respective pole [that conjecture depends on unproven assumptions about scale]
dobriennm wrote:Louis R wrote:There are more recent partial maps in Downloads.
Unfortunately, Himself hasn't let anyone have a full map since MTT. Presumably because he's now filled in enough detail we would be able to deduce too much of what's coming next.
While not a completely updated map, one of the posters here created a Safehold Globe which incorporates the latest partial maps at
Illustrating David Weber's Books.
Unfortunately, it's complicated, but you essentially install the Celestia software and then the Safehold Addon Version 2 (Safehold_V2.zip).
Then you can turn the globe around, see it from any angle and zoom in to the max resolution. It includes the latest partial maps as overlays. I think the base map is MTT, though.
It's neat to see Safehold as a actual world in space and "fly" around it.
It is a little complicated to set up the first time, but very neat to look at.
And apologies to the individual who did all this work, but I forgot your name
All true, but still the best available. And some of the faults (like ends not matching up or some of the overlap plus the poles), as I understand it, are due to a combination of the limitations of the Author's maps, projecting a flat map onto a sphere, limitations of the Celestia software and trying to "fit" the partial maps back onto the MTT map.
It's essentially the problem the Author would have if he tried to convert his present maps to a globe representation. He'd get more accurate distances (I believe - think Greenland looking larger than South America on most world maps - though maybe his mapping software compensates for that), but the effort involved would be tremendous. Plus, I'm not sure what presently available software is available to do the global spherical map.(I believe Celestia is good for viewing, but I'm not sure how good it is for mapping/distances purposes)
The Author has discussed some of the problems he's had with his mapping software in other threads. Since the writing started in the 2007 time-frame, he's done the best he could do with what was available at the time.
I personally like the globe representation. When the Author starts talking about sending ships out and having to go the long way, looking at the globe (and rotating it) gives me a better feel than a map where I have to mentally "wrap" it around.
And the detailed map overlays may be approximate locations, but it's close and still gives you a better feel for the action in the books plus all of the detailed maps are available in one view. So it's easy to rotate the globe to each of the detailed maps quickly in one browser window.