Unable to “View in Google Earth” GPS tracks opened in Garmin BaseCamp or Mapsource – Solution
When
I first installed Garmin MapSource (and later BaseCamp) I could open
GPS tracks (gpx files) in it and select “View in Google Earth”
and Google Earth would open and I would be able to see the tracks in
Goggle Earth.
Like
many of you, as my recent online research discovered, a while back I
became unable to do that but instead I saw a message saying I had to
have Google Earth installed (which I did). At that time the solution
was as simple as opening Google Earth before attempting to “View in
Google Earth” from within MapSource.
However
more recently that stopped working and even after re-installing
Goggle Earth I could not view the tracks I had open in MapSource (or
BaseCamp) in Google Earth.
That
is when I went looking online for solutions. The first solutions I
found involved editing the Windows registry which I am very leery of
attempting so I passed on that solution.
The
solution I used involved uninstalling Google Earth and installing an
older previous version of Google Earth which I found at
http://www.oldversion.com/.
The version I installed was version 7.0.2.8415 from
http://www.oldversion.com/windows/google-earth-7-0-2-8415.
This
returned the original functionality of being able to open GPS tracks
in it and select “View in Google Earth” and Google Earth would
open and I would be able to see the tracks in Goggle Earth.
This
did mean that I did not have all the benefits of the newest version
of Google Earth but that was solved by also installing the latest
version of Google Earth Pro now
available free from
https://www.google.com/earth/download/gep/agree.html.
After
saving the tracks in the older version of Google Earth I simply
opened the latest version of Google Earth Pro and the tracks were
there to view and edit or manipulate as I wished.
I
should point out that through this troubleshooting process I
uninstalled and re-installed Google Earth several times and never
lost the GPS tracks I had saved in Google Earth and they were all
available in the installed older version of Google Earth and the
newly installed version of Google Earth Pro.
I
hope this solution is helpful to others who have experienced the same
problem as I did.
It
appears I will still need to use the computer version of Google
Earth (version 7) to create Google Earth view maps, though I may
experiment with importing the tracks into the new version to see if
there are any advantages to viewing them from it.
UPDATE
2017-04-18
Today
the new Google Chrome only web-based version of Google Earth (version
9) was released.
On
the basis of a preliminary examination I have discovered the
following.
It
does not appear to have the gpx file import (via MapSource or
BaseCamp) nor the track editing capability that version 7 of Google
Earth or Google Earth Pro does.
You
can, however, get your tracks from Google Earth 7 into the new
version by exporting them to your computer as kml files and then
importing them into Google Earth version 9.