Official Google Blog |
- Rain or shine, see the weather in Google Maps
- Magnifier: Taking a closer look at great music
- Street View goes to the Amazon
| Rain or shine, see the weather in Google Maps Posted: 18 Aug 2011 09:39 AM PDT (Cross-posted on the LatLong blog) Whether you're organizing a trip overseas or a picnic at a local park, knowing the weather forecast is a crucial part of the planning process. Today, we're adding a weather layer on Google Maps that displays current temps and conditions around the globe, and will hopefully make travel and activity planning easier. To add the weather layer, hover over the widget in the upper right corner of Google Maps and select the weather layer from the list of options. When zoomed out, you'll see a map with current weather conditions from weather.com for various locations, with icons to denote sun, clouds, rain and so on. You can also see cloud coverage, thanks to our partners at the U.S. Naval Research Lab. And, if you look closely, you can also tell if it's day or night around the world by sun and moon icons. Enabling the weather layer also gives you an instant weather report for friends and family living around the world. For example, it looks like my family in London isn't experiencing the best summer weather right now: Weather near London, UK Clicking on the weather icon for a particular city will open an info window with detailed data like current humidity and wind conditions, as well as a forecast for the next four days. Below is the upcoming forecast for my location in wintertime Sydney, which seems to have the similar weather as London! Weather near Sydney, Australia in satellite view Changing the units of wind speed (Mph/KMph/Mps) and temperature (F/C), and enabling or disabling the clouds (when you're zoomed out), can also be done from the left-hand panel. Weather left hand panel Get started now and check out the weather layer here. |
| Magnifier: Taking a closer look at great music Posted: 17 Aug 2011 04:48 PM PDT Three months ago at Google I/O we launched Music Beta, a service that lets you upload your personal music collection to the cloud and listen to it on the web or your Android phone or tablet. Since the beginning, our goal has been to help you fall in love with your music all over again, and now we're taking that idea one step further. Today we introduced Magnifier, a new music discovery site that will keep your collection growing. Magnifier will feature great music and the people who make it, including videos of live performances, interviews with artists, explorations of different musical genres and free songs that you can add to your Music Beta collection. The featured artist on Magnifier this week is Grammy-nominated indie rock band My Morning Jacket. We're giving away two of their tracks to Music Beta users, one of which is an exclusive to Magnifier: a live performance of "The Day is Coming." To get these free tracks and hundreds of other songs in our Free Song Archive, you need a Music Beta by Google account (if you don't have an account, request an invitation). Head over to Magnifier, find the songs you want, click on the "Add free music" buttons and the tracks will be instantly added to your library in Music Beta. Stop by Magnifier regularly to get the free Song of the Day and reignite your passion for music. |
| Street View goes to the Amazon Posted: 18 Aug 2011 09:24 AM PDT With Google Street View, you can do amazing things such as hike around Stonehenge or even ski down Whistler's slopes—all without leaving home. Soon, you'll be able to float down the Amazon and Rio Negro Rivers of northwest Brazil and experience some of the most remote and biodiverse areas in the world. A few members of our Brazil and U.S. Street View and Google Earth Outreach teams are currently in the Amazon rainforest using our Street View technology to capture images of the river, surrounding forests and adjacent river communities. In partnership with the Foundation for a Sustainable Amazon (FAS), the local non-profit conservation organization that invited us to the area, we're training some of FAS's representatives on the imagery collection process and leaving some of our equipment behind for them to continue the work. By teaching locals how to operate these tools, they can continue sharing their points of view, culture and ways of life with audiences across the globe. We'll pedal the Street View trike along the narrow dirt paths of the Amazon villages and maneuver it up close to where civilization meets the rainforest. We'll also mount it onto a boat to take photographs as the boat floats down the river. The tripod—which is the same system we use to capture imagery of business interiors—will also be used to give you a sense of what it's like to live and work in places such as an Amazonian community center and school. Image of the Tumbira community in the Rio Negro Sustainable Development Reserve In this first phase of the project, the Google and FAS teams will visit and capture imagery from a 50km section of the Rio Negro River, extending from the Tumbira community near Manaus—the capital of the state of Amazonas—to the Terra Preta community. We'll then process the imagery of the river and the communities as usual, stitching the still photos into 360-degree panoramics. Image of the Tumbira Community For many outdoor enthusiasts, travelers and environmentalists, this creates an opportunity to experience the wonders of the Amazon, which will be accessible in a way they'd previously only dreamed about. We're honored to work with FAS on this project to bring the Amazon online for those who can't visit in person, and help our partners share with the world the unique stories of its inhabitants and the beauty of this place they call home. View Larger Map Click the above album for more photos of our team's work in the Amazon, and the communities with which they're working. Update 8/18/11: We've added a photo album to this post. |
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