Google Earth Comes to the iPhone.
Here's a video walkthrough from Peter Birch, Google Earth's project manager.
Click here to download the app for your iPhone from the iTunes App Store.
Here's a video walkthrough from Peter Birch, Google Earth's project manager.
Click here to download the app for your iPhone from the iTunes App Store.
MIT's Technology Review just published it's list of 10 Emerging Technologies for 2008. The one piece that resonated with me is Sandy Pentland's exploration into Reality Mining especially in relation to social networking, new media and interactive.
Reality mining "is all about paying attention to patterns in life and using that information to help [with] things like setting privacy patterns, sharing things with people, notifying people–basically, to help you live your life."
Remember that Gmail viral effort I mentioned a while back?
Well they got all their submissions (over 1,100), and the final video has been assembled and is ready for your viewing pleasure.
Great effort, GOOG. Check it out:
And here's a map that shows where in the world all these videos were sent from.
Awesome touch!
I'm seeing the rumor mill pick up some serious steam on the oft-talked-about gPhone (real name TBD) to (possibly) be released by the Google.
The Wired Blog Compiler has a nifty little post hinting that an official announcement may come as early as September. Here's what you need to know:
According to Rizzn's source at Google, the device runs a modified version of the Linux kernel and has GPS built in. The positioning system will be used to power a Google Maps application, and the phone will also have tight integration with other Google apps like Gmail, Calendar and Docs. The source for Rizzn's post notes that the company will announce the device in two weeks, and that a North American version will be available soon, possibly by the end of the year.Rizzn also notes that Google's mobile device "is less about beating the iPhone and more about beating the $100 Laptop" made by the OLPC project. He speculates that Google will sell the phones for cheap and then reap ad revenue from targeted, text-based ads served to the phone. This isn't entirely new information, but it's interesting to hear the comparison with the OLPC -- at the least, we'll see an inexpensive, accessible device that uses open-source software.
Read the rest here.
Voila. Google has made embed code available for all Google Maps.
To do this yourself, simply visit a Google Map, click the "Link to this page" link, and copy and paste the provided code in your blog, profile, or GeoCities site.
Speaking of maps, does anyone have any information as to when or why Amazon's A9 got rid of their map feature? They had some really cool "block view" technology that held some promise...
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