Google Captures 'Street View' of Underwater Habitats 66
hypnosec writes "Google has released the first-ever underwater 'street view' images of some of the world's most famous undersea locations — the Great Barrier Reef, Hawaii's Hanauma Bay, and Apo Island in the Philippines. Google collaborated with Caitlin Seaview Survey using a specialized SVII camera to capture the amazing underwater images. The camera travels at 2.5 mph, capturing a 360-degree panorama with geolocation information and a compass heading every 3 seconds."
Check it out.
Not so good (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm starting to think that street view is really starting to mess with tourism. At least repeat visitors. I worked in Tel-Aviv around 15 years ago, always wanted to come back for a visit, but once the street-view'ed the city and I was able to check out where I lived, worked, and so on I just though "pretty much the same" and closed the browser.
This 'check everything' from home will soon take a hit on the beauty of traveling, and being places worth seeing.
Re:Not so good (Score:5, Insightful)
On the other side of the coin, that trip to tel aviv can now be replaced by going somewhere new.
Reduction of Carbon Footprint (Score:5, Insightful)
Surely looking at Tel Aviv through an iPad with an especially low power draw would offset an awful lot of carbon that otherwise would have been spewed into the atmosphere by flying you there to reminisce...
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Re:Not so good (Score:5, Insightful)
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I agree that it is better to see things in person. But not everyone can go everywhere.
There may be a day when I am too infirm to travel, so just think of the "Imagination Vacations" I can take with Google (or whoever is big at that time) without leaving home. Heck, I do that now from my desk when I'm sick of working.
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To be honest, "real" travel is over-rated.
1. You have to schedule time off from work. This can be extremely difficult if you work multiple jobs.
2. You have to forgo the pay you would have gotten (unless you're lucky enough to have paid vacation).
3. You have to plan the trip, book airline tickets, book hotels, book transportation, etc. or pay someone to do it.
4. The expense of the above.
5. If we're talking international travel, there's the hassle of getting a passport, visa, currency exchange, language barri
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This 'check everything' from home will soon take a hit on the beauty of traveling, and being places worth seeing.
Some people won't mind [etravelblackboard.com]
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beauty of traveling
Unless you have a fluffy, intelligent pegasus I can travel around on that takes me from my house to my hotel via instantaneous wormholes that phrase does not compute.
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Didn't you hear? They started hiring fashion models to work in TSA so you can at least try to enjoy getting felt up.
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Oh...
Can I still have the pegasus?
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Just uninstall Flash. Then you can't use street view. Now you have to travel!
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Just uninstall Flash.
And Google Earth.
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Safari on my home Mac doesn't have Flash, and often displays the "Install Flash" message, especially on Youtube. But on several occasions it has inexplicably been able to go to Street View, with navigation and other controls working as expected. Right-clicking on the Street View confirms that it's not using Flash. There must be some trigger or URL parameter that makes it offer the non-Flash version, but I haven't looked too closely into it.
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As a scuba diver I have to say, the experience is not the same. Static images don't give you enough information or the same feel as being there in person. You can't see (or experience) a cleaning station [wikipedia.org] from pictures. You can't experience the sensation of floating in mid-water while watching a shark swim back and forth around a reef below you. You can't hear the sounds, feel the water.
What it does do is give people the ability to see something that they may otherwise never experience in person. Never
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If you believe what some on here write, they're too busy doing other things to go shopping for food or clothes, music, tvs, heck, just about everything, which is why they sit in their dark rooms and order everything via these interwebs. It's too much of a hassle to go out into the world and spend time interacting with other people.
This is essentially the same thing. Why bother go and e
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Such pictures may help people appreciate the oceans more, and Tel Aviv more too for that matter. Maybe we won't travel as much, but we may come to a greater appreciation of what we have.
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I'm starting to think that street view is really starting to mess with tourism.
There's a HUGE chunk of the internet-connected world that can't afford to travel, and there's another large chunk of people who can maybe afford some travel but don't normally think of it. Something like Street View might give them a taste or awaken them to opportunities they never considered. Which could ultimately increase tourism. While we're speculating, let's ask what Street View might mean to some economically disadvantaged kid growing up in an ideological monoculture, eh? That might be their first re
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On the up side, previously over crowded tourist spots will be less crowded and worth visiting again?
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Your move, Apple. (Score:4, Funny)
Your move, Apple.
Re:Your move, Apple. (Score:5, Funny)
Apple was actually first on this, with their mapping of sub-oceanic starbucks.
Re:Your move, Apple. (Score:5, Funny)
Your move, Apple.
In other news, hot-on-the-heels of Google's release of Underwater Street View, Apple has filed a preliminary injunction against USW claiming Google's use of the the terms "Street" and "Ocean" violate 14 of Apple's patents. Among them, Apple cites two in particular: patent 1345-B which covers the use of "Words relating to rectangular shape or design" and patent 3821-F "Color variations of AppleBlue-13 developed by Apple Inc". A preliminary hearing is set for Dec 13th 2012.
That ain't a real starfish! (Score:2)
> underwater 'street view'
Watch out for the naked clown fish.
Damn it! (Score:5, Funny)
I want my home pixelated!
-Signed, a mollusc.
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Don't worry. It said 'Address is Approximate' - they'll never be able to find you.
I misread (Score:1)
Thought it said Underwater Hobbits somewhere in the Gulf of Tolkien...
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Gulf of Tolkien
Wait, wasn't that incident what started the whole Middle Earth war?
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nah, it was an ancient and mostly failed LAN networking standard, 802.4, aka tolkien bus.
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You had your chance and blew it! It's 802.5, tolkien ring...
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Don't you mean "wasn't that the concocted and overblown incident used as an excuse to start the whole Middle Earth war?"
What's next? (Score:2)
I had thought that the next "street-view" would be of popular and exotic hiking trails. I guess that's harder to pull off.
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It's hard to move a camera along the more remote regions of, say, the Appalachian Trail. Consider that what you'd be asking for is for somebody to go 10 feet down the trail, stop, steady the camera, take a panoramic picture, walk another 10 feet, etc. If it takes 30 seconds to take a picture, that's approximately 4.2 hours to go 1 mile. Also particularly interesting would be the spots where stopping to take this picture puts you halfway up a rock face or wading through a pond (I'm not making those scenarios
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I agree, it's clear in retrospect.
I can't wait for my virtual underwater trip down the Mississippi with this technology! :-)
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Right, that's because the cameras are mounted on top of the car and set up to take pictures automatically. There's no way to do that on a footpath, because the only way you can move something in there is for somebody to carry it.
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The cart would have a tough time: Try taking a cart along this [franklinsites.com] or this [atwaterboy.com]. For a backpack, the problem is that the backpack is attached to the back of a person who has to stop for a while to steady and aim the camera.
For those who can never go wonderful! (Score:5, Interesting)
I have worked in seniors facilities helping take care of shut ins and what Google has done with street view is a wonderful thing. There is nothing more satisfying than watching a 90 year old who was born in a Dublin slum cry as you walk them down the shanty streets where they grew up.
Piss on all the fud that "Google is evil, you can't trust them with your data" that many anti Google paid shill "high tech pundits" are currently spreading.
Sorry but in the real world what Google has done for those who can't get out is wonderful and beyond that think about how important it is to allow others to actually see your culture and how you live. If someone in China can look at a town in Northern Canada and see the actual poverty of Native Indians or see remote places and poor districts in Chicago I do not find it wrong. They will know that we as a people exist not that differently from them in their ghettos and slums. Is this really a bad thing?
DO not for one second think that Google's street view is just about that which is perfect in the world. I would highly encourage Google to also use the underwater street view in a few places that would make some people cringe and take notice of what has happened to the environment where people are not just eco tourists as well.
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This is a great point. Before all this technology, you had to find paper photos of some place that other people took, or had to have the financial and physical means to actually go somewhere to see it. Google has opened up experiences to people who otherwise wouldn't have been able to take part.
ala Google Backpacks program? (Score:3)
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I learned to dive in San Diego. Some of my favorite dives ever are in the San Diego Area
What, no Venice? (Score:1)
For actual underwater streets, they ought to head to Italy!
Underwater? Finally! (Score:1)
I've always wanted to stroll down Main Street, Atlantis!
Self diving car? (Score:2)
Somehow this would be more poetic if it resulted from a 'GPS Accident' with their self-driving cars.