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Tag: views

  • Google Lets Anyone Create Street View Imagery For Google Maps

    Google has now enabled users to create their own Street View imagery to share and make visible to people using Google Maps. Now the amount of Street View imagery available is going to grow tremendously, offering a lot more to people looking to check out areas of the world they intend to travel to or just want to look at from afar.

    Users will no longer only see one version of what a location has to offer. Obviously a variety of factors can affect the scenery, and because of Google’s latest offering, users will have the opportunity to see a wider variety of conditions for any given place.

    “We are excited to see the different types of Street View experiences that everyone will contribute,” says Google product manager Evan Rapoport. “For example, this feature can now enable environmental non-profits to document and promote the beautiful places they strive to protect. It also opens up a new tool for photographers to showcase diversity in a specific location — by times of day, weather conditions or cultural events — in a way that Street View currently doesn’t cover.”

    The feature comes as part of the Views offering Google launched earlier this year, enabling users to make their “photo spheres” available via Google Maps.

    Views lets users showcase their work and plot photos on Google Maps. The new offering is a tool that stitches the photos together to create 360º Street View imagery. Users create their photo spheres, share them on Views, select the spheres from their profile, and the tool will connect them together. Once connected and published, others can navigate between them on Google Maps just like regular Street View. They can also be kept private if the user prefers. Google calls the stitched-together collections “constellations”.

    Constellations

    You can get a step-by-step walkthrough for creating constellations here. You may have to do some dragging and dropping and rotating of imagery. Google gives users a few tips, such as only connecting spheres that can be navigated in real life (this isn’t Inception). Don’t, for example, connect photo spheres that cross walls, buildings, etc. It’s also worth noting that removing a photos sphere from a constellation does not delete the sphere. More on photo sphere management here.

    “We hope this new feature will enable people to share and witness the beauty and breadth of our planet through Google Maps,” says Rapoport. “Whether you’re photographing exotic islands or your favorite neighborhood hangout, mountain peaks or city streets, historic castles or your own business, we’re thrilled to see the places you love coming to life on Google Maps.”

    The Street View experiences that you create are embeddable, so you can share them wherever you like.

    Google has been working hard to gain Street View imagery in more exotic (and practical) locations, employing various pieces of equipment (like trikes and Trekkers). Giving users the ability to contribute with their phones and cameras, however, is bound to increase Google’s photographic coverage in ways that even the search giant is unable to get on its own.

    Image: Google

  • Google Adds ‘Behind The Views’ Content To Street View Collections

    Google announced today that it is adding “behind-the-scenes” content like photography, video, audio tours, etc. to its Street View Collections site on the recently launched Views. The content can be accessed from a “Go Behind the Views” icon.

    “Our first two multimedia adventures enable you to experience the Canadian Arctic in Iqaluit, Canada, and the world’s tallest building, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, UAE,” says Street View program manager Deanna Yick in a blog post. “We also invite you enjoy photos and videos from our past journeys to the Grand Canyon, the base camp of Mount Everest, the Amazon Basin, the Great Barrier Reef and the NASA Kennedy Space Center — minus the extreme temperatures and long plane rides! If you’re on the Views page for those specific collections, just click on the “About this place” button on the upper right hand corner.”

    “As we trek around collecting more imagery of interesting places across the globe, we’ll continue to add more content to these sections of the Views site,” she adds. “So come back often to check them out, get behind-the-scenes insight into how Street View imagery is collected, and learn fun facts and details about these select locations.”

    More on Views here.

  • Google Launches ‘Views’ Site To Get Users’ Photo Spheres On Google Maps

    Google Launches ‘Views’ Site To Get Users’ Photo Spheres On Google Maps

    Google announced the launch of a new site called Views to showcase users’ photo spheres that are shared to Google Maps. Users’ Views pages will let people browse the photos and plot them on the earth via Google Maps so people can quickly see where they were taken.

    Google is constantly updating its Street View imagery to be more comprehensive, and with photo spheres, which are simply 360º panoramas (not unlike Street View shots) that can be taken with Android phones (4.2+), Google can greatly enhance the available imagery in Google Maps even more by way of crowdsourcing.

    You can also use a DSLR camera.

    This is what a user’s Views page looks like:

    Google Views

    “Since Views also incorporates the Street View Gallery, you can check out incredible panoramas of our most popular Street View collections, from the Grand Canyon to the Swiss Alps,” notes Google Maps and Photo Sphere product manager Evan Rapoport. “Just click on ‘Explore’ at the top of the Views site to browse a map of these special collections right alongside community-contributed photo spheres.”

    To upload the photo spheres, sign into the Views site with your Google account, click the blue camera button on the top right of the page, and import. You can also upload them to Views from Gallery in Android when you tap “Share” and select Google Maps.

  • Sesame Street Is First Non-Profit to Hit 1 Billion Views on YouTube

    YouTube has just announced that Sesame Street is the first non-profit to hit 1 billion views on their YouTube channel.

    In honor of this milestone the Count has made a video, well, counting the views. Check it out:

  • Gangnam Style Supplants Bieber’s Baby as YouTube King

    For more than two long, hopeless years, Justin Bieber’s “Baby” wore the crown of most viewed video on YouTube. We knew that eventually a white knight would ride in and oust the boy tyrant, but we were unsure of just how long we would have to wait. Ladies and gents, the wait is over.

    And your favorite South Korean rapper was the man to do it.

    Over the weekend, YouTube announced that the PSY megahit “Gangnam Style” surpassed Justin Bieber’s “Baby” in terms of total views on the site. The transition of power occurred at noon on Saturday, with “Gangnam Style” registering 805 million views to “Baby”‘s 803 million. As it stands today, “Gangnam Style” has opened up a bigger lead with over 825 million views. Bieber is still stuck with just over 805 million.

    YouTube says that “Gangnam Style” is still being viewed between 7 and 10 million times a day, even though it debuted on the site over four months ago. It’s path to over 800 million views was meteoric, a viral rise that is really unprecedented in the annals of YouTube.

    As it stands, “Gangnam Style” and “Baby” sit one and two on the YouTube top videos of all time. Ronding out the top 5 is Jennifer Lopez’s “On The Floor,” Eminem’s “Love The Way You Lie.” and LMFAO’s “Party Rock Anthem.”

    Of course, views aren’t all that matter. What about popularity on a different scale – likes? PSY has that on lockdown as well, as he won a Guinness World Record back in September when “Gangnam Style” became the most-liked video in YouTube history. For more on the Gangnam Style phenomenon, including remixes and covers, check here.

  • Even Negativity Brings Fame On YouTube and Twitter

    If you know the story of Justin Bieber, he gained his fame due to a talent scout discovering him on YouTube. Could Rebecca Black be the next sensation to follow in Bieber’s footsteps? Google+Reader”>Her video has already reached 9 million views on YouTube, mostly due to negativity. She already has a rather lengthy Wikipedia entry, detailing her rise in fame.

    Michael J. Nelson, a comedian, was the first to poke fun at the song. On March 11th, the day the huge view spike hit, Nelson tweeted this:

    Let this be on your lips as you head into the weekend http://youtu.be/CD2LRROpph0 (it also answer the ? “what’s the worst video ever made?”) 4 days ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Later, the viral based Comedy Central show, Tosh.0 poked fun at the song titled “Friday”:

    Rebecca Black: “Are you sure these are the lyrics you want me to sing?”
    Producer: “What are you talking about?”
    Rebecca Black: “This part where I just kinda slowly explain the ordering of the days of the week?”
    Producer: “That’s the hook, baby! We breakin’ it down for the kids! They gonna know those days!!”

    On Monday, ‘Friday’ became available to download on iTunes. For $0.99, you can own the now huge YouTube sensation. The song has received over 550 ratings, and is averaging 2.5/5 stars.

    Currently, Rebecca Black is trending high on Twitter and the YouTube views show no sign of slowing down. The true question now remains, will her success continue? The song was produced by a legitimate company, by the name of Ark Music Factory. Though her song is trending due to its widely accepted awfulness, will it lead to bigger thinks for Black?

    I won’t keep you in suspense any longer. If you haven’t listened to the song yet, here’s the YouTube video.

    (WARNING: the song is extremely catchy. If you’re caught singing it, expect laughter coming your way).