Google Announces Massively Improved 3D Views For Google Earth, StreetView Backpacks & Offline Maps For Mobile

google_maps_3d_logo

At a press event in San Francisco this morning, Google announced that it will soon feature far better 3D maps in Google Earth. The company also announced that Google Maps for mobile will soon feature offline caching. This feature will come to Google Maps to Android soon. Google says it wants to bring this feature to all platforms in the long run. Users will be able to download parts of a map to their devices and then use them when they are offline.

The company also announced that its Street View cars have now driven 5 million miles and collected 20 petabytes worth of imagery data. Google also announced that it is bringing Map Maker to South Africa and Egypt today. Google’s engineering director for Street View, Luc Vincent also announced that the company has now managed to put the hardware that Google uses to capture its Street View data into a backpack called the Street View Trekker.

Google’s Peter Birch noted that it’s taken Google a while to go from basic 3D maps to adding buildings to its maps. One issue Google faced by 2008 was that its 3D data was coming from a wide variety of sources. “We knew we wanted to do something better,” said Birch.

To model the world in 3D, the company will now use the 45-degree aerial images it already gathers from planes. Thanks to new imagery rendering techniques and advances in computer vision, Google can now retire its old 3D view in Google Earth and replace it with these new images. The result, which Google demoed today, is nothing short of spectacular. These new features will come to Android and iOS devices. Google expects this new technology will cover “communities of over 300 million people” by the end of the year.

Google doesn’t want to say when these features will become available, making it pretty obvious that today’s announcement is meant to preempt Apple’s rumored announcements next week.

Talking about the history of Street View, Vincent noted that Google’s earliest vans worked (Google didn’t use cars back then) but weren’t very good. The company now uses a fleet of cars and trikes (and even a snowmobile) to collect its street level imagery. Now, however, with the backpack, Google will be able to add data from a far wider range of locations.

Starting the event, Google’s Brian McClendon, a VP of engineering for Google Maps, noted how far we’ve come since the early days of Silicon Graphics machines in the 1990s, which once upon a time allowed its users to see a 3D view of the world for the first time. Not until 2001, when Keyhole launched, met with CNN in 2003 and made it onto the big screen did this kind of technology really become available to the public. Google, of course, bought Keyhole in 2004 (after just 24 hours of deliberation).

At the same time Google bought Keyhole – which then became Google Earth – the company was also working on Google Maps. According to McClendon, Google always had a fetish for comprehensiveness and even though the first versions of Google Maps missed many countries, it quickly added data from as many providers as it could find.

In 2006, after launching Google Earth, the company now had more imagery data and now 75% of the Earth is covered in high resolution by Google Earth. Street View is now available in many countries and on every continent, including Antarctica.

Google, with its Ground Truth program, also started building its own maps over the last few years and now uses street signs from its Street View cars and adds this data to its maps and directions.

As for making sure its data is accurate, McClendon noted that this is often still a hard problem. Even basic plate tectonics can often lead to misalignments between different data sets. Here, too, Google uses its Street View data to extract business data and human operators to ensure its data is correct. The company, of course, also uses its Map Maker program to let users edit maps. South Africa and Egypt. It’s bringing this program to 10 more countries, including New Zealand and Australia in a few weeks.

Google’s engineering manager for Google Maps for Good Rebecca Moore also talked about how Google Maps can be used by non-profits and during humanitarian crises. Google started this program after Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans. Google, for example, helped a tribe in the Amazon to map its territory to preserve its culture by, for example, putting the location of the tribe’s battles on its maps.

Starting today, the Halo Trust, which is dedicated to eliminating land mines around the world, will also start using Google Maps to show which areas have been cleared of mines and which are still too dangerous.

Preempting Apple

The company’s invitation to the event promised that Google would unveil “the next dimension of Google Maps.” Apple, of course, is widely rumored to be in the process of replacing Google Maps in its iOS mapping apps with its own service. Rumor has it that these new maps from Apple will feature a prominent 3D mode, but for the time being, these are obviously just rumors. The timing of Google’s announcement today, however, was likely not coincidental and the date was probably set to preempt Apple’s announcement next week.

Asked about this during today’s event, McClendon noted that Google is very proud of Google Maps and that it will continue to make it available on as many devices as possible.


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Google Announces Massively Improved 3D Views For Google Earth, StreetView Backpacks & Offline Maps For Mobile

Internet killing porn

Louis Theroux, who produced a documentary on the US porn industry 15 years ago, has revisited the industry, and found it in severe decline. The proliferation of free Internet porn and the rise of amateur pornography has combined to take nearly all the money out of the system. He writes about it in The Guardian:


At one of the top LA agencies for performers, LA Direct, the accountant Francine Amidor laments the “devastating” impact of piracy. “There’s less work, and there’s an abundance – because of the economy – of performers. There aren’t enough people shooting to give everybody a day’s work.”

I put it to Amidor that she owes it to the young aspirants who still make their way to the LA Direct offices to explain the consequences of their decision. She demurs. “Because then I would talk three quarters of the girls out of the business and then we wouldn’t be in business.”

Fees for scenes, not surprisingly, have taken a hit. “Some girls get $600 [£390] for a scene now,” the retired performer JJ Michaels tells me. “It might be $900-$1,000 for a big-name girl. It used to get up to $3,000.” For guys, rates can be $150 or lower.

How the internet killed porn


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Internet killing porn

World IPv6 Launch Day Underway


A number of readers have written in with stories related to today’s permanent rollout of IPv6 by several major organizations. From the looks of it, for the 1% or so of end users with IPv6 support, everything is going smoothly. For those not so lucky to have IPv6 already, an anonymous reader writes with (mostly) good news: 60% of ISPs intend to enable IPv6 by the end of 2012. For business users, darthcamaro provides some words of caution: “…the Chief Security Officer of VeriSign doesn’t think IPv6 should be turned on by a whole lot of people. The problem is network security devices in many cases don’t scan IPv6. So if you turn IPv6 on, you’re screwed.
‘If you don’t have that visibility into IPv6, you should probably consider explicitly disabling IPv6 on your systems until you can take a very concerted approach to enabling IPv6 in a secure manner,’ McPherson said.”


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Your iPhone calendar isn’t private—at least if you use the LinkedIn app

Researchers have found that the LinkedIn iPhone app transmits all manner of data from your iPhone’s calendar to LinkedIn’s servers, and without notifying the user, either.

Today’s not a good day to be a LinkedIn user—doubly so if you use LinkedIn’s iPhone or Android app. Researchers have discovered that the app scrapes users’ Calendar items and sends the data back up to its servers, even when those Calendar items were created outside of the LinkedIn app. The scraped data includes participant lists, subject of the entry, time of the meeting, and any attached meeting notes (such as dial-in details and passcodes).

The LinkedIn app manages to gain access to your Calendar items because it has a feature that allows you to view your calendar from within the app itself. According to security researchers Yair Amit and Adi Sharabani, the app then transmits this information to LinkedIn’s servers without any clear indication to the user that this is hapening—a throwback to the Path controversy that revealed the social networking app (among many others) had been transmitting users’ contact lists to a remote server without explicit user consent.

Amit and Sharabani plan to present their report at a cyber security conference in Tel Aviv on Wednesday. In their report seen by Ars, they note that the information being collected by the LinkedIn app has no apparent relevance to the app’s functionality, though they don’t believe LinkedIn has included this functionality maliciously. “However, we are concerned by the fact it collects and sends-out sensitive information about its users, without a clear indication and consent,” the researchers wrote.

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Your iPhone calendar isn’t private—at least if you use the LinkedIn app

IPv6 lands today, do you copy?

IPv6 lands today, do you copy

June 6th has arrived, which means that participating ISPs, hardware manufacturers and search engines must stick to their word and permanently enable the IPv6 address system — not least as an encouragement for others to do the same. The ultimate purpose? To allow trillions of users to have their own IP address, instead of just a paltry few billion permitted by the IPv4 standard that continues to run in parallel. The risk? That the Internet collapses and we all get the day off work. Evidently that hasn’t happened, no doubt thanks to Google and others having tested the system during pilot programs, and indeed Vint Cerf’s explanatory video seems to be working fine after the break.

Continue reading IPv6 lands today, do you copy?

IPv6 lands today, do you copy? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jun 2012 03:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IPv6 lands today, do you copy?

Army scientists juice battery voltage, hike life up to 30 percent

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With the modern US soldier turning into a walking gadget, the army has some heavy reasons to lower battery weights. Its own scientists might have the answer, claiming 30 percent energy density jumps could happen using additives they developed. Those “sacrificial agent” materials would bond with electrodes to allow five volts instead of the four they’ve been stuck on, permitting a “quantum leap” in efficiency and weight. We’ll have to see if that’ll come to pass, but given the sheer volume of tech that soldiers are strapping on these days, it couldn’t be too soon. To see a video of how it works, zap past the break.

Continue reading Army scientists juice battery voltage, hike life up to 30 percent

Army scientists juice battery voltage, hike life up to 30 percent originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jun 2012 04:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Army scientists juice battery voltage, hike life up to 30 percent

Like XP or Vista: how will businesses treat Windows 8?

Setting up the Windows Assessment and Deployment Kit. Can Windows 8’s new business features justify its jarring UI overhaul?

Windows 8 Release Preview

Businesses hated Windows Vista. It required new drivers, and new security features like User Account Control caused problems with older applications. Computers that shipped before Vista often lacked the RAM and graphics hardware to take full advantage of the new operating system’s capabilities. It made extensive changes to how the operating system was customized and deployed. Businesses hated Windows Vista so much that they overwhelmingly chose to stay on Windows XP. Even after these problems were largely resolved, it took a new operating system to get companies to start upgrading.

Windows 7 is a big step up from XP, both in terms of security and features. For businesses who are in the middle of or have already completed Windows 7 migrations, can Windows 8 offer them enough incentive to consider upgrading again, or do its interface changes doom it to share Vista’s fate?

New business-oriented features in Windows 8

Back in the days of the Consumer Preview, Microsoft put out a PDF detailing the most pertinent Windows 8 features for small and large businesses (that PDF is still a good resource for the Release Preview and will remain so for the release version of Windows 8, so read up if you’re interested). Some of these have relatively broad appeal for businesses, while others will be more useful for particular niches.

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Like XP or Vista: how will businesses treat Windows 8?

Eulerian Video Magnification

This one is pretty amazing: a team of MIT researchers have created a
technique to amplify small changes in a video clip that enables us to
see minute changes that otherwise would’ve been unnoticeable (see 3:20
where they made a person’s arterial pulse visible). They called it Eulerian
Video Magnification
:

Our goal is to reveal temporal variations in videos that are difficult
or impossible to see with the naked eye and display them in an indicative
manner. Our method, which we call Eulerian Video Magnification, takes
a standard video sequence as input, and applies spatial decomposition,
followed by temporal filtering to the frames. The resulting signal is
then amplified to reveal hidden information. Using our method, we are
able to visualize the flow of blood as it fills the face and also to
amplify and reveal small motions. Our technique can run in real time
to show phenomena occurring at temporal frequencies selected by the
user.

Hit play or go to Link [YouTube]

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Google starts warning users of state-sponsored computer attacks

Google unveiled a service that automatically displays a warning to users who may be the target of state-sponsored phishing or malware attacks.

Company representatives aren’t saying precisely what criteria is used to determine when a particular attack is sponsored by a government actor, because that information could be used to evade detection. They went on to say very generally that the company relies on “detailed analysis” and victim reports that “strongly suggest the involvement of states or groups that are state-sponsored.”

The warning comes in the form of a red banner just above the Google search bar that reads: “Warning: we believe state-sponsored attackers may be attempting to compromise your account or computer.” It includes a link to information users can use to help lock down their computers, smartphones and Google accounts.

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Mophie’s Juice Pack PRO aims to keep iPhone 4 / 4S protected and powered during wild adventures

Mophie's Juice Pack PRO aims to keep iPhone 4  4S protected and powered during wild adventures

Staying true to its peripheral nature, Mophie’s outed yet another iPhone companion: the Juice Pack PRO. Although the new power-boosting case doesn’t carry as much juice as that Powerstation (not surprising, really), it does offer similar ruggedized aesthetics — which should come in handy the next time you decide to take your Cupertino handset on a hazardous trip. Mophie notes the Juice Pack PRO can more than double the iPhone 4 / 4S life with its 2,500mAh battery, but the company’s also placing a hefty amount of focus on the add-on’s water splash, sand, impact and shock protection features — these, naturally, earned the PRO a MIL-STD 810G (Military Standard) rating on the testing grounds. If all that makes this Juice the one for you, then gather up $129.95 and head over to the Mophie site to snag one for yourself.

Continue reading Mophie’s Juice Pack PRO aims to keep iPhone 4 / 4S protected and powered during wild adventures

Mophie’s Juice Pack PRO aims to keep iPhone 4 / 4S protected and powered during wild adventures originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 05 Jun 2012 21:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mophie’s Juice Pack PRO aims to keep iPhone 4 / 4S protected and powered during wild adventures