This week I was impressed by two Street View browsing applications. I'm not a Photo Sphere contributor but I still loved Google's new Photo Sphere community website, 'Views'. I was also greatly impressed with The Forgotten World, an atmospheric Street View tour of the abandoned Hashima Island in Japan.
Finally, this week, I really liked the imaginative use of the Google Maps API elevation service by the San Francisco Hill Mapper.
Google has unveiled a smart new community website, just for Photo Sphere users, called Views. If you aren't a Photo Sphere user don't worry, Views is still a great
way to explore both Google Maps Street View imagery and Photo Spheres
captured by people around the world.
The site highlights some of the
best panoramas featured on Google Maps (the bigger blue dots on the map
seem to indicate Street Views and the smaller dots Photo Spheres). The
site really is great way to explore the world and is great fun to
navigate around.
If you are a Photo Sphere user then you can get your very own beautiful
Views page. Your page contains all your panoramic photos and provides a
great way for you to share your Photo Spheres with all your friends.
Are you brave enough to venture alone onto the abandoned island of Hashima?
In June Google added Street View imagery of the abandoned Japanese island of Hashima, in Nagasaki Prefecture. Hashima Island - The Forgotten World
is an amazing tour of Google's Street View imagery of the island, which
includes historical background on the featured locations and the
desolate landscape.
The site is a great guide to the island, adding context and the
back-story to Google's amazing imagery of the island. The Street Views
in this tour have been enhanced with some CSS3 filters to create an even
spookier atmosphere which is intensified further by the accompaniment
of some suitably spectral background music and sound. The children's
voices and school bells that play when you stand in Hashima Primary
School playground made the hairs on the back of my neck stand-up.
Hashima Island - The Forgotten World is a Chrome Experiment, so you will
have to view the site in Chrome to get the full effect.
The Hill Mapper San Francisco makes great use of the Google Maps API Elevation Service to show the direction of the slopes on San Francisco's streets.
The uphill streets are colored red and the blue streets go downhill. The
darker the color of the street, the steeper the hill. If you move your
location on the map the colors of the streets dynamically update to
reflect the new directions of the slopes, relevant to your new position.
I'd love to see cycling directions added to this map, with a route
dragging option, so that you could plan a cycle route that avoided the steepest
uphill climbs.
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