Mapping the Future
Executive summary by darmansjah
FOR DIGITAL NOMADSand even some Luddites, online maps are a ubiquitous tool. Now Google is pushing deeper into the realm of virtual travel. Taking its “Street View” technology off-road, Google Maps has been adding photo tours of popular attractions, from the Colloseum in Rome to Joshua Tree National Park in California, and Google Art Projects goes inside 180 museums such as Musee d’Orsay in Paris, giving Internet users anywhere the ability to hop galleries and behold the brushstrokes of Vincent van Gogh.
Most recently? Hikers strapped with 360-degree cameras on backpacks plotted out the Grand Canyon's South Kaibab and Bright Angel trails, and cameras on underwater scooter plumbed the depths of Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Even North Korean streets can now be zoomed in on. But all that’s just the start. Manic Gupta, senior project manager for Google Maps, says eventually virtual travelers may be able to preview, for instance, any restaurant interior to “request that table in the corner.” If Google’s sight seem set for planetary domination, consider its army: you. Someday, your smart-phone shots may help crowdsource a global panorama. Seems it’s not time to retire to the armchair just yet.
0 comments :
Post a Comment