Jeannie D would have a fit if she saw this, but there’s something uniquely endearing about Natasha Gupta’s ‘boring’ travels videos. In an ASMR way.
A new innovation from the Google Earth team, in collaboration with the World Resources Institute, means that now users can watch the face of the earth morph and alter in real-time.
Google Earth is full of valuable tools and others that are just a bit of fun, like the ‘Time-Lapse in Google Earth’ feature.
40-year-old William Moldt went missing in 1997, and his disappearance had remained a mystery for all of 22 years.
If you’re around the age of 30, you probably remember an M-Net show based on Carmen Sandiego’s exploits. Now Google Earth is getting in on the fun.
Pokemon Go is no doubt a phenomenal hit, but the guy behind it has been building up to this point 20 years. Let us introduce you to John Hanke.
In what is no doubt some sort of elaborate marketing ploy for the new Hobbit movie, Google is allowing us to fly through Middle Earth using Google Earth technology.
Motion control technology now allows Google Earth users to use their hands to control the imagery software, which sounds superficially boring, until you consider that you now have the option to fly over mountains, seas and cities with the swoosh of a hand.
The all-seeing Google Earth camera has captured pictures of a nuclear test site in North Korea. Pyongyang, the North Korean capital vowed to conduct nuclear tests to even the score for United Nations sanctions against North Korea for their December rocket launch. Which would actually make the score uneven again. Tensions are high. If the […]
Massive unidentified structures have been spotted from space by Google Earth. The weird shapes, one of which contains three jets parked in what looks like a concentric circle, are raising all sorts of concerns. The reasons for this is that they come from the Gobi desert, which is a region that is well known for it’s use by China for testing it’s military, space and nuclear programmes.
In the age of information, nothing can be kept in the dark anymore. These are the so called controversial Google Earth photos that initially set off Bahraini protests of inequality back in 2006. And when you see them, you’ll know why.