The feature is available in many other places too: New York, San Francisco, Rome, Tokyo, Barcelona, Sydney and New Zealand, to name just a few. Anywhere, really, where Street View is available and where users have contributed lots of high-quality photos; of course, this usually is near famous landmarks but you never know where you'll discover more to see. With user-contributed photos you can inspect architectural details and close-up quirks, or see what is happening at a place at more than one time of day, or see whatever else it was that inspired the photographer to press the button. Take a look at this video to see more:
If you are a Panoramio user, you may already have a photo in Street View. If not, what are you waiting for? Just contribute your best photos to Panoramio and remember to geo-tag them. Google's image-matching algorithms will analyze them at some point to see if they are also a good match for a Street View location. At the most famous places in the world, competition for space is already tough -- take a look at the range of images of the Sagrada Familia -- but on less travelled roads the world is still largely a blank canvas. Please help to fill it in!
Posted by Frederik Schaffalitzky, Software Engineer, Google Zurich
Great work, looks like a nice new feature, I'll have to try it out.
ReplyDeleteSeems to work very well. The 'blink' feature - after you have selected a photo, is a little distracting, I love the 'roll-out' of teh images from the deck.
ReplyDeleteI love that video that was awesome and i hope i could uses it soon and have a nice day
ReplyDeleteThat is a very delicate use of the F-stop. I appreciate good camera work in the new age of digital photography. Keep up the good work and see u soon.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Fredrik the the contributors work for them free, and they still demand, all rights over the pictures, that is not fare.
ReplyDelete