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Google maps satelites
Google maps satelites













google maps satelites

Think parking is tough where you live? In Westenbergstraat, Netherlands, drivers apparently have to park on the sides of walls. Here’s a closeup shot of it, taken from the ground. The graffiti appears to have been drawn with the intention to be seen by people looking down into the crater from the eastern rim of the crater. Apparently, a lot of visitors to the site have decorated it with their graffiti, drawn huge enough to be seen from high above. Site of an extinct volcano crater, the Cerro Prieto, located near Mexicali in Baja California (Mexico). Once stitched together, the taller buildings at the edges of each of the pictures appear to be leaning toward or away from one another at pronounced angles. Stitching together satellite pix and aero pics of cities can result in situations like this where the different aerial vantage points result in buildings’ pictures being taken at different angles. Marriage proposal seen on a rooftop via Google Maps. He’s worked at Google for over 14 years and he gave me an aerial view (pun intended) of how satellite imagery works.Sign up for a free Jotform account to create powerful online forms in minutes - with no coding required. To answer these questions, I reached out to our satellite imagery techspert, Matt Manolides. But how does satellite imagery actually work? How often are images updated? What are some of the biggest challenges to bringing satellite imagery to more than 1 billion users? Capturing the world from above is a huge undertaking, matching millions of images to precise locations.

google maps satelites

Today, satellite imagery is one of the most popular features on Google Maps. For most of human history, it was impossible to even imagine what Earth looked like from above, and only in the past century have we been able to capture it. It’s thrilling to watch cars move, see skyscrapers cast shadows on the street or check out the reflection of the sun in a body of water. (And I can’t wait to start flying again… or at least get out of my apartment.) Not because I’m annoyed by the beverage cart hitting my elbows (though I am), or because I like to blankly stare out at the endless sky (which I do), but because I enjoy looking down at the streets, buildings and skyline of my destination as we land. When flying, I am firmly a window seat person.















Google maps satelites