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Google, Web

Is Google Street View Taking Its Cameras Indoors?

Google Street View is Taking Its Cameras Indoors?
Google Street View can take you down almost any street in America, and through just about every major city worldwide. But Street View stops right where its name implies -- in the street. That might be changing though, if a source that e-mailed the blog, Search Engine Land, is to be believed.

New York City nut and candy shop, Oh Nuts, e-mailed Search Engine Land claiming a representative from Google came in and took photos of the store and its products for a new feature tentatively called Google Store Views. The store provided images from the security camera showing a person moving around the shop taking photos with a tripod, but all that proves is that someone was moving a camera around the store.

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Web

Google Street View Catches Tree Assassin Red Handed

Back in the day, all you needed to break open a court case was some modicum of logical argumentation, and Gregory Peck's voice. Fast forward to 2010. Exit Atticus Finch, and enter Google's Street View.

As Wired reports, Margaret Burnyeat, of Vancouver, Canada, was charged last year with the illegal removal of trees, after allegedly hiring a company to chop down some 23 cedar, cypress and evergreen trees from her property. Police had found evidence of a few stumps in her front yard, but Burnyeat's goose wasn't cooked until someone happened to take a gander at Google. As it turns out, one of Google's fleet of Street View camera cars happened to pass by Burnyeat's property, and photographed the arboreal assassins in action. Google's images show very clearly defined tree stumps, as well as the workmen and their truck parked in the front yard.

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Nokia Debuts Ovi Maps Navigation, Piracy's Effect on Local Bands


Highlights from this morning's other big tech headlines....
  • Man, free-market competition is awesome. Verizon has already made some smartphone noise with its announcement that it would offer Google Maps navigation as a free, default service on the Droid phone. Nokia is following that lead and will also be providing a free, global navigation system with all of its smartphones. [From: Engadget]
  • It can be easy to dismiss the negative effects of music piracy because of the exorbitant wealth of those in the music industry. Illegal downloads don't just hurt financially successful and wildly popular artists, though. Members of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry are claiming that illegal file sharing in Spain has indirectly been responsible for a 65-percent drop in local music sales. [From: The BBC]
  • Just last month, StatCounter announced that Mozilla's Firefox 3.5 had become the world's most-used browser. Mozilla isn't spending too much time exulting in that success though, as a Firefox 3.6 "sneak peek" preview is officially debuting today. [From: Download Squad]
  • Concerned citizens have impressively contributed millions to the Haitian relief effort, but aid organizations still need help getting supplies to the island. One Laptop Per Child is currently seeking interested groups to help distribute specialized, rugged laptops to relief workers. [From: Media Bistro]
  • A Massachusetts court ruled last summer that university student Joel Tenenbaum had to pay $675,000 in damages for illegally downloading 30 songs. Demonstrating that not much has really changed between administrations, the federal government has officially backed the original, ridiculous ruling. [From: Boing Boing]
  • Verizon seems to grasp the absurdity of astronomical fines and penalties for illegal file-sharers. The company is reportedly implementing a plan to terminate the service of repeat offenders, and, according to spokeswoman Bobbi Henson, has already "cut some people off." That sounds significantly more effective that levying insanely high fines on broke college students. [From: CNET]

Google, Web

New Zealand Florist Admits to Sabotaging Competitors on Google Maps


Don't be fooled by all the pretty colors and aromatic bouquets -- the world of floristry can be pretty cutthroat. Just ask any rose retailer in Napier County, New Zealand, where one florist has admitted to changing her competitors' listed information on Google Maps as a way to undercut them.

According to Stuff, Kendra Drinkwater, who runs a flower business out of her home, recently pleaded guilty to six counts of accessing a computer for dishonest purposes after being accused of Google's first ever charge of "editing with ill intent" in New Zealand. According to the charges, Drinkwater accessed Google Maps on numerous occasions between November 1 and December 4, and, on at least 100 of those occasions, she changed the addresses, phone numbers and Web sites of six of her competitors. Drinkwater told the police that the habit soon became an addiction, and now seems pretty repentant, claiming to have penned handwritten apologies to the business owners she sabotaged. Still, she now faces up to five years in prison, and says she's already lost a lot of business because of her now-smeared reputation.

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Google, Web

Find a Flu Shot Near You With Google Maps

Find a Flu Shot Near You With Google Maps
Having conquered general Web searches, e-mail, video, and advertising, Google is now trying to become a one-stop repository for all your flu information needs. You can already look up information about general flu trends, and track outbreaks of the swine flu, so it only makes sense that the next step would pertain to prevention. Google has partnered with the Department of Health and Human Services, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, pharmacy chains, and various state and local agencies to map out where you can get vaccinations for both the seasonal flu and H1N1.

The Flu Shot Finder isn't comprehensive, as Google is still collecting data from many localities. But even in its current state, the tool is a great help for finding where you can get yourself inoculated. After searching by address or ZIP code, you can click on any result to find the location's hours of operation and to see whether or not it currently has the vaccine in stock.

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Google, Web

The Legend of Argleton: A Town That Only Exists in Google

The Legend of Argleton: The Town That Wasn't
So here's an interesting mystery. How did a town that doesn't exist in reality find itself nestled in an empty green field between two actually real towns in Lancashire, U.K. on Google Maps? Theories are plentiful, but is seems no one knows the true origins of Argleton -- the town that wasn't there.

If you search Google for Argleton, U.K. you'll turn up plenty of results for businesses, real estate, even weather forecasts for the area. Click on over to Maps and you'll find the little British townlet sitting between Aughton and Aughton Park. The problem is that residents of neither Aughton or Aughton Park have ever heard of Argleton. What's stranger, if you follow Google Maps to where Argleton supposedly sits, all you'll find is an empty grass field.

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Cell Phones, Google

Google Maps Navigation Debuts on DROID, Android 2.0 Phones

Verizon has some powerful new ammunition for its anti-iPhone attack campaign. Considering a public statement made today by Google, Verizon's newest anti-Apple ad will likely read, "iDon't have free, default GPS." That's right, the rumored Google Maps Navigation service is officially for real, and Android 2.0 software will debut first on Verizon's Motorola DROID.

According to Google's statement, the free Navigator service (video after the break) will provide unparalleled services, including voice search (It does have a car dock mode.), up-to-the-minute traffic view, a "search along route" function, actual photographs of destination points so you know exactly where you're going, and several other exclusive features. Judging from the demonstration video (above), Navigator definitely passes the eye test. The alluring route search function, in particular, looks perfect for finding pit stops during a road trip.

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Google, Web

Philip Garrido Kidnapping Case Displays the Reach of Google

Philip Garrido Case Displays the Reach of Google
Philip Garrido is, to put it mildly, a creepy dude. (We prefer to describe him as a tad 'rapey' looking). Everything surrounding the case of the confessed kidnapper, rapist, and now suspected serial killer is unsettling. The case gets truly bizarre and horrifying when you start looking at all of the online elements.

The most immediately disturbing, and most revealing, is Garrido's blog -- Voices Revealed. The Blogspot site, which he penned using the screen name themanwhospokewithhismind, is filled with religious ramblings, claims of controlling sound with his mind, and vague claims of being cured of a "problem," which may be a reference to pedophilia.

While the blog does offer rare and disturbing insight into the mind of the criminally insane, it contains little evidence of the true nature of Garrido's depravity. For even more horrifying direct imagery, you can turn to Google. The tent and tool shed compound that Garrido built in his backyard, where he is alleged to have held his victims, is clearly visible in the satellite imagery on Google Maps.

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Google

Google Placing Giant Map Pins Around Tokyo?

We can't read Japanese, and using Google Translate is a bit like reading poetry written by a stoned Yoda, so we're left trying to piece together what's going on here from a bunch of photos of people standing next to giant "pins" a la Google Maps.

Our assumption? Either Google has decided that the next frontier in information sharing isn't the Internet, or it's trying to locate the best places to start an invasion for our future galactic overlords. Either way, the pins, which are placed throughout Tokyo, appear to range from 4- to 13-feet in height and are emblazoned with the all-seeing eye of the Goog. Or, at least, that's what we assume it is.

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Computers, Google, Web

Thieves Using Google Earth to Kidnap Koi Fish


People have been using Google Earth to find all sorts of crazy things: secret military installations, marijuana crops, sunken ships, and pools for "dipping." Thieves have even used the satellite imaging app to seek out lead roof tiles. So it should come as no surprise that other criminals are now making use of the tool to steal fish. (Well, maybe kind of surprising.)

According to the Telegraph, twelve people in Hull, England have fallen victim to nefarious koi thieves who, authorities believe, are using Google Earth to spot their next victims. Koi fish -- those popular residents of backyard ornamental fish ponds -- can cost hundreds of dollars, and the pond equipment the burglars are also jacking can cost a pretty penny, too.

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Google, Web

Biblemap.org Shows Location of Important Biblical Events


If you find that figuring out and visualizing the exact location of an event or place referenced in the Bible has you wishing for a 1000 B.C. version of Google Maps, you're now in luck. The swath of land along the Mediterranean Sea, where many stories in the Bible take place, has changed hands, names, and borderlines enough times to confuse even the most zealous biblical geographer. However, a new site, featuring an interactive map powered by Google, should help the devout (or merely curious) keep their bearings straight.

BibleMap.org features drop-down boxes that allow users to select a book and chapter from the Bible. Once selected, the locations referenced are displayed on an interactive map. Users can then click on the location, which brings up a box that features useful information, like place-name pronunciation (Kadesh-barnea?), and the number of times the location is mentioned in a particular book. Visitors to the site can also choose between text from the King James Version and the English Standard Version.

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Computers, Webware

Thief Uses Google Earth to Spot and Plunder Lead Tile Roofs



Tom Berge, a builder from Sutton, England, has been using Google Earth as a treasure-seeking tool, of sorts. While other Google hunters before have claimed to find lost ships or even Atlantis, Berge pursued a more tangible type of booty.

Using the popular map application, Berge would canvass nearby areas and identify buildings whose roofs consisted of valuable lead tiles. An unidentified friend of Berge told The Telegraph, "he could tell the lead roofs apart on Google Earth as they were slightly darker than normal." After locating the lead roofs, Berge would climb the building, remove the tiles, rappel down and then sell the material to scrap metal salvagers.

Police arrested Berge in February after he allegedly accumulated approximately $200,000 from his plundering, which included a church, a museum and a girls' school. Berge received an 8-month suspended sentence for his 6-month spree, after which lead investigator Detective Sergeant Chris Grant said, "he was a prolific offender up until the time he was arrested. Since then our crime figures for theft of lead have reduced significantly." [From: The Telegraph]

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Cell Phones, Computers, Google

Google Latitude Lets you Track Your Friends' Locations


Ever been sitting at a restaurant waiting for a tardy friend, not wanting to call them and seem impatient, but also growing a little sick of the dirty looks you're getting from the waitress? If so, you may be interested in Google Latitude, a new extension to the ever popular Google Maps, which lets you broadcast your location and track those of your friends.

As the video after the break shows, you can install Latitude onto many smart phones, including BlackBerry and Windows Mobile handsets (thought not, curiously, Google's own Android handsets), or even on a desktop computer. Once installed, the application uses GPS to track your location, and then updates it online. You can then select which friends can monitor your position, enabling them to view you on Google Maps. You can even update your status and let people know what you're doing, such as eating lunch or watching a game.

The privacy concerns here are obvious, but since this is strictly opt-in and nobody can track you without your permission, we're not too worried. Getting that perpetually late friend of yours to actually nstall this, though, could be quite a challenge. [From: The Official Google Blog]

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Computers, Google

Did Google Street View Kill This Deer?



We've seen tons of interesting and hilarious stuff on Google Street View, but this made us a little sad. See the cute little deer skipping across the road above? Move forward two frames and turn around (check out the embedded map after the break) -- poor guy never had a chance.

If you really want to tug at your heart strings skip forward one frame and point the camera down...

The images of Five Points Rd. end shortly thereafter, leading us to believe at least that the Googlemobile pulled over and the drivers did what they could to clean up after their unfortunate mess. [Thanks: Mike and Sarah Booz for sending this in]



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Computers

Where to Experience the Inauguration Online


If you couldn't get to D.C. to see the inauguration today, or just didn't feel like fighting with the crowds, you have plenty of options for keeping up with the action, without going outside. Of course, every news network has its cameras poised to capture all the action it can, but if you're not near a TV you can still keep up with things, thanks to a range of online services (compiled by Google's Lat Long Blog) and a ton of other alternatives that we've found while perusing the Web. With the number of streams, photos, and even Twitters being uploaded today, this is without a doubt the most watched (and most digital) inauguration in history.

Head after the break to see where you can experience the inauguration online.

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