Official Street View Website

For Google's official website on Street View locations (present and future) and much more, go to:

Monday, June 30, 2008

Blue Highlights Updated!

On Google Maps, the Street View mode has been updated so that users can see blue highlights from any zoom level. This will most definitely help Street View users in the future, when Street View goes worldwide. This will also eliminate the need for camera icons soon.

EveryScape tries to beat Google

You probably recently heard that ABC News has put out an article regarding EveryScape, another street-level panorama service. EveryScape offers many views of places all over the world, and they currently have at total of sixteen locations. Some "scapes", as they're called, even go indoors. Lately, many Internet users have even started to claim that EveryScape is better than Google Street View, for the following reasons:

  1. EveryScape has some locations that Street View has not yet.
  2. EveryScape goes inside buildings.
  3. Their goal is to "scape" the whole world.
  4. They display advertisements directly on the image.
  5. OMG they have an awesome 3D speed forward effect!
Well, each of these reasons are false, and for the following reasons:
Yes, EveryScape has some locations that Street View doesn't have at the moment, seven, to be exact. But Street View has 48 locations that EveryScape doesn't have. So, Street View has EveryScape already beat in number of locations.
Yes, EveryScape goes inside some buildings, but this happens only extremely rarely. But rthat's still some. So, EveryScape has Street View beat in number of interior locations, even though it's a very small quantity.
Yes, EveryScape's goal is to "scape" the whole world, but so is Street View's goal, and Street View is closer to accomplishing it, so Street View has EveryScape beat again there.
Yes, EveryScape displays ads directly on the "scape", but that's also its disadvantage, since many users don't want to see a panorama cluttered with ads. Most Internet users don't even click Internet ads (from AdSense experience, I can tell you this is true), much less want to see them. So Street View has EveryScape beat there.
Yes, EveryScape has a cool-looking 3D transition effect. Can't beat that, but it would also cause unnecessary bandwidth, time, and it's pretty much just showing off.
In conclusion, EveryScape is just another street-level panorama service like MapJack and street-side. For more reasons that these just don't compare to Google Street View, see this earlier post. It's not hard to see that Street View is the best on the 'Net!

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Bill Gates's Prediction Came True

According to CTV.ca, Bill Gates's book The Road Ahead predicted many things in the future that would involve computers and the Internet. One of those predictions was that anyone will


be able to jump into a map so you can navigate down a street or through the
rooms of a building.

Well, Google Street View has fulfilled this prediction, but not going into buildings yet. That could come very soon, though, and Google is known for their genius ideas, so expect "Interior View" sometime in the future.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Street View visits Microsoft

Lately, there has been a rumor spread on the Internet that a Microsoft emplyee found a Google Street View car driving through the Microsoft campus in Seattle. If you're a Street View you'll easily spot this as true, since Street View cars are currently roaming the streets of Seattle, Washington. This rumor was started at Gizmodo, from a Microsoft employee. An amusing part of the sotry is that the Street View car drove right by the Live Maps team, who started teasing Google.

Monday, June 16, 2008

I Can't Believe it's not in Street View!

All but one of the locations in the previous I Can't Believe it's not in Street View! have been added. The only one left is Seattle, which has been included again in this list. ;-)

  • Seattle, Washington - Who wasn't surprised when it didn't come out on Street View's latest update? They did 37 new cities, none including the Emerald City.
  • Portland and Bangor, Maine - Maine seems to be left out of the Street View service. Why not include the state's largest city, and the city most famous for lobster fishing?
  • Flagstaff, Arizona - The major city with loads of tourists on their way to the amazing Grand Canyon, the location of the discovery of the planet Pluto, and major Route 66 stop, isn't in Street View yet. It seems it wasn't close enough to Phoenix?
  • Memphis, Tennessee - Not only a huge city, but the home of...the home of...the King, of course!
  • Baltimore and Annapolis, Maryland - The largest city in Maryland and Maryland's capital city. Although close to Washington, shouldn't these be added soon?
  • El Paso, Texas and Las Cruces, New Mexico - El Paso is a very large city, and Las Cruces is the second-largest in New Mexico, and also nearby White Sands National Monument, which would be quite a sight in Street View. However, being so close to Mexico, these cities might take a while to complete.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Seattle and Baltimore Spot Street View

According to CHS Capitol Hill Seattle, a Street View car has been spotted in Seattle, Washington, with the SICK Lasers on top. The two places it was spotted in were at a Home Depot and a parking lot by Starbucks HQ.


According to an anonymous commenter here on Street View Stuff, a Street View car has also been found roaming the streets of Baltimore, Maryland. The car was spotted at the Historic Fells Point of the city. This could mean that the District of Columbia is being Street Viewed, too, but there are higher security risks.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Columbus is Clueless

In Columbus, Ohio, one of the new Street View cities, 36-year-old Carla Sue Boswell and her three children were found playing at their house on Google Maps Street View in nearby Grove City, as reported by local NBC 4 WCMH.

There are many things wrong with this.

  1. Instead of referring to Google Maps at its appropriate address, they claim the website is called GoogleMaps.com, which is clearly incorrect.
  2. Carla doesn't need to be worried, since the images of her children were not only low-resolution, but their faces were blurred.
  3. It's interesting how many children in Columbus were found on Google Maps Street View playing outside their house by their concerned parents.
  4. They are redundant in their previous article, where they ask the same question people have been asking for the past year, and they ask the same question twice.
  5. In that same article, instead of interviewing the parent directly (he wasn't home), they interviewed his neighbor, whose home "was also photographed."
  6. NBC 4's Amy Basista was explaining how Street View worked, and said that zooming in enlarges the picture, which is incorrect, since the imagery is no longer high-resolution.
What's the point of all this? Well, it shows how paranoid many people are, and their assumptions are often false. What should we do about it? Well, Google's done much about it already. They've done the face-blur feature, and the low resolution, which is plenty safe.
So there is still no need to worry over Street View capturing images of people, since those people are made anonymous.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Canadian Street View...eh?

In the Buffalo, New York, area, which was released in Street View yesterday, you could see a bit of blue highlighted street that went into Ontario, Canada, on the Peace Bridge. But after going to check it out, this is what was left:


View Larger Map

Apparently, there were still a few security concerns with adding Canada to Street View, even if it's only a bridge over a river. This could mean that Google isn't planning Canadian Street View anytime soon.

All New Locations

Google's new batch of Street View locations really surprised most of us. Instead of doing only 14 cities, Google sent Street View cars pretty much all over the state! There were only fourteen new camera icons on Google Maps, but as you can see, they covered a lot more. Here is the total list of new locations:

  1. Salem, Oregon
  2. Santa Rosa, California
  3. Sacramento, California
  4. Lassen Volcanic National Park, California
  5. Modesto, California
  6. Fresno, California
  7. Bakersfield, California
  8. Kings Canyon National Park, California
  9. Sequoia National Park, California
  10. Death Valley National Park, California
  11. Palm Springs, California
  12. Reno, Nevada
  13. Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
  14. Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming
  15. Omaha, Nebraska
  16. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  17. Tulsa, Oklahoma
  18. Topeka, Kansas
  19. Saint Louis, Missouri
  20. Jackson, Mississippi
  21. Louisville, Kentucky
  22. Lexington, Kentucky
  23. Knoxville, Tennessee
  24. Huntsville, Alabama
  25. Ann Arbor, Michigan
  26. Cincinnati, Ohio
  27. Dayton, Ohio
  28. Toledo, Ohio
  29. Columbus, Ohio
  30. Atlanta, Georgia
  31. Cape Coral, Florida
  32. Key West, Florida
  33. Jacksonville, Florida
  34. Greenville, South Carolina
  35. Columbia, South Carolina
  36. Charlotte, North Carolina
  37. Winston-Salem, North Carolina
  38. Virginia Beach, Virginia
  39. Buffalo, New York
  40. Rochester, New York
  41. Syracuse, New York
  42. Hartford, Connecticut
  43. Springfield, Massachusetts
  44. Worcester, Massachusetts

And that doesn't even include all the other smaller cities beside them also covered. If a picture is worth a thousand words, then here's a more detailed description:



In fact, there are so many locations now, that the list of Street View locations on Wikipedia has been nominated for deletion. It had to happen sometime.

But what's interesting is that Raytown in Missouri, and South Hill in Virginia, have not been added yet, and there have been some Street View car sightings in those areas.

What's next? Australia, of course!

Monday, June 9, 2008

Lou Piniella


View Larger Map

Yep, that's Chicago Cubs manager Lou Piniella. This has become quite a Street View phenomenon over the past few days.

UPDATE: The image has been replaced as of June 10, 2008.