Google Earth

Started by Event Horizon, February 07, 2007, 05:42:37 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

PhillyPhanInDC

Quote
UN-Google Earth map climate change

NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters) -- After letting computer users soar over Mount Kilimanjaro's melting snows and peer down on illegal logging in Asia, the U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP) is exploring how the latest technology can help it reach more people, an official said on Wednesday.

It hopes to copy the success of a venture with Google Inc. that made an atlas of before-and-after satellite images of environmental change available to more than 100 million viewers through the interactive mapping program Google Earth.

Now UNEP is seeking similar partnerships with firms including Microsoft, Oracle Corp., Cisco Systems and ESRI, a California-based computer mapping company, UNEP program officer Michael Wilson told Reuters.

"A lot of effort is going into developing these sorts of partnerships and finding alignment of interests," he said on the sidelines of a U.N. environment conference in Kenya.

UNEP's "Atlas of Our Changing World" was first published in hardback in June 2005 and features high-resolution images of changes ranging from dramatic deforestation in South America to retreating glaciers in the North Pole, oil exploration in Canada and the huge growth of greenhouses in southern Spain.

In environmental terms, the book became something of a bestseller, moving more than 10,000 copies at $150 each.

"For an organization like UNEP, that was an unprecedented success," Wilson said. "So we all started looking at ways we could make this information available to more and more people."

Late last year, U.N. officials finished uploading the atlas to Google Earth, which covers a third of the world's population in images detailed enough to show cars.

As a result, users can now zoom in and fly over virtual environmental "hotspots" like the explosion of shrimp farms on Thailand's west coast, China's massive Three Gorges Dam or the vanishing snows of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania.

"Google clearly feels it improves their product," Wilson said. "The animations we can use to show the changes taking place are a very effective vehicle for communication."

"The very existence of flamethrowers proves that some time, somewhere, someone said to themselves, "You know, I want to set those people over there on fire, but I'm just not close enough to get the job done.""  R.I.P George.

Rome

Quote from: Event Horizon on February 07, 2007, 09:06:47 PM
It doesn't have to support every detail. It is interesting that every major culture has such a myth. Many of them share significant details. Wouldn't you expect there to be a worldwide remembrance of such an event if just a handful of souls survived? As the oral history was handed down from one generation to the next, details would be forgotten and/or exaggerated. According to the biblical account, hundreds of years after the flood, an authoritative account is written down by special revelation. My position is that these are descriptions of the same event with the Bible being more descriptive. There are lesser flood myths which are not global in scope. They should not be confused with the global accounts.

No one believes in your fractured fairy tales so quit trying to sell them here.