2013-09-07
Google Street View from Inside a Ship
Google has quietly released a high definition tour from the inside of a ship using its ever popular street view mapping function.
This summer Google took their cameras on board Schmidt Ocean Institute’s 272-foot research vessel, Falkor, while she was on a visit to the San Francisco Exploratorium’s new learning center facility at Pier 15 in downtown.
The street view begins in the engine room and includes 8 other preset “tours”, which include areas of the ship such as the bridge, control room and deck. We are told that with over 300 panoramics on 9 different levels, this is the most complicated Google indoor Street View collected to date.
Interestingly, one goal of the Falkor project was to provide an example of Google’s new public interface and tools available to collect indoor Street View, and is now leaving it up to any person or business out there to use a photographer who is in the trusted program who can do the whole process.
So why the Falkor? Well, as it turns out, the Schmidt Ocean Institute was founded by none other than Dr. Eric Schmidt, philanthropist and Chief Executive at Google, along with his wife, Wendy.
SOI bought the vessel from the German government in 2009 and recently completed an extensive three year, $94 million conversion of the ship from a fishery protection vessel to the high-tech research vessel it is today.
“Falkor’s biggest goal is to help change the public conversation about ocean health,” said Ms. Schmidt at the Exploratorium, “We’re living on a planet where we really don’t even know most of what’s here. So, we would like to say it’s time that we did understand.”
Following her San Francisco debut, Falkor left the City by the Bay for British Columbia on two expeditions in Canadian and U.S. waters, before making her way southwest for several months conducting oceanographic research in the Central and Western Pacific.
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