Warping it up!

Fini Alring’s Glossy Tech Zine

The Moon has been Googled

Wednesday, July 20th, 2005

The folks at Google have released a partial map of the moon, based on their exisiting mapping sites.

TIP: Try zooming all the way in!!

In honor of the first manned Moon landing, which took place on July 20, 1969, we’ve added some NASA imagery to the Google Maps interface to help you pay your own visit to our celestial neighbor. Happy lunar surfing. More about Google Moon.

* Google Moon

* Google Earth

Maps on Path to Mass Innovation

Wednesday, July 6th, 2005

/. Ryan MacCarthy writes “When Google and Yahoo
released their map API’s last week they unleashed a horde of hungry developers eager to integrate their data with the user-friendly maps. Brilliant hacks like Chicago Crime and Craigslist Real Estate are in the midst of switching over to the new API, while sites like MetroFreeFi use the new API to make it easier to find free wi-fi locations in US cities (San Francisco, for example). Imaginative developers, like Alan Taylor (Transparency concept), are digging deep into experimentation to dream up new uses for the maps. It’s great to see the innovation when hacks turn to apps.”
I want to see Los Angeles maps of the action in James Ellroy’s novels, and a national map of the worst, funniest tourist traps across the U.S.

* Slashdot | Maps on Path to Mass Innovation

Who Will Google Buy Next?

Wednesday, June 15th, 2005

Kruo5hin writes “Google is the new Internet behemoth, snatching up small companies left and right. So, in this article, I ask: what tech gems are in the running for Google’s growing subsidiary menagerie? To help predict, I will first take a look at who Google has acquired in the past and what Google has done for them, and then I’ll throw out a few possibilities for Googlification and discuss where they might fit into Google’s strategy.

* Who Will Google Buy Next? | kuro5hin.org

Google Maps insider

Friday, June 3rd, 2005

jgwebber” has written an in-depth article about the way “Google Maps” (Good old hidden frame technique) works and compared it with GMail’s (XMLHttp based) method.

as simple as possible, but no simpler: Mapping Google

Google Launches Google Sitemaps

Friday, June 3rd, 2005

/. Ninwa writes “Google has launched Google Sitemaps. It seems to be a service that allows webmasters to define how often their sites’ content is going to change, to give Google a better idea of what to index. It uses some basic XML as the method of submitting a sitemap. More information on the protocol is available in an FAQ. What’s most interesting is that Google is licensing the idea under the Attribution/Share Alike Creative Commons license. According to the Google Blog, this is being done ‘…so that other search engines can do a better job as well. Eventually we hope this will be supported natively in webservers (e.g. Apache, Lotus Notes, IIS).’ They even offer an open source client in Python.”

* bytefarmers.com sitemap.xml

* Slashdot | Google Launches Google Sitemaps