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Google Businesses The Internet Space

Google Sky Now Available Through Your Browser 83

Ars Technica brings word that Google Sky, formerly only available as an extension of the Google Earth software, is now accessible through your web browser. The interface of Google Sky is quite similar to that of Google Maps, complete with search and alternate views by spectrum. The story also mentions (and more importantly, links) ten of the more interesting sights. We discussed Google Sky's initial release last year. Quoting: "Visible light only shows us a small picture of the entire universe; non-visible spectra such as ultraviolet (UV), infrared and X-ray hold a whole other world of information. Here is where Google Sky becomes very cool. There are three more sections that highlight fantastic images from the Chandra X-Ray Observatory, the GALEX Evolution Explorer (UV), and the Spitzer Space Telescope (IR). What makes these very cool is that under each selected body there is a slider that will change the displayed image back and forth between the visible and invisible spectrum."
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Google Sky Now Available Through Your Browser

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  • by RobinH ( 124750 ) on Sunday March 16, 2008 @10:03AM (#22765026) Homepage
    Wouldn't Google Sky be more useful if you could enter a lat/long, and it could give you a picture of the sky from that location at a given time, related to NSEW, etc.? Then you could actually see that the bright object in the SE sky in the morning really is Venus, etc.

    The problem with it currently is that there's no frame of reference. On Google Earth, you generally look at everything from some frame of reference, like you start with your house or the Eiffel Tower or Hoover Dam and start looking around from there.
  • by Jugalator ( 259273 ) on Sunday March 16, 2008 @10:22AM (#22765116) Journal
    So what component in Ubuntu is at fault then, so he can roll it back?

    Somehow I think you're better at giving a hand waving reply here than knowing what you're talking about in this case.

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