Riding Shotgun With the Google Street View Beetle 139
longacre writes "Popular Mechanics takes a ride in an Immersive Media VW Beetle, one of the six cars that drives around America shooting images for Google Maps Street View. Mounted on the roof is the $45,000 Dodeca 2360 video camera, whose 11 lenses record a 360 degree field of view at 30 frames per second, sucking up as many as 200 miles of city scenes per day. The setup takes up the whole back seat and part of the front passenger seat, and is all controlled with an off-the-shelf Logitech game controller. Includes a cool interactive raw video of a drive through Manhattan."
Impressive (Score:2, Interesting)
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Re:Impressive (Score:5, Funny)
Yes. If only there was some way we could make a solid, imovable, vertical surface transparent so that we could make parts of vehicles from it. We could then drive moving vehicles down the street without crashing and children could peer outside while travelling.
The techology may even become so cheap so that we could use it housing so theat we dont have to live in darkness in our homes. We good look outside through the transparent 'walls' and see the sun.
One day technology will find a way.
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welcome to slashdot (Score:1)
pure blindness and hypocrisy at work on slashdot
Re:welcome to slashdot (Score:4, Informative)
Re:welcome -- Aspen Movie Map (Score:2)
For those of you too lazy to follow the links, the Aspen Movie Map was a project done in 1978-81 by the MIT Architecture Machine Group (precursor to the Media Lab) to create an interactive map of the town of Aspen Colorado. Similar to Google, they mounted sideways facing cameras on a car, drove around the town collecting "street-view" imagery and loaded it all into an interactive map. They built an interactive videodisk
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For years you've been able to look at street-level pictures of every property in Cook County, Illinois (Chicago) on the internet through the Assessor's web site.
Just because Google's doing it, people pretend like this is something new.
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Re:welcome to slashdot (Score:5, Insightful)
if the fbi (Score:1)
i don't really care if you think the fbi would be right doing that, i don't really care if you think the fbi would be wrong doing that
what i care about is thinking the fbi is right/ wrong to do that, and thinking elsewise of google
a massive company like that? who knows practically what everyone in the country is searching for?
i'm not being paranoid, i'm illustrating the kind of distrust that flows to
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were sitting on a streetcorner, photographing everyone walking by, the outcry here on slashdot would be huge
Why?
don't really care if you think the fbi would be right doing that, i don't really care if you think the fbi would be wrong doing that
what i care about is thinking the fbi is right/ wrong to do that, and thinking elsewise of google
Same logic: if the FBI were doing it, it would be fine. There's no reasonable expectation of privacy of anything that can be viewed from a public street. Besides, the FBI, the ATF, and yes, your local and state police departments do this every day. It's called a stakeout. And it's been ruled legal by the courts over and over.
and i don't have a problem with that (Score:2)
i have a problem with the usual slashbot who would cry high holy terror if the fbi did it, and swoon if google did it
How reasonable are any expectations? (Score:2)
There's no reasonable expectation of privacy of anything that can be viewed from a public street.
My experience in court (as a witness, only) in the US state of Virginia was that the "reasonable" in this statement refers to the legal concept of the "reasonable man". It was a jury trial so the judge explained rather precisely what the law said was a "reasonable expectation of privacy" in Virginia.
The fictious Reasonable Man does not have access to machines that would allow him to see through walls, nor does he have any reasonable expectation that someone would want to look through his walls for harmles
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If the FBI were sitting on a streetcorner, photographing everyone walking by, the outcry here on slashdot would be huge
Not to nitpick, but doesn't the FBI (and several other governmental offices) as well as private companies do this already? Think about any major bank branch, post office, or office buildings and I guarantee there are PTZ cameras all over the place.
Distrust Google if you want to, or fume at the 'fanboyism' that seems to occur around them from time to time. I'm not saying that Google is completely free from any wrongdoing, just that I don't think the vast majority of people here on Slashdot think
wrong (Score:2)
but the usual slashbot would cry high holy terror if the fbi were doing it, and swoon if google would do it
i don't care if google or the fbi take your pictures on a streetcorner. i care that the difference in reactions on slashdot is so retarded. so little trust here, so much trust there
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amazing (Score:2)
Reasonable expectation of privacy! (Score:2)
So is the "reasonable expectation of privacy" a digital thing? All or nothing? People behave differently when three, thirty, three hundred or three million people are watching them.
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, I reasonably expect some 30 or 40 people currently I can see could see me. I reasonably expect a million people are not watching me and what happened there would not come back to haunt me 10 years from now.
You do? How do you know CNN isn't conducting a 'hidden camera' investigation? Do you think news crews get releases from everyone that happens to appear in a camera shot that was filmed on a public street?
If 30 or 40 or 300 or 3000 people driving by that day can see you, then you have to expect that everyone can.
Re:Reasonable expectation of privacy! (Score:4, Interesting)
There are no laws to prevent this, in fact, in many places the laws are CAUSING this (London, Chicago). Unfortunately for you, your expectations are no longer reasonable.
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On the far side of the street a little 7 year-old boy in traditional British school uniform with shorts leans forward shyly to see better.
That little boy is my 82-year-old father.
He had no expectation of privacy as he watched that parade 75 years ago and the picture of the parade is no different than the pictures Google is taking now.
If I knew Googl
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pure blindness and hypocrisy at work on slashdot
Diversity of opinion? NO! That way lies madness!!
EXTERMINATE! EXTERMINATE!
Seriously - it did occur to you that these points of view might be held by different individuals. Didn't it?
you can have any opinion you want (Score:4, Insightful)
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of course there is (Score:2)
i'm referring to the usual kneejerk twit
such a person doesn't exist?
you feel a need to defend such a person, or group yourself with them?
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Better yet, find enough examples of users here that would do that so it can be considered the "usual" reaction. We'll make it easy, say, 15% of Slashdot's users? (On the grounds that 15% of the users posting similar comments is enough to seem like a very popular opinion.) Please list usernames.
Thanks.
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* Google is using their own money for this venture, not taking it from the taxpayer.
* Google is upfront with what this is for. Government might install cameras for "safety" but once the infrastructure is in place there's all sorts of new things they can push by.
* It's not permanent. Just a car driving. It's not surveiling street corners.
* Google doesn't have the government database cross-references. The camera sees a car dri
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Have you tried the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button?!
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Wait until Google has enough data gathered on everyone.
Then it'll become the...
"Are you feeling lucky, punk?" button.
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"hi" (Score:2)
you'll excuse me, but your distrust of government and trust of google is fucking hypocritical and stupid
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It's not hypocritical if they're, oh I don't know, two completely unrelated and dissimilar entities.
Or perhaps I shouldn't trust my mother because I can't trust the guy who mugged me?
hey moron (Score:2)
is your hypocrisy and misplaced trust and logical incoherence dawning on you yet?
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Trust is a lucid thing. Once they start doing bad things by me I will withdraw my trust. Right now I have no problem with them funding the public view from the road, and there simply isn't a slippery slope argument that can be made.
Pro Tip: you can better prove that you're right with evidence instead of calling people morons. Perhaps THAT was what you meant with "Welcome to Sla
you can have any opinion you want (Score:2)
yu can't spout one opinion one monet, and then the opposite opinion the next, and not expect to be called out for it
that's what is happening with the government photographing you, or google. why is one mistrusted? why is the other trusted so much? makes no friggin sense
I'd be more impressed... (Score:5, Insightful)
What purpose does the game controller have? Are the drivers allowed to track hotties? or is it for focusing in on billboards for corporate sponsors? Are they offering street view adwords or something?
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Fun times (Score:2)
Just like Data (Score:4, Funny)
Data formats (Score:2)
Raw video linked on the front page of Slashdot... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Raw video linked on the front page of Slashdot. (Score:1)
Obviously, I could have spent that time better.
Police Dash-Cam 2.0 (Score:3, Insightful)
With the increased Law-Enforcement use of WiFi/Wireless-Data access and the necessitation of Computer capabilities in modern Police Vehicles, this device would make a nice streaming Police roof-cam.
(The quality looks good enough that "Cops" or other 'reality' police shows might just fund the costs for the cameras too.)
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Question about the "RAW" video (Score:3, Insightful)
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Everything to the side of the car looks stretched and skewed.
Someone correct me if I'm wrong but it's not the side that's distorted, it's the lower part of the image, just like the projection of a map. I think for it to look right they should project their "map" onto a sphere.
Well, theres only one thing that bugs me (Score:1)
Re:Quality = VERY GOOD! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Quality = VERY GOOD! FLV Mirror too. (Score:2)
In any case, here's it again, this time along with a mirror for the flash file in case their site gets hammered from the original link:
Eh, it's actually pretty good... check out the flash file that that viewer is displaying:
http://demos.immersivemedia.com/fvdemo_1/data/CylindricalFlashPlayerDemoSite/PopularMechanicsNYCDriveAlong/video.flv [immersivemedia.com]
Mirror here: http://g.appleguru.org/nycpano.flv [appleguru.org]
Open that without t
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Rural Areas (Score:1)
Still, the possibility that someday soon users will be able to submit their own images of various locations suggests that suburban
One word why user submissions would be a bad idea (Score:2)
Google does that already (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panoramio [wikipedia.org]
DIY Street View (Score:2)
Make a DVD with angle selection (Score:2)
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They kinda did that already. It was called "The Matrix".
great for F1 or Nascar, or superbikes?! (Score:2)
I'd love to try this out with video from a formula1, nascar or superbike race - it'd be *really* amazing if it could be done live - you could actually simulate being in the driving seat live during a race!
I can predict that if the tech becomes cheap enough, it will lead to a slew of re-runs of the famous Rendezvoos video (cross-Paris maniac run in a Ferrari) or Gumball rally.
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Driver: "Why is there a bloody great wind break on my car?"
Manager: "We're gonna video everything you do so we can sell it to the cable subscriber schmos."
Driver: "Can't you at least stick an aerofoil on it!?!?"
Manager: "If it's good enough for Google, it's good enough for you. Now race!"
Driver: "Bah."
*yawn*
Sorry, I'm tired.
Ooo, ooo, that smell. The smel of Google... (Score:1, Flamebait)
Privacy? (Score:3, Funny)
Social hacking with Google (Score:2, Interesting)
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Whole Netherlands already in 360 view + palace pic (Score:2)
Where Will It Be, And When? (Score:1)
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Next Monday, 3-4 PM for your neighborhood.
What Colors can I get this in? (Score:1)
But I want one!
In Blue! No Yellow! No, sorry, Blue.
Dodeca? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Dodeca? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Because nobody is interested in the view pointing towards the roof of the car?
:)
--Rob
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Hendeca not dodeca (Score:1)
Meh. I prefer the distributed approach (Score:2)
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Scary (Score:2)
One really cool possibility (Score:1)
WATCH OUT! (Score:2)
Google Cars? (Score:2)
Those pictures show a LOT more than 6 cars.
http://www.gpsmagazine.com/2007/07/googles_secret_cameracar_armad.php [gpsmagazine.com]
What was with the honking? (Score:2)
"nearly a dozen" == 11 (Score:2)
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Re:Get these damn things off the streets. (Score:4, Funny)
Should be no problem so long as they don't record a policeman performing his job duties.
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Re:Get these damn things off the streets. (Score:4, Funny)
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Why? I can't see a point of contention; yes, Google's videotaping/photographing documentary footage for inclusion on its website, in order to show that "this is what 'here' looks like," but what's the problem with that? Presumably anything occurring in the public setting has no reasonable expectation of privacy. On the (presumably) rare occasions that a Google-Cam documents something through a window that should have an expectation of privacy I seem to recall reading that th
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Fight back against this Cyber Scum with some incognito [disguise.com] wear.
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Although I did blanch a little when I read the part about the $45,000 camera mounted on the roof. I guess I'd want to be real careful I could see that thing when I went in for lunch...I'd hate to have my paycheck docked for the cost of one of those, just because I picked the wrong McDonalds to take a bathroom break at.
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Re:Dangerous work (Score:5, Funny)
Police? Yes, I'd like to report a stolen camera.
The parking lot at seven eleven.
To buy a slushie.
The roof of my car.
It cost over forty grand.
A Volkswagon Beatle.
No no, the camera.
That's right, a slushie.
No, just a slushie.
I don't think they sell that.
Yes, the roof.
Really big. And it takes round pictures.
No, really, I haven't.
No, this isn't.
Balls? Only two.
Yes they are, but that's not what I meant by round pictures.
Well, I guess it is.
I'm sure it wouldn't fit.
Same to you.
Nice to see being a paranoid nutjob... (Score:1)
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