Tag Archives: Google Earth

Official: Audi first to bring LTE to the car later this year

By Jonathon Ramsey

Filed under:

It appears Audi will be the first to market with in-car LTE service later this year. We knew that BMW was working on LTE integration last year with its ConnectedDrive, and we’ve been told that, by the end of 2015, most General Motors products will have it, but LTE can be ordered on the S3 Sportback (pictured) as soon as July. Other models in the A3 line-up will add the option in November.

Inserting an LTE-enabled SIM card into the Audi’s MMI navigation will make the S3 a WLAN hotspot that can quickly shuffle high-definition content from the cloud to the cockpit. It will also bolster Audi Connect services like Google Earth, Facebook and Twitter, e-mail, and streaming internet radio.

We’ve been told that we’ll be offered the LTE option when the 2015 A3 sedan gets here in the spring of 2014. Since the service requires you to provide a SIM card, we expect that costs and data caps will be a matter between you and the service provider; speaking of which, Audi hasn’t announced yet who that provider will be on this side of the Atlantic. The press release below has more details.

Continue reading Audi first to bring LTE to the car later this year

Audi first to bring LTE to the car later this year originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 30 Jul 2013 18:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Have long-lost pyramids been found in Egypt?

By hnn

Mysterious, pyramid-like structures spotted in the Egyptian desert by an amateur satellite archaeologist might be long-lost pyramids after all, according to a new investigation into the enigmatic mounds.

Angela Micol, who last year found the structures using Google Earth 5,000 miles away in North Carolina, says puzzling features have been uncovered during a preliminary ground proofing expedition, revealing cavities and shafts.

“Moreover, it has emerged these formations are labeled as pyramids on several old and rare maps,” Micol told Discovery News….

Source:
Archaeology News Network

Source URL:
http://archaeologynewsnetwork.blogspot.com/2013/07/have-long-lost-pyramids-been-found-in.html#.UehG7VO9wak

Date:
7-16-13

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

Have Mankind's 'Greatest Pyramids' Been Pinpointed?

By Ruth Brown

An amateur archaeologist in North Carolina made headlines last year when she claimed to have uncovered long-lost pyramids in Egypt via Google Earth. Real archaeologists have been a bit more skeptical. But Angela Micol says new discoveries help prove her findings, reports Discovery News . Another amateur archaeologist recently did a… …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Great Finds

Check Out This UFO On Google Earth Map Before Google Deletes It In A Few Months.

By ScottCWaring

Date of sighting: Date of image March 2011
Location of sighting: North Lauderdale, Florida
Date of discovery: June 29, 2013
Method used to find it: Google Earth Map (free online program, includes Mars, Moon, Stars)
Copy past this in Google search box: 26°14’1.94″N 80°14’29.80″W

Look at this fantastic discovery. I checked it out and its there, but you have to enter streetview from that point. The person who found it was looking in Google Earth map and found a UFO over the house.

Now, I have reported a few of these that I discovered myself and every one of them were deleted by Google within 3-5 months. The last video I made was of the Lazar style UFO over Cape of Good Hope, Africa, but those @#$#erds at Google deleted it soon after. The post is on the left side of this web site. What I’m saying is that I have reported over 50 Google earth UFOs and none…I repeat none exit today. That in it self is undeniable proof that Google in working with the US government to keep alien evidence under wraps. It sounds like Google, the NSA and CIA are in bed together. You can also see that when you visit Google Mars. It looks like a child’s scrap book, not a professionally put together map. Scott C. Waring

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at UFO Sightings Daily

Google to Close Google Reader & 7 Other Products

By Kevin Chen, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Technology constantly changes and some Google  products must make way for better initiatives. In its second announced “spring cleaning,” Google is bringing the total number of product and services closures to 70. Here is a quick rundown of the “to-close” products:

  1. started in 2005 as an alternative RSS reader and has attracted a loyal product following. Because usage has declined, Google will retire the product on July 1. Before then, users can export their data and subscriptions.
     
  2. Google Voice App for Blackberry will end next week. BlackBerry  can continue using Google Voice through Google’s HTML5 app, which is more secure and will receive updates. The HTML5 site is compatible with BlackBerry version 6 and later.
     
  3.  for Macintosh and Windows will no longer receive updates. Existing customers will continue to be able to download the software, and Google will still offer Snapseed mobile app on iOS and Android for free.
     
  4. Google Cloud Connect is a plug-in to help people work in the cloud by automatically saving Microsoft Office files from Windows PCs in Google Drive. The product will close April 30 as users can, instead, use Google Drive on the desktop. Google Drive works more effectively and across Windows, Mac, Android, and iOS devices.
     
  5. Google Building Maker helped people to make three-dimensional building models for Google Earth and Maps. It will be retired on June 1, but users can access and export their models from the 3D Warehouse. 
     
  6. Apps Script will refocus efforts from GUI Builder and five UiApp widgets to better the HTML Service. The rest of the Ui Service will not be affected. The GUI Builder will continue to be available until Sept. 16. 
     
  7. CalDAV API will become available for whitelisted developers, and will be shut down for other developers on Sept. 16. 
     
  8. Search API for Shopping will shut down on Sept. 16. While Google believes in helping developers create shopping apps based on Google’s Product Search data, it’s shifting its focus on creating a better shopping experience for users through Google Shopping

The article Google to Close Google Reader & 7 Other Products originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Kevin Chen has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends and owns shares of Google. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Copyright © 1995 – 2013 The Motley Fool, LLC. All rights reserved. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Charred remains found in cabin positively ID'd as Christopher Dorner, police report

Charred remains found in a burned out California cabin have been positively identified as that of fugitive ex-cop Christopher Dorner, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Office said Thursday.

San Bernardino County sheriff’s spokeswoman Jodi Miller said the remains were identified through dental examination in the autopsy. Authorities said other personal effects were found in the cabin, including Dorner’s license.

Miller did not give a cause of death.

The search for Dorner began last week after authorities said he had launched a deadly revenge campaign against the Los Angeles Police Department for his firing, warning that he would bring “warfare” to LAPD officers and their families.

The manhunt brought police to Big Bear Lake, 80 miles east of Los Angeles, where they found Dorner’s burned-out pickup truck abandoned. His footprints disappeared on frozen soil and hundreds of officers who searched the area and checked out each building failed to find him.

Five days later, but just a stone’s throw from a command post authorities had set up in the massive manhunt, Karen and Jim Reynolds said they came face to face with Dorner inside their cabin-style condo.

The couple said Dorner bound them and put pillowcases on their heads. At one point, he explained that he had been there for days.

“He said `I don’t have a problem with you, so I’m not going to hurt you,”‘ Jim Reynolds said. “I didn’t believe him; I thought he was going to kill us.”

Police have not commented on the Reynolds’ account, but it renews questions about the thoroughness of a search for a man who authorities declared was armed and extremely dangerous as they hunted him across the Southwest and Mexico.

“They said they went door-to-door but then he’s right there under their noses. Makes you wonder if the police even knew what they were doing,” resident Shannon Schroepfer said. “He was probably sitting there laughing at them the whole time.”

The notion of him holed up just across the street from the command post was shocking to many, but not totally surprising to some experts familiar with the complications of such a manhunt.

“Chilling. That’s the only word I could use for that,” said Ed Tatosian, a retired SWAT commander for the Sacramento Police Department. “It’s not an unfathomable oversight. We’re human. It happens. It’s chilling (that) it does happen.”

Law enforcement officers, who had gathered outside daily for briefings, were stunned by the revelation. One official later looking on Google Earth exclaimed that he’d parked right across the street from the Reynolds’ cabin each day.

The Reynolds said Dorner was upstairs in the rental unit Tuesday when they arrived to ready it for vacationers. Dorner, who at the time was being sought for three killings, confronted the Reynolds with a drawn gun, “jumped out and hollered `stay calm,”‘ Jim Reynolds said during a Wednesday night news conference.

His wife screamed and ran downstairs but Dorner caught her, Reynolds said. The couple said they were taken to a bedroom where he ordered them to lie on a bed and then on the floor. Dorner bound …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

5 online tools to track the flu

Forty seven states reported widespread Influenza activity last week, up from 41 the week before, according to the CDC. The good news is that several websites offer useful—or at least interesting—information regarding the season’s outbreak.

Google.org Flu Trends is a good place to start.

First, it shows the regions in the world where the flu is most rampant, with North America being the hardest hit. You can also download animated flu trends for Google Earth that show a 3D model of the Earth, then you can drill down into various states to see how this year’s flu data compares with previous years. It also provides a link to Public Data Explorer, which lets you click on various countries or regions and compare flu search activity according to which of them are getting the most Google searches for the term “flu.”

FluNearYou.org is also worth checking out if you’re concerned about how many people near you have come down with the bug. You can sign in with Facebook or your email address, give the site your birthdate and zip code, and fill out a short survey to determine whether you’re experiencing any symptoms. In return, you get a Google Map peppered with little pins indicating others who have self-reported whether they have been sick. FluNearYou is also available as an Android and iOS app.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

The EPA’s Mercury Problem

By Susan Stamper Brown

EPA 2 SC The EPAs Mercury Problem

Ninety-six. That’s the number of 60-watt incandescent light bulbs I purchased last weekend after learning the other kind, the compact fluorescent lights (CFLs) environmentalists are so in love with, are hazardous to my health and to the environment. I would have preferred a higher wattage but discovered that the 75-watt version was outlawed January 1st.

It took about three hours to replace every CFL bulb in my house and carefully place them in a huge plastic container used to transport them to the recycling center at a local home improvement store. I said a quick prayer for safety while coasting down the road in my SUV. A HAZMAT decal would have come in handy because had I been in a collision, I had enough mercury on board to make the evening news. And because I am a Conservative, they might have labeled me a home-grown terrorist.

CFLs aren’t all they’re cracked up to be. Back in 2008, some Yale University scientists isolated CFLs’ benefits down to one: lower energy bills. The scientists questioned whether a little savings was worth the danger attached to mercury exposure and “runoff downstream.”

Besides making the environment sick, researchers recently discovered that these “environmentally friendly” light bulbs aren’t friendly to humans either. According to the UK Telegraph, CFLs “should not be left on for extended periods, particularly near someone’s head” because “they emit poisonous materials when switched on.” The report found those “carcinogenic substances” should be “kept as far away as possible from the human environment” because they may cause migraines, skin problems, and breast cancer. Great.

It really makes no sense. Somehow, it’s okay to have mercury housed in delicate glass bulbs inside every home in America; yet the EPA feels compelled to enact new regulations like the Mercury and Air Toxics Standards (MATS) limiting mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants promising MATS would raise kids’ IQs, prevent a substantial amount of premature deaths, reduce heart attacks, and lessen childhood asthma. I’d settle for weight control and whiter teeth.

Sounds wonderful. Problem is, the EPA’s logic is about as twisted as a CFL, considering most people don’t live next to a coal-fired plant; but every home in America using CFLs is at risk of mercury exposure.

They say the pricey CFL’s are cost efficient but fail to mention that their measure for efficiency decreases if the bulbs are switched on and off. Nor do they discuss the outrageous price per bulb or the gas usage (carbon footprint) involved in transporting old bulbs. They also fail to factor in human nature; most people will simply discard old bulbs instead of spending their Saturday driving to the recycling center.

Seems to me that enacting the most expensive EPA rule revision in history, MATS, has less to do with people and more to do with coal-fired plants. Back in January 2012, the Washington Times said the rule will cost power plants up to $18 billion a year and “will be passed directly to consumers.” I’ve always believed that Progressives love the planet but hate the people who live on it. Think about it. They are quick to condemn environmental violators but conveniently ignore the massive amounts of mercury Mother Nature herself spews out by way of volcanoes, deep-sea vents, and geysers. Maybe we should tax the planet, just for good measure.

According to Power Engineering Magazine, by 2016, EPA rules will force the shutdown of “32 mostly coal-fired power plants” in 12 states, and possibly 36 others. The shutdowns will lead to higher power costs, less jobs, and potential rationing. Before long, we’ll be rubbing sticks together to cook food, stay warm, and find our way to the community outhouse.

But, in the meantime…tonight I celebrate. I purged my home of all those hazy mercury-filled bulbs, and I’m switching on every last one of my incandescent bulbs to celebrate — in hopes the Google Earth satellite will drift my way and snap a picture. My house will be one of the brightest spots on the planet, second only to Al Gore’s.

Photo credit: TexasGOPVote.com (Creative Commons)

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism