123-year-old Man in Bolivia is World’s Oldest Person


The verified oldest person living right now is Misao Okawa. She is 115 years old and lives in Japan. Now a report from Bolivia says that Carmelo Flores Laura is the world's oldest person. He is...

Google Maps adds natural terrain by default outside of satellite views, reminds us the world isn’t flat

Google Maps adds natural terrain outside of satellite views, reminds us the world isn't flat

Everyone knows that Google prides itself on mapping accuracy. If you hadn't checked beyond the base maps in the past few years, though, you'd have thought the terrain was charted in the "here be dragons" era -- it's been as flat as a board. Take a second look today. Google has overhauled Google Maps worldwide to show hills, deserts and lush zones by default, as well as label the geographical features that hadn't previously been identifiable in a sea of white. The map overhaul isn't so nuanced enough as to remind us how steep the hills can be in San Francisco, but it will remind us that Gobi refers to more than just a chipset.

Filed under: , ,

Google Maps adds natural terrain by default outside of satellite views, reminds us the world isn't flat originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 26 Oct 2012 17:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGoogle Lat Long  | Email this | Comments

NASA READI GPS Satellite Network Will Detect Earthquakes


NASA has announced that it has installed a group of 500 ground stations throughout the Western Coast of the United States that will communicate with GPS satellites in orbit. The goal of the system,...