From Coolest Gadgets: Google Street View now explores the Amazon

The Google Street View team has certainly done their part in mapping around major portions of the streets around the world, and there has been some pretty zany images to look at in the past. Having said that, I am just waiting for Google’s Street View team to head off into space, although getting their orientations right might take some time. Well, this time around, they have not traveled that far – at least not into the outer reaches of space, but rather, a handful of members of the Brazil and U.S. Street View and Google Earth Outreach teams were invited to the Amazon Basin in order to collect ground-level images of the rivers, forest and communities that are located in the Rio Negro Reserve.

I could have sworn that I saw an Angry Bird in some parts of the rainforest featured, but then again, it might have just been my overactive imagination. World Forest Day has come and past, hence the images captured have been uploaded and are now available to the masses via the Street View feature on Google Maps. No longer do you need to book a flight to South America if you want to check out the natural beauty and diversity of the Amazon with your own eyes. Hey, it is better than nothing, right?

You are able to take a virtual boat ride down the main section of the Rio Negro, or choose to float up into the smaller tributaries where the forest is flooded, without having to slap on an entire tube of mosquito repellent. How about strolling along the paths of Tumbira, the largest community in the Reserve? Not only that, you are able to visit some of the other communities who have invited the Google Street View team into recording their lives and cultures.

This project would have been impossible if it were not for the partnership with the Amazonas Sustainable Foundation (FAS), which is actually a local nonprofit conservation organization. The Street View trike was good to go even in such challenging environments, while the tripod camera with a fisheye lens saw action, capturing the beauty of the natural landscape and the local communities. Over 50,000 still photos were stitched together as a result of this mammoth effort, resulting in immersive, 360-degree panoramic views.

Since many areas of the Amazon such as the Rio Negro Reserve remain under the protection of the Brazilian government, with the public having restricted access, so this might be the closest you will ever get to the rainforest in real life, in that part of the world.

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from Coolest Gadgets

From Ars Technica: Zynga buys Draw Something maker OMGPOP, will soon own everyone and everything


Four weeks ago, only people who follow and play social games pretty closely had heard of New-York-based developer OMGPOP. Today, over 35 million people have downloaded the company’s asynchronous art-guessing game Draw Something, and the company has attracted a Zynga buyout offer that AllThingsD is reporting is worth more than $200 million.

OMGPOP has been around since 2006, creating 35 other social games first on its own social network and then on Facebook and mobile platforms. But today’s sale seems designed to strike while the company is incredibly hot with Draw Something‘s meteoric success—the game generated 1 billion drawings across 84 languages in the last week, a peak of 3,000 per second.

Draw Something‘s quick rise is a bit hard to decipher, considering that countless other Pictionary-style games have failed to catch fire on iOS and Facebook, including many with much deeper gameplay and features than OMGPOP’s extremely basic title. It could be that Draw Something‘s simplicity, along with a design that allows for play sessions as short as a minute or two, appeals to players that don’t have time to get fully absorbed in social games. Or maybe it just illustrates the exponential marketing power of having seemingly all of your friends stumble on to a single multiplayer game all at once.

As one anonymous OMGPOP backer told AllThingsD, “No one had any idea that this would take off, and no one knows why it did.” But OMGPOP said during a conference call that the new association with Zynga will let them quickly add new features like chat, photo galleries, and possibly the ability to draw your own profile picture to broaden the game’s appeal even further.

The company also said it currently has “no plans” to change the game’s name to something like Draw With Friends, to match fellow Zynga mobile hit Words With Friends. That game also came to Zynga though a buyout of developer Newtoy in 2010, one of 14 acquisitions the company made in a 12-month period leading up to its IPO last year. At this rate, we wouldn’t be that surprised if, ten years from now, every single major game developer and publisher is just a Zynga subsidiary.

 

from Ars Technica

From Ars Technica: CEO dares Microsoft to sue him over virtual desktops that flout licensing


We recently told you about a virtual desktop service for iPads and other devices that seems to exist only because it breaks Microsoft’s Windows licensing rules in order to provide an unbeatable price: free, with the option to upgrade to a more robust service for just $5 a month.

The hosted virtual desktop service, from gaming company OnLive, has virtualization vendors who play by Microsoft’s rules seething. Instead of suing OnLive, as one might expect, Microsoft responded to criticism of OnLive’s favorable arrangement with a blog post stating “We are actively engaged with OnLive with the hope of bringing them into a properly licensed scenario.”

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from Ars Technica

From Engadget: Microsoft releases Robotics Developer Studio 4, bring your own Kinect

It’s been available in beta for a few months, but Microsoft has now made the final version of its Robotics Developer Studio 4 toolkit available for download. As before, it remains completely free, and it’s also now compatible with the release version of the Kinect for Windows SDK so you can build your own beverage-carrying robot like the one Microsoft shows off in the video after the break. Hit the links below to download the software or see a few more examples of what can be done with it.

Continue reading Microsoft releases Robotics Developer Studio 4, bring your own Kinect

 

from Engadget