![]() ![]() It´s outside Panoramio and I found the making of good sphericals not only very time consuming, but not very satisfying (light problems, stitching problems, missing 1 photo or one photo corrupted means game over etc.) I must admit I didn´t go to the bottom of this. Google photos AND Streetview ask for ready photos, preferably made with a full automatic sphere camera.įor a DLRS they have a help page, but no way to add metadata, the helpfile seems to be outdated, nothing new there. This asks some skills with scripts or the use of a Google app, which one could find on. ![]() For a "normal" camera you will have to add those metadata. When you use a mobile app for sphericals (after Android 4.2) the metadata and coordinates are automatically added. They aimed at DLRS for that, but I uploaded sphericals from my Nokia too. They wanted them from mobile devices, but also from "normal" cameras. We can not see our Panoramio photos uploaded after August on desktop, but we can see them in GE for Android another sign for Googles priorities.Īs for Streetview, the question at hand, Google wants spherical Panoramas. So prioritizing the mobile market will mean less interest in point and shoot camera´s or in DLRS´s. Problem with that is that, even when you have a 41 MP Nokia, there will not be much post processing on the phone, the quality can never be visible as on a desktop monitor. Views has been abandoned because of the link with Google+, IMO that doesn´t mean that the marketing strategy prioritizing mobile has changed The majority of the photos made would come from mobile devices, that´s the medium which makes the photo and puts it on the web immediately if wanted. The Pizzeria nearby was a much used example. With the POI preferably being a business. The whole Views idea and Panoramio merging with Views was to make photos available on mobile, finding Points of Interest on your smartphone and then get the photos showing that POI. The problem of erosion is commonly seen in several areas in the south-Kerala region whereas in Vypeen, accretion is observed that have been kilometres long.Google is aiming at mobile, that means not only output, but also input. Factors like underwater current, littoral drift processes such as accretion - a phenomenon where coastal sediment returns to the shore - or erosion of the coast could have contributed to this. ![]() He also stated that members of the fishing community have raised concerns about the formation of this being a result of dredging by the Cochin port. John added that this can only be determined after a thorough investigation. However, with the most recent discovery, they don’t really know what it is made up of for instance, whether it's made of sand or clay and its distribution. In a conversation with TNM, Vice-Chancellor of KUFOS, K Riji John states that according to the images, it looks like an ordinary underwater island that is commonly seen around the world.Īlso Read: Use Google Maps To Avoid Crowded Places And Stay Safe: Here's How Experts feel it’s another underwater island The letter asked for studies to be conducted to denote reasons for this formation as well the role this would play in water currents and coastal erosion as well as whether it can be used for artificial shore conservation in Chellanam. According to his post, the formation was expected to be around 8 kilometres long and possessed a width of 3.5 kilometres.Īlso Read: Google Maps Will Now Tell You Number Of COVID-19 Cases In A Location The discovery was made by the aforementioned organisation’s president KX Julappan who a few weeks ago had shared a screenshot of Google Maps along with the bean-shaped island off the coast of Cochin in a Facebook post. This was first brought to the attention after the Chellanam Karshika Tourism Development Society, wrote a letter to KUFOS, about this discovery. This matter is now under the investigation of the Kerala University of Fisheries and Ocean Studies (KUFOS). This has been baffling not just the locals but also the experts, who are now of the belief that this could be an underwater structure. A bean-shaped island has surfaced on Google Maps’ satellite view in the Arabian Sea just outside of Cochin, India.Īlso Read: India's Own Google Maps Soon As ISRO, MapmyIndia Join Hands For Homegrown Mapping ServicesĪs reported first by TNM, the formation appears to be almost the size of west Cochin, but surprisingly, the structure is not visible to the naked eye. ![]()
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