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PICTURE THIS: Auckland Art Gallery will put hundreds of its works online as part of a Google project.

Auckland Art Gallery will open its doors to distant audiences as part of the Google Art Project.

It is one of two Australasian galleries chosen for the virtual museum tours launched by Google earlier this year.

The online project allows users to wander the likes of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, the Tate Britain or the Palace of Versailles.

Seventeen museums and galleries from nine countries have contributed more than a thousand artworks to the online collection.

Regional Facilities Auckland says Auckland Art Gallery will add several hundred major New Zealand artworks to the virtual gallery when it joins the project in February next year.

Google's street view technology allows users to take virtual gallery tours or artworks can be viewed individually.

Art lovers can pick and chose their favourite pieces to make an online collection to share on social networking sites.

Both Auckland Art Gallery and Google said they could not comment on the project.

Sydney's Gallery of New South Wales is set to be the second Australasian gallery involved.

source: stuff.co.nz

 

stuff.co.nz

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Google Street View Trike captures RIT campus

Posted at: 10/11/2010 9:43 AM | Updated at: 10/11/2010 2:35 PM
By: Lynette Adams | WHEC.com

Google TrikeStudents may have noticed some unusual visitors on the RIT campus today. The search engine Google sent a specially equipped tricycle to Henrietta.

The tricycle is equipped with nine directional cameras. it cruised around campus today taking street level pictures of rit. the photos will provide a continuous 360 degree view of the campus and will be featured in Google’s prestigious street view gallery.

RIT won a Google contest for the honor. It received 30,000 votes.

Soon, people interested in the university will be able to click on Google or RIT's website and get a virtual tour of the campus.

Bob Finnerty of the Rochester Institute of Technology said, “The fact that we'll have this on our website when its all finished, and the fact that they'll be able to do a virtual tour of RIT whether they're in California which is where we have a high number of applications from high school students, Texas and of course when they come to visit campus it will all make sense for them.”

This is an honor for RIT, a technological university, to partner with Google.

Only a few other campuses like Boston University and San Diego State University are featured in the street view gallery.

Some of the other winners in Google’s spring contest: Boston’s Faneuil Hall Marketplace and the National Mall in Washington, D.C.

For more Rochester, N.Y. news go to website www.whec.com.

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We’ve all seen “virtual tours” of open houses on real-estate sites. What if every location, every restaurant, store, museum, theme park ride and airport had a virtual tour on Google Maps? In three or four years that may be the case as a result of the acquisition of an Israeli company called MentorWave Technologies (or Quicksee), for approximately $10 million.

Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz first reported the acquisition yesterday.

Quicksee makes it fairly simple for individuals to create “virtual tours” of locations, things and experiences. Obviously this is directed toward Google Maps/Earth (see ideo below) but may go well beyond Maps to product tours and other applications as well.

Right now Google uses StreetView cars (or trikes) to capture exteriors and outdoor locations. The company has also been sending still photographers to document building and store interiors. Quicksee would potentially speed that process dramatically by enabling user-generated tours (which can be done today but not simply and uniformly).

Here’s how Quicksee describes itself:

Founded in late 2004, Quiksee is a privately held start-up company, established to develop, manufacture, and market comprehensive interactive media solutions utilizing its proprietary imaging technology. Our multi-disciplinary team includes scientists and engineers in the fields of new media, networking and optical technologies, and hardware/software integration. Several of our executives and researchers have past experience working in organizations such as Microsoft, Orbotech, and Medcon. Their valuable experience places Quiksee in a formidable market position and allows us to pursue the innovations we are so passionate about.

Based in Herzliya Pituach, one of Israel’s leading high-tech centers, Quiksee works closely with its business clients & media partners to provide customized immersive visual experiences designed to meet their specific requirements. Quiksee aims to become a world leader in the visual documentation market, providing state-of-the-art technologies for people and organizations looking for simple, efficient, and cost-effective visual solutions.

The video immediately below looks as though a Quicksee employee put together a demo of how Quicksee and Google Maps would integrate (perhaps to pitch the technology to Google). It gives us a bit of a glimpse into the future of Google Maps:

Boston-based Everyscape can do a version of this today with still photography. And Everyscape is set to roll out a number of partnerships in the local segment soon (ie., directories).

Microsoft has Photosynth and has demonstrated video integration and live streaming in maps. So Google won’t be the only one offering more dynamic and interactive interior photography in the not-too-distant future.

I would also fully expect Quicksee tours to be integrated to be showcased in Google Maps for Mobile as well.

by Greg Sterling

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A team of researchers from the University of Ottawa has set out to teach Google Inc. a lesson on how to make software.

The three professors believe the Internet giant's controversial Street View service should allow people to not only venture wherever they want, but allow them to take tours inside buildings.

"We are trying to make an application like (Street View) more immersive," said Robert Laganière, an associate professor in the School of Information Technology and Engineering at the university. "With Street View, all you can do is follow the path proposed by the application. What we want to do is to be able to move in any direction." Laganière partnered with professors Eric Dubois and Jochene Lang in late 2008 to come up with a superior street mapping system.

The problem with Street View, according to the trio, is that it feels like users are stuck on rails and are only being shown what Google wants them to see. What if they don't want to move in the direction Google is telling them to? Or what if the user wants to head off the beaten path and check out a local park or a landmark that can't be accessed by a car? "(Now) you make a decision when you are at an intersection about whether to go right or left," said Laganière. "But the way we would like it to be is, if you are in a large space, then you can decide to move in any direction. If you want to approach a building, you can do it from any angle and any direction." Whereas Street View displays arrows telling users which directions are available for them to travel in, the University of Ottawa software allows users to travel almost anywhere. If a user is checking out street images of Ottawa and wants to hop a curb and head toward the Rideau Canal, they can do so using the university's technology.

Creating the technology has been particularly challenging. While Google has billions of dollars, thousands of employees and fleets of camera-equipped automobiles at its disposal, the team of Ottawa researchers is working on a shoe-string budget.

However, they have managed to reach most of their goals thanks to a bit of funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), an electronic scooter, a donated R2-D2-like robot and the help of a handful of very smart PhD students at the university.

Using the battery-powered scooter, which is driven around town by student Jamal Saboune, the team has collected thousands of images of the university's campus and parts of downtown Ottawa. The scooter is equipped with a panoramic camera and a global positioning system (GPS), which allows 360-degree panoramic images to be captured and inserted into their software to create a virtual map.

The researchers are not taking any more pictures than Street View does — the secret is the software that stitches together the images to make them seem seamless. In Google's Street View, when a person moves from one picture to another, they see a blur and then the screen refocuses on the next available image.

When compared to Street View, the university's software makes the experience seem almost like a video game. Moving down a street, across a park or any other area for which the team has collected images, can be accomplished virtually, with the group's software automatically stitching images together, doing away with the need to reload static imagery.

"Our goal is to make you feel like you are there and actually moving through that environment," said Laganière.

The second component of the university's research is to use a small trash-can-sized robot they call the "PC-Bot" to capture images inside buildings. The PC-Bot, which also has a panoramic camera mounted to it, can be pre-programmed with the floor plans of a building and then sent off to automatically capture images.

The robot could be used to take photos of the inside of a museum, allowing people from all over the world to take virtual tours of the facility from the comfort of their own homes.

Dubois, another researcher on the project, said with all the progress the team has made so far, he expects a commercial version of the university's software and mapping technology to be available within the next year. He hopes the university can license the technology, or sell it to a private company that would then be free to offer the software online.

"We have no concept of competing with Google on a large scale," said Dubois. "Our goal is to license these things to companies that can use them." While the team is finally coming within arm's reach of their goal of recreating the Street View service, they already have ideas about how the service can continue to improve.

According to Dubois, the team has students working on ways to make computer-based mapping services available in 3D.

The university is also working on ways of pulling people, cars and other items that may identify people or infringe of privacy rights, out of images entirely.

Complaints over breaches of privacy have plagued services such as Google Street View since they were first introduced.

"These are hard problems to solve. We have PhD students working on them," said Dubois.

© Copyright (c) The Ottawa Citizen

via Going beyond Google.

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