Google Maps’ “Immersive View” shows cities in a whole new way

The new view combines billions of satellite and Street View images.

Google Maps will soon offer another perspective on our cities via “immersive view.”

Existing somewhere in between satellite and street, immersive view uses AI to stitch together billions of Google’s satellite and Street View images to render a kind of drone’s-eye-view of the cityscape. 

Immersive view uses AI to stitch together billions of Google’s satellite and Street View images to render a kind of drone’s-eye-view of the cityscape

“We’re able to fuse those together, so that we can actually understand, okay, these are the heights of the buildings,” Google VP of engineering Liz Reid told The Verge’s David Pierce. “How do we combine that with Street View? How do we combine it with aerial view to make something that feels much more like you were there?”

Immersive view will allow users to go from an overhead perspective down to street level, something akin to “playing a video game on medium graphics set in a precisely scaled real world,” as Pierce put it.

Swooping over neighborhoods, around famous landmarks, and down streets, users will also be able to toggle on Google Maps’ other layers, viewing places at various times of day and in differing weather conditions and getting reports on the real-time busyness of businesses and traffic conditions, Google Maps VP Miriam Daniel wrote in a blog post

You can even duck your head into a digital rendering of restaurants, a feature which drew applause when demonstrated at Google I/O, the company’s annual developer conference.

Immersive view will rollout later this year for Tokyo, San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, and London.

“It’s in the physical and geospatial information around us” that much which is knowable about the world can be found, Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai said during his I/O keynote speech.

Immersive view had been in the works for a while, but only recently has it become ready for release, although at first only in select neighborhoods of Tokyo, San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, and London.

“It’s a thing where we had demos years ago, and it was like, ‘oh, here’s the thing,’ but it didn’t really work,” Reid told The Verge. “Now the technology has come a long way into making it feel pretty natural.”

Immersive view is scheduled to rollout later this year, and the company says more cities will soon follow.

We’d love to hear from you! If you have a comment about this article or if you have a tip for a future Freethink story, please email us at tips@freethink.com.

Related
Farmers can fight invasive insects with AI and a robotic arm
As the invasive spotted lanternfly threatens to expand its range, Carnegie Mellon researchers are developing a robot to fight back.
Google unveils AI try-on feature for shopping
Google’s AI-powered virtual try-on feature lets shoppers see what an article of clothing would look like on a wide range of models.
GitHub CEO says Copilot will write 80% of code “sooner than later”
GitHub CEO Thomas Dohmke goes in depth to answer questions about how AI-powered development will change the future of innovation itself.
No, AI probably won’t kill us all – and there’s more to this fear campaign than meets the eye
A dose of scepticism is warranted when considering the AI doomsayer narrative — there are commercial incentives to manufacture fear of AI.
AI is riding to the rescue on wildfires
AI-powered systems designed to detect, confirm, and detail wildfires at the earliest possible time may help firefighters tame infernos in the West.
Up Next
Exit mobile version