Mapping That Puts You There
In one window on my computer, I'm strolling down the Embarcadero in San Francisco -- but instead of sticking to the sidewalk, I'm somehow occupying the middle of the southbound lanes, where I've been passed by a series of sport-utility vehicles.
In another browser window, I'm flying over a slightly blurry version of Lower Manhattan. I can see the park near my cousin's old apartment, but I can't spot the pizza joint or the bagel store that should be there. Then again, I can get uptown much faster than usual, since I'm no longer confined to the streets or the subway.
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Online mapping has advanced a little since the days when everybody was excited just to see Web sites that could calculate driving directions for us.
Now, mapping sites include extras like satellite photography, real-time traffic data and outlines of buildings. They even act like regular desktop programs, allowing you to scroll around and zoom in with a keyboard or mouse -- no need to wait for a page to reload.
This week, the operators of the two best mapping sites -- Google and Microsoft-- upgraded their mapping sites in flashy, useful ways.
Google Maps ( http:/
These options are not quite new. Google's Google Earth program offers its own 3-D flyovers, though without the high resolution of Microsoft's service. Amazon's A9 search site provided a sidewalk-view option years ago, and Microsoft has a version of that concept tucked away on a corner of its own site ( http:/
But now you don't need to bookmark a new site or run a separate program. You can open your Web browser to a mapping site you already know and start clicking away.
Google Maps' Street View doesn't require any extra software; it worked in the Internet Explorer, Firefox and Safari browsers. If this option is available in the area you're viewing, a "Street View" button will appear. Click it, and any streets with available photography will appear outlined in blue. Then drag a stick-figure icon to the street you want to inspect.
The Street View vista appears in a little frame over the standard Google Map view. You can pan around the view or zoom in just by scrolling or double-clicking. Then, wander through the city by clicking the arrow icons that float over each street.
It may remind you of navigating through old interactive-adventure games like Myst, except all this runs inside your Web browser, not a CD-ROM's worth of separate software.
Street View photos sometimes had the washed-out look of camera-phone pictures but still yielded an extraordinary level of detail -- I couldn't read headlines in newspaper vending boxes, but I could easily make out the license plates of cars on the streets.




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