Check out these interesting Google Maps:
- Disneyland
- Bill Gates’ House
- Area 51
- The White House
- Las Vegas Strip
- Statue of Liberty
- Mount Saint Helens
(via Perljam.net)
A collection of digital wonders and some other stuff
Check out these interesting Google Maps:
(via Perljam.net)
I guess my backmasking page was mentioned on G4’s Attack of the Show on March 28th, 2005. I’ve never seen the show, but all the same, that’s cool!
I’m off to Malaysia next month and in preparation I went down to the health unit today and got a total of four shots – two in each arm. I’ve been avoiding my MMR booster shot for a few years now and I skipped out on the mandatory tetanus shot they give you in the 9th grade, but I got caught up on all of them in four foul stabs earlier today. The tetanus side is still throbbing slightly but it wasn’t nearly as painful as I had it built up to be. My biggest fear is that I will be part of the tiny fraction of people that have an adverse reaction to the vaccines. So far so good.
In the year 2014 all media will be automated and personalized. It will be delivered via Google and Amazon… or Googlezon.
Check out this video which runs about 8 minutes, or just read the transcript.
The Globe and Mail has an article about what a hotbed Vancouver is for the Video Game industry. I’m interested in working with a company mentioned in this article, hopefully I’ll be able to secure an internship there this summer.
Google never ceases to amaze me! They are offering a new storage service for videos that users upload themselves.
We’re accepting digital video files of any length and size. Simply sign up for an account and upload your videos using our Video Uploader (please be sure you own the rights to the works you upload), and, pending our approval process and the launch of this new service, we’ll include your video in Google Video, where users will be able to search, preview, purchase and play it.

The Adidas_1, reviewed by cool hunter Josh Rubin, looks amazing. Each shoe contains a small computer chip that calculates the amount of cushion your shoes need for optimum performance.

From Adadas’s (flash overboard) site:
Every Runner is Different: In an ideal world no two pairs of runners shoes would be the same because no two runners are the same. Welcome to that ideal world.
I only hope it doesn’t have air cushion blow-outs like Reebox’s Pumps from the 80’s had.
Using Buzztracker, you can see the geospacial relationship between Google News and the world.
In case you thought my heart was broken, you can listen for yourself.
For those of you asking why I put a sound file of my heartbeat on the Internet, I guess the answer lies somewhere between, “because I can” and “because I’ve never seen it done before”, and because it hurts.
Check out this Google Hacks link I picked up via Slashdot. My favorite new hack is using Google as a proxy server. Personally I don’t need to use one, but if I did, this would be the way to do it.
Did you know you can use Google as a free proxy server? By submitting a specially-crafted, English-to-English translation query, you can capitalize on Google’s translation service to anonymously submit all your Web requests.
So if you’re at a school or workplace and would like to reach content that is otherwise inaccessible, try this hack. It’s not like they’re going to ban the world’s best search engine.