Get a split map/street view of any location! Simply enter an address above or click on the green geolocation button next to the address field. The Apple Map and the 2024 Satellite Street View are fully synchronized and dragging the marker or changing the zoom level on one will automatically rearrange the other accordingly.
In the Maps app , you can look around some places with 360-degree panoramic views. For example, you can take a virtual walk through the streets or orient yourself to landmarks you can use to navigate when you get to your destination.
The Geographical Information System (GIS) OneView is an interactive map ts.sterling-heights.net/oneview_staginghat has attributes attached to it. This allows the user to create custom maps of their choice. The City maintains multiple layers in the GIS. Current map layers consist of: City Boundary, Roads, Parcels, Aerials, Subdivision/Condominium Boundary, Zoning, Flood Areas, Soil Classifications, Refuse Collection, Zip Codes, School Districts, Polling and Voting Locations, Points of Interest, Utilities, and Public Land Survey System. There are also many tools to use such as: drawing, street view, directions, demographics, and buffer.
After many weeks with only very small additions around Kigali, new large additions were made in Rwanda. This time, all the provinces received coverage, notably the Eastern Province which got its first imagery. In Kigali itself the new areas that were partially published in a previous update got some extensions, but many tiles still remain empty.
The Western Province saw missing neighborhoods of Gisenyi (Rubavu), the border town next to Goma, DRC, getting their coverage. The National Road 16 was also covered between the National Road 2 and the National Road 17.
The Eastern Province, where only the Akagera National Park was available, got its first regular coverage. Along the National Road 4, the towns of Kabarondo and Kigarama and their surroundings were added.
In Kenya, many roads were added in the southern half of the country. Notable additions are located near Narok or Nakuru, two towns located west of Nairobi, but more updates can also be found in many other counties from the coast to Lake Victoria.
Most of the new coverage consists into dirt tracks in the fields east of This, in various regions. It can be quite impressive how well covered some areas are considering the kind of roads that were driven.
In Indonesia, a completely new island was added in the province of East Nusa Tenggara. Rote Island had no coverage before and is now fully covered with data from January 2024. Additional roads were also added on Timor near Timor-Leste and on the eastern part of Flores Island.
A couple of new roads were also added in other parts of the country, with a special mention with Aceh where a few roads got their coverage extended near the nearby province of North Sumatra. Outside of this area, Aceh remains mostly uncovered: only 3 sections of streets around Banda Aceh are available, and the reason is still a mystery today.
After two years without any update, Google finally started to publish new coverage in Malaysia. New data from 2021, 2022 and 2023 was released in Selangor near Kuala Lumpur, and in the southern state of Johor next to Singapore. Almost no new roads were added since the new imagery was released on roads that were already covered.
Earlier in January, Bangladesh saw most of the remaining empty areas of the Rangpur Division being filled with new imagery. This should complete the ambitious mission of covering the whole country, even if a few places still lack of coverage (notably in the southeast near Chattogram). Dhaka itself also got some updates.
The local partner, The Decode Ltd., is now driving bikes with Trekker cameras in the narrow streets of Dhaka. A car was also spotted in Harirampur, Dhaka Division, meaning the company should keep driving with the cars along with the bikes.
In Turkey new coverage was added in multiple areas, including areas around orum, Kayserim, Bitlis, Van, or Erzican. Some major cities such as Instabul also received updates, with data as new as January 2024.
Did the policy in Google Maps for -18s change recently?
Since a couple of weeks our students (primary school) can no longer use the pegman in Google Maps. They can place the pegman on the map, but street view does not open.
We are experiencing the same situation where students can not drag the pegman to a street. However, they can click on the street, then select street view and it opens. Appears to be a issue just with the pegman?
Just noticed this here as well. I recommend reporting this to support and maybe they can take this into consideration. You may want to try the Feature Idea's area of this forum as well to see if this can be fixed for edu users.
We have noticed the same issue with both Maps and Earth websites...street view not working on either of these websites for student accounts that have been aged restricted within their OU of Google Workspace for Education
Users in our Staff OUs that are not age restricted work just fine. If I temporarily move a test student account to a Staff OU, or create a sub OU without age restrictions, that account will then work just fine, move it back and it stops working again ?
It is a very strange issue... We have also noticed that the traffic layer does not work, it's greyed out. The Google Maps phone app also does not work at all as guessing it relies heavily on the traffic feature
We just opened a case, too. It works for students under 18 when they use a personal account, but not their school acocunts. So it seems that it *was* impacted by the changes earlier this school year.
Talk to the Google Admin at your school for they should be able to change the settings to permit students to use Google Maps. Kindly review the following Google Workspace Admin Resource: Turn Maps on or off for users
The specific issue is that they cannot make use of Street View on either of the apps and this restriction is directly connected to whether or not the OU is designated for under 18 year olds.
Between May 2024 and March 18, 2025, Google Maps Platform will update thedefault map style for the following APIs and SDKs. To confirm compatibility withyour maps experience, you can opt in to update to the new map style earlier,depending on the product you use. For more information, see the followingsections.
Starting March 21, 2024, if your app uses map IDs, you can update to the latestversion of cloud-based maps styling. With cloud-based maps styling,you can preview and opt in to the latest updated map styles with customizationoptions to align with your specific requirements. For more information, seeCloud-based maps styling.
On March 18, 2025, the default map style will update to the latest version, witha new color palette, improved map experiences, and better usability. Your customstyles will sit on top of the default map style.
Google Maps Platform will release new versions for each of the APIs and SDKswith the updated default map style according to the schedule in the followingtable. If your app doesn't use map IDs, you can choose these new versions (orsubsequent) in order to use the new default map style.
Except as otherwise noted, the content of this page is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License, and code samples are licensed under the Apache 2.0 License. For details, see the Google Developers Site Policies. Java is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates.
A 2015 Harvard Business Review study put the value of privacy to the test. In a survey of nearly a thousand people across five countries (the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, China, and India), researchers tested how much respondents would be willing to pay to keep different types of data private.
Across the board, surveyed Germans were willing to pay relatively high prices to protect data including government identification, credit card information, digital communication history, web browsing, and health history. In fact, German respondents were willing to pay $184 to protect their health history, the highest sum anybody was willing to pay to protect any type of private information.
The decree document above banned the publication of the newspaper, but the overarching decree also suspended the rights of personal freedom (habeas corpus), freedom of opinion, freedom of expression, the right to organize and assemble, and the privacy of mail, telegraph, and telephone communications. It also enabled law enforcement (Nazis) to confiscate and search property wholly unchecked.
A much more recent surveillance moment in German history is, of course, the Soviet surveillance state that survived in East Germany from October 1949 until the Berlin Wall was felled in November 1989.
When Google launched Street View in the United States in 2007, there was some trepidation here and there, but the company managed to map five million miles of roads across nearly 40 countries in its first five years. By its 10th birthday, Street View had captured 10 million miles of roads in 83 countries.
All the while, Germany remained conspicuously absent, save for a few bits of Street View data here and there. As Google mapped the surrounding nations, covering them in a blanket of interconnected imagery, much of Germany stayed a giant Street View blank space.
While attempting to map the country in 2010, Google learned firsthand just how serious Germans are about privacy. The company said it would begin mapping streets in 20 of the largest German cities, and the backlash was fierce and immediate.
The then German Consumer Protection Minister, Ilse Aigner, had said that Berlin and Google reached an understanding earlier that year, and that Google would only start its Street View service when all privacy concerns had been addressed.
Germany was the first, and only, country in which Google ever allowed people to opt-out permanently from having their homes imaged by Street View cameras before any imagery was published. Google believed this was sufficient, and would smooth over concerns.
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