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First Preview Of Maps On Google Glass Project

mapcardAbove you can see the preview of the first Google Map for Glass project as Google finally released guide for apps developers (Mirror API).

You can use the Mirror API to observe the user’s location in timeline items, request their last known location directly, and subscribe to periodic location updates. You can also deliver pre-rendered map images in timeline cards by giving the Mirror API the coordinates to draw. […] The map is rendered using the default color and width in this situation.

The visualization surely looks cool at the computer but it’s hard to imagine how will it look on Glasses display… What I like about it is condensed content, generalized map and minimalistic colour palette. You simply look at it and you understand everything in less than 2 seconds. How do you like it?

source: Glass/location

 

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A Smithsonian Special: “Time and Navigation: The Untold Story of Getting from Here to There”

The world’s largest museum and definitely one of the most popular museum’s in the world – The Smithsonian Museum now has a special exhibit that will make any Location Enthusiast sit up, take notice and start booking his/her tickets to Washington D.C!!

image1

THE exhibition that has me going gaga is “Time and Navigation: The Untold Story of Getting from Here to There”; exploring the connection between Time and Navigation.

Ever wondered about the connection about time and space/location? We have always wanted to know where we are and surprisingly that question always needed the assistance of a clock! Centuries ago, sailors used to navigate the seas using Celestial objects and magnetic compass. The equipment that we have overlooked here happens to their watches! An unsung connection between positioning and time, at an age when GPS did not exist.

Of course, today the connection between Time and Navigation seems rather straight forward. GPS based positioning would not be possible if not for clocks and the 4th dimension “time”.

The exhibition features more than a hundred objects that explores and traces the revolutions in timekeeping over the centuries.

It has been organized into the following five sections: NASMTimeNavigation2012-02204

  • Navigation for Everyone
  • Navigating at Sea
  • Navigating in the Air
  • Navigating in Space
  • Inventing Satellite Navigation

Here’s some interesting piece of information from InsideGNSS

” The exhibit sprang from a suggestion by Demetrios Matsakis, the head of the Time Service Department at Naval Research Laboratory, to commemorate the anniversary of the publication of Einstein’s “Special Theory of Relativity. He suggested to me in early 2004 that wouldn’t it be a great idea to have for Einstein’s 100th anniversary in 2005 an exhibit about the relationship of clocks and GPS because GPS is one of the few things in everyday life that has to take into account the theory of relativity,” Stephens, one of the exhibit’s four curators, told Inside GNSS. “

The invitation from Smithsonian!

Location: Time and Navigation, Gallery 213, 2nd Floor, East Wing.

Time: April 12, 2013 – Permanent (new opening date).

Location and Time! They do make a wonderful pair 😉 So see you soon at the Air and Space Museum!

 

 

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