If you went to Burning Man this year and didn't get a chance to see that one great art piece everyone was talking about, the event's organizers and Google may have a solution.
By leveraging the open-endedness and utility of Google Earth--the search giant's 3D mapping and visualization tool--Burning Man is embarking on what it's calling "Burning Man Earth." The project's creators envision that eventually they will be able to offer fully 3D versions of each year's event in the Black Rock desert, and in the process give participants a way to connect with the makers of art pieces and theme camps so that members of the community can learn from each other and extend the event's reach across the world.
"We'll be creating a map of the constellation of (each) year's (Burning Man)," said Larry Harvey, Burning Man's founder and director. "It doesn't simply provide you with a vicarious spectacle, but rather a blueprint of the community itself in its most active manifestation."
Indeed, there is no end to the projects third parties have undertaken using Google Earth. Some of the best of them, in fact, are cataloged by a Swedish blogger named Stefan Geens on the site Ogle Earth.
Among them are a new project from the United Nations Environment Program that lets users see environmental "hot spots" and crisis zones on a map and compare them to a map of untouched Earth, and one that highlights outbreaks of avian flu on a world map.
"I love the way in which scientists have taken to Google Earth as a visualization tool (and) also to make their data much more widely available than before," Geens said. "Take, for example, meteorite databases, or volcano layers, or recent earthquakes or scientists who have put all the data of ocean buoys online live. These things are obviously best viewed from the perspective of an atlas, and Google Earth is a kind of ultimate atlas."
What makes it possible for organizations like Burning Man, or any of the dozens of other teams that have worked on custom uses for Google Earth, to do so is what is known as KML, or Keyhole Markup Language. KML is named after Keyhole, the company Google bought that provides its satellite data. The language stores "geographic features such as points, lines, images and polygons for display in Google Earth, Google Maps and Google Maps for mobile," according to Google.
'Preserved in amber' So rather than just providing Burning Man participants with a static 3D map of the event, Harvey and the Burning Man Earth team envision a fully immersive environment that he is calling a "map of (Burning Man's) cultural genome."
"It will be possible to walk down the 30 miles of streets that comprise (Black Rock City) and range through the open playa and when you encounter a three-dimensional rendition you'll be able to knock on the door of the creators. And, it being Burning Man's culture, they'll open their door and you'll be able to contact them through their URL or their e-mail address."
Once Rod Garrett--who designs the layout of Black Rock City each year for Burning Man--and a team of four others began talking to Google, the search company provided access to tools that allowed the team to begin creating custom KML content.
"The Burning Man organization has some very technically savvy developers and the community is very creative," said Peter Birch, Google Earth's project manager. "They have some very interesting ideas about building a virtual community, and we love it when our users think of new and exciting ways to share content with Google Sketchup and Google Earth."
That's important, since it would be difficult to place art pieces or theme camps from different years' events on a single version.
And to Harvey, the ability to create different versions for each year is one of the advantages of using a product like Google Earth for this project.
"Every year will be preserved in amber," he said, "and people will be free to go back" and discover or rediscover art or other artifacts from years past.
Like Burning Man, there's lots of good stuff to be found in GE. Like that other amazing thing which was spotted using Google Earth:
Article with pictures: <a class="jive-link-external" href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/07/19/huangyangtan_mystery/" target="_newWindow">http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/07/19/huangyangtan_mystery/</a>
Google Earth forum post: <a class="jive-link-external" href="http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/484568" target="_newWindow">http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/484568</a>
That's the place in the middle of the desert where the Chinese Army has constructed a scale-model replica of the entire region of Aksai Chin (occupied by China since the 1962 war with India). At 1:500, it's still 700 by 900 meters big ( = several football fields). Next to it is a base with dozens of troop transporters seen coming and going. The duplicate shows everything: rivers, lakes, roads and snow-capped mountains. It's basically a landscape within a landscape.
The problem is that nobody has been able to figure out the function of this thing. The world's biggest miniature golf course, perhaps? China's own Area 51? That's why it's the subject of so much discussion in the blogosphere. The discoverer even had to set up his own blog: foundinchina.blogspot.com
The two telecom carriers will carry a next-generation iPad running on the fast, next-generation wireless technology, sources tell The Wall Street Journal.
Google creates an animated doodle that features a boy, a girl, Google's search engine, and a jump rope. But might there be darker, more analytical, more troubling interpretations to this tale?
The Silicon Valley online payments startup grew by 1,000 percent last year and is hopeful it can repeat that level of growth this year. To do that, it's had to move away from its early friends-and-family roots and embrace small businesses.
Chamtech's spray-on antenna uses a nano material to provide a low-power boost to antenna range. The wireless-in-a-can product may some day bring an end to unsightly cell towers.
EnerG2 opens a plant to make an engineered carbon that will improve performance of energy storage devices and make storage for start-stop hybrid cars less expensive.
Article with pictures:
<a class="jive-link-external" href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/07/19/huangyangtan_mystery/" target="_newWindow">http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/07/19/huangyangtan_mystery/</a>
Google Earth forum post:
<a class="jive-link-external" href="http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/484568" target="_newWindow">http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/484568</a>
That's the place in the middle of the desert where the Chinese Army has constructed a scale-model replica of the entire region of Aksai Chin (occupied by China since the 1962 war with India). At 1:500, it's still 700 by 900 meters big ( = several football fields). Next to it is a base with dozens of troop transporters seen coming and going. The duplicate shows everything: rivers, lakes, roads and snow-capped mountains. It's basically a landscape within a landscape.
The problem is that nobody has been able to figure out the function of this thing. The world's biggest miniature golf course, perhaps? China's own Area 51? That's why it's the subject of so much discussion in the blogosphere. The discoverer even had to set up his own blog: foundinchina.blogspot.com
Any ideas?