The Newspaper Map: browse thousands of local, regional and national newspapers from around the world, based on geographical location. Filter and translate languages, see newspaper archives back to the early 19th century, and find fourth estate Twitter and YouTube feeds. A
mobile version is also available.
via
posted by Bora Horza Gobuchul
on Jun 7, 2011 -
7 comments
The
nuclear weapons simulator at CarlosLabs
(previously) has been updated to include fallout wind drift, pressure and thermal events to evaluate the impact of everything from a suitcase nuke to the
Tsar Bomba on your city. The
Missile Range Tool can show if you are in the vicinity of any delivery systems currently in service, or compare your location to the range of those used historically, such as the V2. For the effects of the cosmic collisions of asteroids and comets (and featuring rather more science) there's the
Earth Impact Effects Program.
posted by Bora Horza Gobuchul
on Nov 1, 2010 -
41 comments
Google Earth: Zero Hour +1 If Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith was responsible for a productivity loss of $600 million (for people playing hooky), then the release of Google Earth
has to be responsible for at least $100m. So the next question is...what's next? When you think about all the Google Maps hacks, from
craigslist, to GasBuddy (offline),
Chicago Crimestats and
Transit Maps,
London Traffic Cams,
various sight seeing sites,
NYC Subway Stops, plus
integration with BlogWise,
Terraserver,
Host-IP (broken?),
Yahoo Traffic, and the
US Census, you might wonder what else could be integrated into gEarth?
Things I'm hoping for? How about integrating historical markers, daytrip resources,
factory tours,
social demographics (like Nationmaster), politics (
fundraising,
election results, registration,
polling place location,
election irregularities), mapped to do lists, real-time weather and traffic, things that aren't there anymore, custom
atlas creation, IMDB movie location shoots,
tighter integration with topographical maps,
WiFi access Points, a
News Attention Index,
shipwrecks,
Job Searches, and tighter integration with the
USGS.
As shown in the gEarth interface (left hand side, first one in "Layers"), their
online community is already working on using, improving, and customizing gEarth's new features, including
some updates (Caution, requires the integration of *.kml file, *.eta, or *.kmz files.)
posted by rzklkng
on Jun 29, 2005 -
21 comments