Posts Tagged ‘mashups’

3D driving maps mashup

I kif maps and map mashups and this is a natty little map-mash from Gaiagi to add to the photo explorer and flight tracker. It uses the Google Earth browser plugin which is still Windows only unfortunately.
Not only does Gaiagi take you on a virtual drive through Google Maps driving directions with the browser plug-in [...]

Leave a Comment

FlashEarth balloon enters Google Earth orbit!

FlashEarth, the marvelous mashup of online mapping services by Paul Neave from the UK, has broken into new territory, thanks to Valery Hrosunov and Barry Hunter.
“What if the current view in Google Earth was quickly viewable in other maps, such as those made accessible by FlashEarth? Well, now it is. As you [...]

Comments (1)

The widget wagon rolls on…

French start-up Criteo, the distributed recommendation service, is dishing out their ‘collaborative filtering technology’ for use in the blogosphere with the AutoRoll widget.
The idea is a dynamic blog roll made up of similar sites that the people who visit your site have an affinity with. It’s a community thing I suppose, a kind of MyBlogLogs [...]

Leave a Comment

A patchwork of 1 million paintings

That is the official record breaking aim of The One Million Masterpiece (OMM) although its purpose is to raise money for a number of charities, one of which you can choose to give £3.50 ($6.50 minimum donation) in return for your patch of digital canvas and a small piece of Internet history.
Paul Fisher [...]

Leave a Comment

Visual acoustic synaesthesia

An online canvas on which you can compose and perform ‘reactive music & visuals’ - Visual acoustics invites you to paint with sound.
Different brushes (instruments) and mouse movements trigger sound produced by Midi and Soundfont technology.
The further the mouse moves over time, the more strokes (triggered by a timer) are made by your brush. The [...]

Leave a Comment

Flash Earth adds NASA satellites

Flash genius Paul Neave from the UK, has updated Flash Earth to include images from NASA’s OnEarth MODIS satellites, as well as : Ask.com, Yahoo! Maps & OpenLayers.org.
The NASA imagery is updated daily showing images of cloud formations from all over our planet so if you’re wondering whet the weather is going to [...]

Comments (21)