Next stop: the Amazon
Has it ever occured to you to get lost in the vastness of the planet with the help of Google Street View?
The idea of walking the streets of every city in the world and exploring unknown places with a clic is simply irresistibile, especially when it comes to destinations that we will probably never get to see in person.
Lately, probably as an answer to the recurring accusations of privacy invasion involving Street View, Google has started to explore a more adventurous and cross-cultural dimension of its technology, offering to us users some very interesting views on the remote and inaccessible places of the earth.
After recently releasing an interactive tour of Anctartica, Google Street View has sent a few members of its Brazil and U.S. staff along with some guys from the Google Earth Outreach team to the Amazon rainforest, where they are currently sailing down rivers and riding on bikes through villages to give an insight into those remote places and their inhabitants.
In partnership with the Amazonas Sustainable Foundation (FAS), the local non-profit conservation organization that invited them to the area, they are also teaching some local people how to operate their Street View technology tools so that they can continue sharing their points of view, culture and ways of life with audiences across the globe.
Arts & Culture
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22.05.2012
Antonín’s workshop
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14.05.2012
50 years of rock
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10.05.2012
Art, books & design
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09.05.2012
Web cinema
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08.05.2012
May’s art agenda
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04.05.2012
Dying Types
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26.04.2012
Investigating the future
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24.04.2012
Minimalist landscapes
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22.04.2012
Slow Seating
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18.04.2012
MOST
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11.04.2012
Apocalyptic scenarios
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05.04.2012
April’s art events
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04.04.2012
Dante in a cave
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03.04.2012
Eight nights at MOMA
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20.03.2012
Spring Exhibitions
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15.03.2012
Music, films and technology
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13.03.2012
The usual suspects
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07.03.2012
The eyes of the world
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05.03.2012
Wrecking ball: the Boss is back
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01.03.2012
Full-length format
