Sipping warm cider, watching the snow fall, unwrapping gifts — these holiday traditions always seem to produce many of the year's sweetest memories. Several years ago, we added another holiday tradition to our list — helping NORAD keep tabs on Santa every Christmas Eve.
NORAD's Santa-tracking dates back to 1955, when a Sears and Roebuck magazine ad in Colorado Springs accidentally directed readers to call NORAD instead of the "Talk-to-Santa" hotline they were advertising. Embracing the holiday spirit, the folks at NORAD provided callers with Santa's location according to their radar and have tracked his journey ever since. Many years later, in 2004, the same holiday spirit inspired us to use Google Earth — it was called "Keyhole Earth Viewer" back then — to display Santa's voyage around the world on Christmas Eve. We hosted the entire tracker on a single machine and were excited to have an audience of 25,000 following St. Nick's flight with us that night.
Our scrappy Santa tracker has come a long way since 2004. We added "Santa-cam" videos for select locations around the world, 3D SketchUp models of Santa's sleigh and his North Pole home, the official feed of Santa's location from NORAD headquarters and several other improvements. With more technical resources to support this richer experience, and the wonderful efforts of our Santa-tracking team, 2008 was the biggest year ever for NORAD Tracks Santa — more than eight million people tuned in to track Santa last Christmas Eve.
As soon as he returned to North Pole last year, Santa and his elves began planning for his 2009 flight — and we were no different. We thought hard about the different ways we could improve the Santa tracker and after a year of planning, we think this year's will be the best one yet. As usual, we'll display Santa's location, according to NORAD, in Google Maps and Google Earth at www.noradsanta.org. But we've made a few improvements to make tracking Santa even easier. Namely, we'll display Santa's journey with the Google Earth plug-in, directly on the NORAD Tracks Santa site, instead of using the Google Earth client. As a result, you'll be able to follow Santa in Google Earth's immersive, 3D environment directly within your web browser. For more information about the plugin and why we chose to use this tool to track Santa, have a look at our post on the Google Geo Developers Blog.
We're also excited about the many different ways you can keep track of Santa's location this Christmas Eve. Like last year, Santa will be trackable by visiting m.noradsanta.org on a mobile device, or searching for "Santa" on Google Maps for Mobile, available for most mobile phones (read more on the Google Mobile Blog). Santa's location will also be updated on Twitter with @noradsanta and you can keep up with news about Santa's flight with our real-time search feature.
To track Santa, visit www.noradsanta.org starting at 2am ET on Christmas Eve. There, you'll see a Google Map that will display Santa's location over the course of the day. To visualize Santa in Google Earth, just click "Track Santa in Google Earth" and you'll see St. Nick flying through Google Earth in your browser. If you don't have the Earth plug-in, click here — it will be installed automatically when you download Google Earth 5.1.
We hope you enjoy tracking Santa with us this year. And on behalf of everyone at Google — happy holidays and have a happy new year!
Rabu, 23 Desember 2009
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Blog Archive
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2009
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Desember
- Five years of Google blogging
- Ordinary citizens, extraordinary videos
- This week in search 12/25/09
- Now, Dasher! Now, Dancer! Track Santa and his slei...
- Unofficial tech support returns home for the holidays
- The meaning of open
- Google Checkout for Non-Profits in 2010
- This week in search 12/18/09
- Tips and tricks for deploying Google Apps
- Carbon offsets at Google
- Go thataway: Google Maps India learns to navigate ...
- Translate Google Sites with one click
- Transliteration goes global
- Browser Size: a tool to see how others view your w...
- More great news sources to discover in Fast Flip
- What you watched and searched for on YouTube in 2009
- Live on YouTube: Leaders answer your questions in ...
- The top ten ways to get your business ready for th...
- A deep dive on display advertising
- Making URLs shorter for Google Toolbar and FeedBurner
- Share any web page from your Toolbar (and more)
- Cloud apps, big city: LA goes Google
- This week in search 12/11/09
- Ad policies — the year in review
- Google Apps highlights – 12/11/2009
- Two new features enhance search beyond the results...
- Panelists for CNN/YouTube Climate Debate announced...
- Seeing the forest through the cloud
- PBS NewsHour comes to YouTube
- Join this group: Google Groups joins Google Apps
- Faster apps for a faster web: introducing Speed Tr...
- Exploring a new, more dynamic way of reading news ...
- Google Chrome for the holidays: Mac, Linux and ext...
- Fighting fraud online: taking "Google Money" scamm...
- Happy holidays from Picasa Web Albums and Eye-Fi
- Celebrating Computer Science Education Week
- Relevance meets the real-time web
- Explore a whole new way to window shop, with Googl...
- Climate tools for Copenhagen and beyond
- This week in search 12/4/09
- Personalized Search for everyone
- Now on Google Finance: streaming news
- Searching the global web just got a little easier
- Connect with world leaders on the climate debate
- Introducing Google Public DNS
- Now you see it, now you don't
- Spread some holiday cheer, one card at a time
- Show Your Vote for COP15
- Show me the pictures: better format for image results
- Introducing the Google Model Your Town Competition
- Zeitgeist 2009: the collective consciousness
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Desember
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