Every day, people come to Google Search to ask questions. Through Google, questions become answers, and answers lead to the next set of questions. These people come from around the world and all walks of life, speaking hundreds of different languages, typing in search queries every single day. Today we’re sharing the Search Globe, a new visual display representing one day of Google searches around the world—visualizing the curiosity of people around the globe.
This visualization was developed and designed by the Google Data Arts Team using WebGL, a new technology for modern browsers that uses your computer’s hardware to generate fast, 3D graphics. As a result, you need a WebGL-enabled browser, like Google Chrome, to see the Globe. You can learn more about the technology behind the Globe on the Google Code Blog.
The Search Globe visualizes searches from one day, and shows the language of the majority of queries in an area in different colors. You’ll see a bright landscape of queries across Europe, and parts of Asia for instance, but unfortunately we see many fewer searches from parts of the world lacking Internet access—and often electricity as well—like Africa. We hope that as the Internet continues to become more accessible over time and people continue to ask questions, we’ll see this globe shine brightly everywhere.
We’ve also open sourced this platform so that developers can build their own globes using their own data, and we look forward to seeing other globes orbiting around the web.
Update 12:45PM: If you'd like to embed the Search Globe on your own site, here's the embed code:
<iframe src="http://data-arts.appspot.com/globe-search/embed" height="500" width="500"></iframe>
Enjoy!
Kamis, 05 Mei 2011
Langganan:
Posting Komentar (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
-
▼
Mei
- Google Offers beta starts in Portland, Oregon tomo...
- Using search patterns to track dengue fever
- Our 2011 EMEA Faculty Summit
- YouTube highlights 5/26
- Coming soon: make your phone your wallet
- Inside the Big Tent
- AdMob celebrates one year at Google as mobile grow...
- Mining patterns in search data with Google Correlate
- Thanks, YouTube community, for two BIG gifts on ou...
- Hacking for humanity in Silicon Valley and around ...
- Investing in the Alta Wind Energy Center
- The votes are in for the Google Science Fair Final...
- Bringing tech knowledge to nonprofits through Hand...
- Google Apps highlights – 5/20/2011
- Japan Prize honors Googler Ken Thompson for early ...
- Join us at Maker Faire
- Making financial comparisons easy with Google Advisor
- Launch a mobile business with The Guide to the App...
- Define, translate and search for words in Google e...
- And the 2011 U.S. Doodle 4 Google winner is...
- Introducing our official search blog
- Bringing Google Apps educators together through re...
- YouTube Town Hall: where your views count
- Google Translate: the remix
- Future female engineers come together in the Techn...
- Google’s 2010 U.S. Economic Impact
- Expanding Google News for more variety and multimedia
- Remembering fallen journalists on video
- Celebrating 150 years of MIT
- Keynote and session videos from Google I/O now live
- This week in search 5/13/11
- YouTube highlights 5/13
- Blogger is back
- 3D dreams in the modern browser
- Google Transit goes to Washington
- Graduate with Google Apps
- 60+ young women recognized as Google Anita Borg Me...
- A new kind of computer: Chromebook
- Think Insights with Google: a new site for data lo...
- Accelerating diversity outreach to businesses in l...
- Android: momentum, mobile and more at Google I/O
- Welcome to the future of video. Please stay a while.
- From Alaska: Old Harbor Books, the 250th indie boo...
- Vote for the Einsteins of the future
- Google I/O: countdown to the keynote kickoff
- Sort by subject in Google Images
- This week in search 5/6/11
- Google moms share tech tips for your family
- Using the power of mapping to support South Sudan
- Google Earth optimized for Android-powered tablets
- A world of curiosity: a peek at searches around th...
- The polls are open—vote for your favorite doodle!
- Sharing stories of the Holocaust for future genera...
-
▼
Mei
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar