The Street View team announced in July of this year plans to digitally archive the areas most affected by the devastating earthquake and tsunami that hit Japan on March 11th. Today, they’ve published over 44,000 kilometres of 360-degree panoramic imagery, available to explore in Google Street View or through a specially dedicated website known as “Building the Memory“.
Idyllic mountain scenes are quickly over-shadowed by ones of destruction as you move nearer to low-lying coastal areas.
Images are date-stamped to provide context to viewers – the most requested Street View feature over the last few years.
Google has stated that this digital archive of one of Japan’s worst ever natural disasters is particularly useful to researchers and scientists studying the effects of natural disasters, but also to a wider audience who want to “better understand the extent of the damage”.
By archiving street-level imagery of Japan so soon after the disaster, Google are ensuring that memories of the event “remain relevant and tangible for future generations”.
The public-private financial revolution requires every person to have a digital identity, so they can…
At the outset of 2025, digital workflow platform ServiceNow revealed plans to hire up to…
Online age checks are not just about children; they're about getting everybody onboard with digital…
Big-name expos and star-studded keynotes may grab headlines, but in 2025, it’s the smaller, more…
Trump says the system will be 'entirely opt-in,' but HHS is looking to encourage, require…
Over the past year, not only has the frequency of cyberattacks skyrocketed across all industries…