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Camera Vans To Photograph 50 Million Buildings

dritan writes "A new van unveiled at CeBIT America is equipped with 50 digital cameras and takes pictures every 15 feet -- with the goal of photographing 50 million buildings in the country. These photos could be cross-referenced with aerial photographs so that law enforcement or insurance agencies can get overhead and street level views of the same location -- just by entering an address." Time to hang out the "Hi, Mom!" signs.

18 of 470 comments (clear)

  1. story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    May 25, 2004
    Van Could Take Photographs While Driving
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Filed at 9:14 p.m. ET

    NEW YORK (AP) -- An odd-looking van sprouts 13 digital cameras that its builder wants to use to photograph 50 million buildings in the country while driving, taking pictures every 15 feet.

    The van's drive-by snaps would be matched against GPS satellite positioning data and aerial photographs in a database. Police, insurance agents and others then could call up overhead and street-level views simply by entering an address.

    The setup from Imageos Inc. was one of the security-related exhibits on display at this year's CeBIT America technology trade show, which opened here Tuesday. Other companies were showing software tools to secure wireless networks, monitor employee surfing and protect users from viruses and spyware.

    The main market for Imageos' photographs would be insurance appraisals, but the Boulder, Colo., startup is also touting the pictures for ``homeland security'' applications, law enforcement and emergency services.

    Imageos' Paul Jurasin said that thanks to the aerial photos, the database can show whether a house has a swimming pool or a fence in the back, details that could be of interest both to insurance companies and police.

    ``It gives them more information than they would get by driving up to a house, before they get there,'' Jurasin said.

    So far, Imageos has photographed only Orlando, Fla. If it gets funding, it plans to photograph the 25 largest cities in the country over the next five years using more than a dozen vans.

    Elsewhere on the convention floor, Hewlett-Packard Co. showed a laptop computer that is secured against non-computing attacks, namely water, dust and physical impact. The nr3600 is HP's first ``rugged'' laptop, an entry into a market dominated by Panasonic's Toughbooks.

    Rugged laptops are aimed at workers who need to bring their computers to rough construction sites, deserts and combat. The nr3600, on sale now for $4,099 and up, meets military specifications for shock resistance and sealing against the elements. It is joined by a keyboard-less ruggedized ``tablet'' for $600 less.

    The nr3600 has a large carrying handle, but for portability, it can't beat the OQO, an ``ultra personal computer'' about the size of a paperback book. The small LCD screen slides away to reveal a tiny keyboard intended for thumb-typing.

    It has most of the functionality of a full computer: The Windows XP machine has a hard drive, built-in wireless networking and a USB port.

    The OQO is designed for simpler tasks while on the move. When you sit down for serious work, you attach it to a docking station that connects to a full monitor, mouse and keyboard. The OQO thus aims to replace Palm-style organizers, laptops and desktops.

    San Francisco-based OQO Inc. has been promising its gadget for two years. It says it's now finally shipping this fall for somewhat less than $2,000.

    Nifty gadgets aside, the latest year's upswing in the technology business was in little evidence at show. Organizers expected 350 to 360 exhibitors, slightly fewer than last year, which was the first time CeBIT held an American show.

    ``It's OK. It's not buzzing with activity, but it's OK,'' said Farhad Keyvan, who was visiting from Bridgewater, N.J., where he runs a small software company.

    Mark Dineen, the show's managing director, acknowledged that some large U.S. companies have ``pulled away'' from the trade show business.

    However, Microsoft Corp. and enterprise software giants PeopleSoft Inc. and Siebel Systems Inc. were added to the roster of exhibitors this year, and a greater number of preregistrations led organizers to expect up to 50 percent more attendees than the 8,500 that showed up last year. The show runs till Thursday.

    CeBIT America is an offshoot of the world's largest technology fair, which is held Hanover, Germany, in March. That show had 6,411 exhibitors this year.

  2. Re:logical question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    You can legally photograph anything you see in public (i.e. from the streets).

  3. Re:Thanks for posting another "requires registrati by wdd1040 · · Score: 1, Informative

    Article Text: Van Could Take Photographs While Driving By PETER SVENSSON NEW YORK - An odd-looking van sprouts 13 digital cameras that its builder wants to use to photograph 50 million buildings in the country while driving, taking pictures every 15 feet. The van's drive-by snaps would be matched against GPS satellite positioning data and aerial photographs in a database. Police, insurance agents and others then could call up overhead and street-level views simply by entering an address. The setup from Imageos Inc. was one of the security-related exhibits on display at this year's CeBIT America technology trade show, which opened here Tuesday. Other companies were showing software tools to secure wireless networks, monitor employee surfing and protect users from viruses and spyware. The main market for Imageos' photographs would be insurance appraisals, but the Boulder, Colo., startup is also touting the pictures for "homeland security" applications, law enforcement and emergency services. Imageos' Paul Jurasin said that thanks to the aerial photos, the database can show whether a house has a swimming pool or a fence in the back, details that could be of interest both to insurance companies and police. "It gives them more information than they would get by driving up to a house, before they get there," Jurasin said. So far, Imageos has photographed only Orlando, Fla. If it gets funding, it plans to photograph the 25 largest cities in the country over the next five years using more than a dozen vans. Elsewhere on the convention floor, Hewlett-Packard Co. showed a laptop computer that is secured against non-computing attacks, namely water, dust and physical impact. The nr3600 is HP's first "rugged" laptop, an entry into a market dominated by Panasonic's Toughbooks. Rugged laptops are aimed at workers who need to bring their computers to rough construction sites, deserts and combat. The nr3600, on sale now for $4,099 and up, meets military specifications for shock resistance and sealing against the elements. It is joined by a keyboard-less ruggedized "tablet" for $600 less. The nr3600 has a large carrying handle, but for portability, it can't beat the OQO, an "ultra personal computer" about the size of a paperback book. The small LCD screen slides away to reveal a tiny keyboard intended for thumb-typing. It has most of the functionality of a full computer: The Windows XP machine has a hard drive, built-in wireless networking and a USB port. The OQO is designed for simpler tasks while on the move. When you sit down for serious work, you attach it to a docking station that connects to a full monitor, mouse and keyboard. The OQO thus aims to replace Palm-style organizers, laptops and desktops. San Francisco-based OQO Inc. has been promising its gadget for two years. It says it's now finally shipping this fall for somewhat less than $2,000. Nifty gadgets aside, the latest year's upswing in the technology business was in little evidence at show. Organizers expected 350 to 360 exhibitors, slightly fewer than last year, which was the first time CeBIT held an American show. "It's OK. It's not buzzing with activity, but it's OK," said Farhad Keyvan, who was visiting from Bridgewater, N.J., where he runs a small software company. Mark Dineen, the show's managing director, acknowledged that some large U.S. companies have "pulled away" from the trade show business. However, Microsoft Corp. and enterprise software giants PeopleSoft Inc. and Siebel Systems Inc. were added to the roster of exhibitors this year, and a greater number of preregistrations led organizers to expect up to 50 percent more attendees than the 8,500 that showed up last year. The show runs till Thursday. CeBIT America is an offshoot of the world's largest technology fair, which is held Hanover, Germany, in March. That show had 6,411 exhibitors this year.

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    wdd
  4. Sounds like Europe by lenhap · · Score: 2, Informative

    This is interesting, I really don't see how this could be bad, aside from having an ugly house or yard. Actually Europe (more specifically france) has things like this, in their internet yellow pages, there is a picture of every single address. Works great when you are looking for hotels (which is how I found) and want to know what the area looks like.

    I can really only see how this can help things, like historical data...how an area looked in a hundred years or something, or with research into an area.

  5. Madrid and Barcelona already have this by z_gringo · · Score: 4, Informative


    Madrid and Bercelona are alaready online, and most buildings have multiple views.

    check it out here. However the site seems to be running very slow at the moment.

    For some sample addresses, you can use Calle Serrano 75, or Francisco Silvela 20

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    -- -- Warning. Do not stare directly at the sun.
    1. Re:Madrid and Barcelona already have this by z_gringo · · Score: 2, Informative

      I should have mentioned that after you are at that site, you have to click on Callejero Fotografico. Then enter addresses..

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      -- -- Warning. Do not stare directly at the sun.
  6. Re:logical question by morcheeba · · Score: 5, Informative

    Cryptome just linked to The Photographer's Rights (pdf, 147kB) - it's a good reference, but it basically says you can photograph anything visible from public property except national-security-restricted-places and places where people have secluded themselves to have an expectation of privacy (their bathroom).

  7. We already have this in Spain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Most houses in Barcelona, Madrid, Sevilla and Valencia can be seen on QDQ. You can either click on one of the cities on the map or type in the address

    (Spanish quickquide: Nombre de la calle = Street name, Número = Number, Buscar = Search)

    As an architect I'm sure you will appreciate looking for Passeig de Gracia 92, Barcelona.

    Cheerios,
    Peter

  8. It's been done already by broothal · · Score: 4, Informative

    The french already did this - check out pages jaunes (pages jaunes is french for Yellow Pages). You can actually look up an address and see a photo of it.

  9. Try this one by TequilaJunction · · Score: 5, Informative

    Pennsylvania's Deptartment of Transportation has been building a video log of the major state routes. It's a similar concept, but their implementation is focused on road maintenance and identification rather than address mapping. http://164.156.5.83/ividlog/video_locate.asp

  10. Re:Cook County (Chicago) Already did this. by RedX · · Score: 2, Informative

    Franklin County, Ohio (county that Columbus and most of its suburbs are in) has had property photos online for a few years as part of the auditor's property tax database. Anyone can go online and search by street name or owner's last name. Several of the surrounding counties have similar services. In fact, I saw a "camera van" in my neighborhood last year taking updated photos. Had I been thinking, I would've ran home and hung my "All Your Base" sign on the porch.

  11. Re:logical question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    "publicly-available information: the outside appearances of buildings. No privacy or copyright concerns."

    Oh there are plenty of people defending the copyright of the outside of their buildings.

  12. Re:All your base! by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Informative
    The roof of your basement? Many of us call that a floor.

    Want to foil aerial IR surveys? Install (water heating) solar on your roof.

    People tend to grow marijuana in the hills under madrone and manzanita because the (relatively) high water content of those plants mask the IR signature from above. You still have to bury your drip irrigation lines, though.

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    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  13. This reminds me . . . by Lorenzo+de+Medici · · Score: 2, Informative
    . . . of something I saw at the Exploratorium in San Francisco.

    I wonder if it will get to 2 Columbus Circle before this beautiful building gets an awful facelift.

  14. Re:(sigh) better go make sure the lawn is mowed. by Fizzog · · Score: 3, Informative

    I once worked at a 'Telephone services' company developing their customer information system.

    There are service companies that provide copious information on people just by giving them a phone number.

    They can find your name, address, occupation, marital status, number of children, ages of children, household income, number of vehicles, value of the property and all kinds of demographic information.

    Mind you, this information doesn't come cheap. It cost 5 cents.

    And you can get way better information with a credit card number...

  15. CA coastal access database by msblack · · Score: 2, Informative

    An environmental group already built a database of houses along the California coastline to prove that homeowners were building without permits or blocking public access to beaches, a mjor political issue. It annoyed Barbara Streisand so much that she sued, but lost.

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    signature pending slashdot approval
  16. Re:logical question by Pooua · · Score: 2, Informative
    But if you photograph people, or copyrighted things, don't you need permissions for some uses of your photographs?

    No permission is needed to take pictures of a group of people, if their faces are not recognizable or the photography is for private use. The photographs may be sold if the faces are not recognizable. If the faces are recognizable, and the photographs are for commercial and public distribution, then it would be wise to get a signed release form from the subject. Celebrities do not fall under this rule, because they are public figures; they can be photographed pretty much anywhere in public, without permission, for commercial purposes.

    In some ways, it is like displaying nudity in commercial broadcasts. If it is obscure or only seen briefly, it is more likely to be allowed.

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    Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)