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Sounds Bring Google Earth to Life

Strudelkugel writes "The BBC is reporting that a Californian company has created software that can layer relevant recorded sounds over locations in Google Earth. The firm, Wild Sanctuary, has thousands of hours of recordings from all over the world. Company director Dr. Krause has spent over 40 years collecting sounds from natural and man-made habitats. '... his recordings include more than 15,000 animal noises, and sounds from a huge array of habitats, including cities, deserts, mountains and the marine environment. It is the largest library in existence of natural sound, he said. He said the idea would be to zoom-in on a particular area and then have the option to listen to the accompanying sound.'"

84 comments

  1. Neat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    No wait, the other thing - annoying.

    1. Re:Neat by hydraulos · · Score: 0

      just tag it wth, and get it over with.

      I mean Honestly, what the hell. Google Earth is a tool(primary use at least), not a piece of art, and I dont belive /. is the place for the Arts.

  2. Great by Quaoar · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now when my relatives use Google Earth to find my house, they'll get to listen to me on the can.

    --
    I'll form my OWN solar system! With blackjack! And hookers!
    1. Re:Great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      next will be a smell option. you can start with my house and bottle up the stink eminating from it...

      --
      on second thought, forget the blackjack.

    2. Re:Great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      > Now when my relatives use Google Earth to find my house, they'll get to listen to me on the can.

      But at least they'll know the answer to the question "What is the sound of one hand fapping".

      (Google Cat is listening to you masturbate.)

    3. Re:Great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And when you look at theirs: "Get off my lawn you damn kids!"

    4. Re:Great by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      Just wait until the British Government start asking for additions

      NOW, WASH YOUR HANDS!

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    5. Re:Great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you know the US is the country with the second highest ratio of cameras/population after the UK? Funny how that comes back to bite you on the ass.

  3. do you hear that? by LiquidMind · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the idea sounds nice on paper, but who will actually benefit from this?

    --
    This sig contains repetition and redundancy.
    1. Re:do you hear that? by aichpvee · · Score: 1

      This guy if he manages to get a nice VC payout. Other than that I can't imagine how this could possibly have a practical use for anyone.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    2. Re:do you hear that? by Itninja · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't know.... who ever thought that a six-year-old aerial photo of the desert would be practical? But now those Google Earth images are shown on the news as visual aids when they are talking about Iraq or some such. I can see this turning into the equivalent for radio news shows.

      --
      I judt got a nre Kinesis keybiartf so please excusr ant egregiou typos.
    3. Re:do you hear that? by garcia · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I could see it being used for a virtual tour of a park, college campus, or business complex. Plot out a route and then follow it along with pictures and sound.

      Seems pretty useful to me. I wish that more public entities would publish their SHP boundaries in KML/KMZ so I wouldn't have to convert them myself.

      It could become a real useful tool for the web.

    4. Re:do you hear that? by veganboyjosh · · Score: 1

      I could see it being useful when looking at a place to live. It would have to be pretty specific, but it's hard to tell looking at a map how far away train tracks/airport/freeways need to be in order not to hear them.

    5. Re:do you hear that? by commodoresloat · · Score: 0, Troll

      the idea sounds nice on paper
      Actually, on paper it doesn't make any sound at all; you really need to upgrade to at least a web browser interface to see how it sounds.

      Actually I take that back - it does make a sound on paper; once you think through the implications of the idea it will make the crinkling sound of paper being wadded up and tossed in the trash.
    6. Re:do you hear that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think Encylopedia,

      A kid wants to hear what the Brazilian rain forrest sounds like, infact I want to as well.

      They click on Google Earth and go there, now they can hear ambience plus native noises. I would find it great. But like any encyclopedia, it'll be there for a fact and I generally read them once and never read them again.

    7. Re:do you hear that? by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      This guy if he manages to get a nice VC payout. Other than that I can't imagine how this could possibly have a practical use for anyone.
      ---
      If it was the _real_ background noise it could be useful.

      Hear the different bird chirping for birdwatchers.

      Check the traffic noise if you want to move there.
      Ditto for 7am lawmowers.

      Check how far you have to go from the freeway, railway, industry zone to have your peace.

      etc.

    8. Re:do you hear that? by rjshields · · Score: 1

      A kid wants to hear what the Brazilian rain forrest sounds like, infact I want to as well.
      The sound of chainsaws and logging trucks making way for herds of grazing cattle to feed all the meat-heavy US diets?
      --
      In this world nothing is certain but death, taxes and flawed car analogies.
    9. Re:do you hear that? by niceone · · Score: 1

      Blind people, you insensitive clod!

    10. Re:do you hear that? by jdray · · Score: 1

      Civ IV has the same sort of thing (dunno about earlier versions), albeit with a fairly limited catalog of sounds. If you zoom in on a city, you get noises relative to the work being done there, but if you zoom in on the ocean, you get wave sounds. I like it. It adds dimensionality to the game that would otherwise be lacking.

      --
      The Spoon
      Updated 6/28/2011
    11. Re:do you hear that? by sdsichero · · Score: 1

      Hmn that actually made me think it would be kind of an interesting experience if they could have categories. Others have mentioned animal type sounds... but it would be interesting to link news audio reports or entertainment type events (concerts in the open) to different areas. Not essential by any means but interesting to experiment with...

  4. San Fernando Valley Sounds by Solokron · · Score: 5, Funny

    Slashdot readers including myself may frequent the San Fernando Valley area for those sounds!

    --
    30% off web hosting. Coupon code "SLASHDOT".
    1. Re:San Fernando Valley Sounds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the sound of traffic and police sirens?

  5. heh, what about smells? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "OH GOD NOT JERSEY! *scroll scroll scroll scroll scroll ...* whew, close one." ;)

    1. Re:heh, what about smells? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Niggers want to record a little something something for the Googles Earth and shit. It's the sound of us Niggers raping the shit out of that little asshole of yours. How many cocks do you think your sweet little ass can take? I'm gonna guess 4 because thats what you gonna get. Us Niggers are gonna call you paris hilton for the next 12 hours. We'll be there at 2am.

      Signed,
      The Google Sound Niggers

  6. Weird by OmegaBlac · · Score: 4, Funny

    When I zoomed in over Microsoft's HQ in Redmond, Washington, I heard the sound of chairs being broken. I'm sure if I zoom in over the White House, monkey sounds will fill my speakers.

    1. Re:Weird by gujo-odori · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, the monkey sounds are in Redmond too...

    2. Re:Weird by ashitaka · · Score: 2, Funny

      There is huge potential for comedy sound layers here. To follow your example, zoom in on the building holding Steve Balmer's office and hear..

      "DEVELOPERS!, DEVELOPERS!,DEVELOPERS!, DEVELOPERS!DEVELOPERS!, DEVELOPERS!"

      --
      If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
    3. Re:Weird by TranscendentalAnarch · · Score: 1

      The monkey sounds are just drowned out by the sound of flying chairs crashing down. Make sure to turn up your speakers for the Full Ballmer Experience.

  7. This location is copyrighted. by TheLazySci-FiAuthor · · Score: 5, Funny

    great, now I can get sued just for mousing-over the RIAA headquarters!

    Thanks a lot guys...

    1. Re:This location is copyrighted. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you implying the RIAA actually LISTENS to the music they produce?

  8. This guy is quite a visionary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He started collecting sounds 40 years ago. How did he know Google Earth would exist? Who knows. I'll tell you one thing though, I bet he got in early on their stock.

  9. SWEET!!!!!!!!!! by Rooked_One · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Now I can finally know what a tree sounds like when it falls and no one is around.

    1. Re:SWEET!!!!!!!!!! by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

      Now I can finally know what a tree sounds like when it falls and no one is around.

      Sounds as if eternity was sucked into itself for infinity and back.

  10. Nature? by DanFM · · Score: 0

    Dude thats totally gay.

  11. Hehe by bigred85 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I'd pay money to zoom over a well-known cattle farm, let's say the King Ranch in Texas for instance, and hear an old, familiar sound:

    "The cow says: MOOOOOOO"

    ...Yes I'm simply amused, what of it?

    1. Re:Hehe by rts008 · · Score: 1

      As long as you don't zoom in too close- the King Ranch is a HUGE place, you would get miles and miles of MOOOO!...just don't step in any of it!

      Cowchip flingin' championship tourney in progress...details at 11!

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
  12. Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > they'll get to listen to me on the can.

    You must live in Washington DC. But I don't think that sound is a reference to you ...

  13. The question is! by nlitement · · Score: 1

    Did they include *fap*fap*fap*fap*?!

  14. Will they release the "sounds of Vegas" by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

    I can finally be able to listen to sob gambling stories, hooker sex, and obnoxious casinos in the comfort of my own home!

    1. Re:Will they release the "sounds of Vegas" by StarReaver · · Score: 1

      Actually, "hooker sex" isn't allowed here in Vegas. So you won't get to hear it. You still get to hear the gambling stories and obnoxious casinos, though.

    2. Re:Will they release the "sounds of Vegas" by bigred85 · · Score: 1

      Sorta off-topic, but I promise it's worth it. There's a funny bit by Lewis Black (I believe it's on the White Album) where he's describing being incredibly astounded by people gambling in Vegas casinos around Christmas while carols are playing over the loudspeakers.

      Granted I'm doing the bit no justice by attempting to explain it, but for some reason it leaves me in stitches every time.

  15. 40 yrs of a life / 1 click / "that sucks" / CTRL-W by mnemotronic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    To have worked for 40 years on something, to believe in it, and dedicate a life to it, to collect samples of sound, or smell, or taste from across an entire planet, then along comes a tool that makes it easy to share the results with other people, to disperse the cumulative knowledge and experience of a lifetime, only to have some bored slasher dis it off after a click and a couple seconds of listening; I'm hurt just thinking about it.

    --
    The Russians have won. They have made the world a cesspool of distrust, greed, fear and hate.
  16. Memes by ross.w · · Score: 4, Funny

    Let's see,

    1. We've done the toilet humour reference.
    2. We've done the Microsoft reference.
    3. We've done the George Bush reference
    .
    .
    4. Oh Yeah... Profit!!!

    --
    If my call is important, why am I talking to a recording?
    1. Re:Memes by theeddie55 · · Score: 1

      Let's see,

      1. We've done the toilet humour reference.
      2. We've done the Microsoft reference.
      3. We've done the George Bush reference
      .
      .
      4. Oh Yeah... Profit!!!

      Surely 4 is another microsoft reference.
    2. Re:Memes by Nushio · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but can you listen to Doom? How about listening to a Beowulf Cluster?

      --
      Check out Unsealed: Whispers of Wisdom! http://unsealed.k3rnel.net It's an action-RPG about Open Sourcerers.
    3. Re:Memes by consonant · · Score: 1

      2. We've done the Microsoft reference.
      But..but...that was a steveb reference! Nobody's claimed this to be the dumbest fucking idea since they've been at Microsoft yet..
  17. Boon for Children = Annoying for adults by Kazrath · · Score: 2, Insightful

    America is undoubtedly the worst 1st world country when it comes to geography. We have no idea where most of our own states are, think Africa is a country and half the time don't even know what the next town down the road is named. A tool like this attached to Google Earth would help in keeping the interest of children. I think from this perspective it would be a very good teaching tool. One of the reasons I enjoyed History so much in High School was my teacher allowing me to play CivII. Adapting sounds/games into learning tools has been done and I believe it to be much more effective than text books. How many of you became quick multiplying numbers due to "Number munchers?". Entertainment for learning is the way to go.

    1. Re:Boon for Children = Annoying for adults by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's just me here, but I live in the UK and I doubt I could name the shires in just England let alone Scotland and Wales. The United states of America are 50 times the size of the UK and is basicly 50 different countries all roughly pushed together, how you can remember the names of all 50 states when you're working on such a scale?

      Sooner or later you have to realize people aren't these magic computers who know everything and desire to. For a kid who never goes much further than 1 or 2 states over to college or on holiday then returns to their home state for the rest of their life, where Kentucky fried chicken was named after just might not be a huge thing to them.

      The same with Asian countries. I very much doubt I could named more than 5 *stan countries, because I personally have no need to know them and when I do I have access to google, an atlus or various other nifty resources to use. Because of this modern era we all love here at Slashdot we have to remember no longer are people required to know everything, infact the old saying "Jack of all trades, master of none" very much applies in this era, and to this extent we may just consider the 36th (random number) state and it's location very important to our life.

      --
      I like muppets.
    2. Re:Boon for Children = Annoying for adults by antic · · Score: 1

      There is a TV show in Australia that sent someone out in the US convincing Americans that various well known attractions (Great Wall of China, Eiffel Tower, Mount Rushmore, etc) were actually in Australia. The number of people who bought it all was quite amusing/scary.

      Previously, they had walked around with an incorrectly labeled map showing South Korea as Tasmania, North Korea as Australia and so on - many of the Americans questioned about it barely blinked; "Wow, I never knew North Korea was so much bigger than South Korea!"

      --
      'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
    3. Re:Boon for Children = Annoying for adults by alexgieg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's interesting to note that the word "school" comes from the ancient Greek word "schole", meaning "leisure". The idea back then was simple, and all but forgot nowadays: that people only actually learn those subjects they're interested in.

      If the school system was made such that, past the very basic knowledge needed for socially functioning, children were able to deepen only on that which they show interest and have talent, the whole experience would be way more rewarding for all those involved. If later in life someone developed interest in an intellectual matter he didn't care before, then, and only then, it's time for her to engage in learning it properly.

      Normal modern day school is flawed because it tries to teach everyone everything. The result is almost everyone, except for those who do actually have interest in everything, feeling bored and unmotivated. Instead of leisure, school becomes work, and a hated one at that.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
  18. World Soundscape Project by gobbo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This sounds like a natural fit with the original vision of the World Soundscape Project, especially since these are ambient field recordings. Too bad they ran short of funding and the momentum faded, I think they would have taken it somewhere like this. I like the fact that they're hoping to showcase changing soundscapes over time. It would be great if the GE community can contribute. If this stuff interests you, check out the literature on acoustic ecology.

    1. Re:World Soundscape Project by Duggeek · · Score: 1

      What could further G-E along these lines is to implement sounds in a spatial (3-D) fashion. That is, have the sounds fade-in or -out (seeming as if they are approaching/receding) while you're travelling across the landscape... blending together across regions, much in the way the sat-photos do.

      Along with the "cruise" function, I would bring it into the African savannah and just let it roll along, or the South American rainforests; absorb the natural ambience and listen as the sound just flows in and out.

      Wow... just a thought... what if we made Google Earth into a Second Life node? Seriously! Invent the ability to scale the v-Earth the same way, but that others in s/l would be a relative size. (that is, the v-Earth wouldn't actually s/l characters are scaled individually, making v-Earth appear to zoom in/out as a result) Have small groups link together where they scale at the same rate! Fantastic!

      I think that Google should be open to this type of integration; though it would be restricted to read-only, so there would be no feedback from irrelevant platforms like games or simulations. Only Google Earth proper would have the ability to submit point-data to the virtual map.

      --
      This post © Copyrite Duggeek, all rights reversed.
  19. Join forces with Wikipedia? by Mogster · · Score: 1

    Perhaps they could join forces with Wikipedia. I could see that as a potential boon for primary school kids in doing geography.
    Research a location on Wikipedia with a link to Google Earth for a look see and a hint of what it would be like to be there.
    Or perhaps research on Orangutans with a link to a map of their native habitat and listen to what they sound like. Many kids have a a wonderful imagination. This could help expand it and their knowledge.

    I'm not sure about the man made sounds though, can't really see any potential benefit unless perhaps a map of the Albert Hall with the London Symphony Orchestra playing Beethoven's 9th, or [insert your favourite venue/band here]

    --
    ACK NAK RST
  20. Please... by msimm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's HIS interest. Hopefully if he's truly passionate about it he's got thick skin anyway. The story is about a company trying to sell sound, seems ripe enough for the odd joke. It's like smell-o-vision for the ears.

    --
    Quack, quack.
  21. And in the near future... by vanyel · · Score: 0

    ...the sounds will be live, the way we're headed...

  22. Re:40 yrs of a life / 1 click / "that sucks" / CTR by suv4x4 · · Score: 1

    To have worked for 40 years on something, to believe in it, and dedicate a life to it, to collect samples of sound, or smell, or taste from across an entire planet, then along comes a tool that makes it easy to share the results with other people, to disperse the cumulative knowledge and experience of a lifetime, only to have some bored slasher dis it off after a click and a couple seconds of listening; I'm hurt just thinking about it.

    Never mind what you do, there'll be always someone to dismiss it and not like it. If the samples collected are of high quality (low noise/hiss, 2 or more channels, good frequency coverage) they can be used for far more things than supplementing google earth.

    Research, audio effects, relaxation mixes etc. etc.

  23. Not Bad by Shifty+Jim · · Score: 1

    It's no "Smell-O-Vision" but I guess it will do.

    Seriously, how can you not see(read:hear) this as sorta cool? I'm as jaded and cynical as the next guy, but I'm intrigued. Scrolling over various areas of the planet and hear the roar of Victoria Falls, the vibrant din of the rainforest, the grating cacophony of a busy metropolitan street, the ominous bells of Big Ben tolling the hour, and numerous other possibilities.

    Think of the kids!

    --
    "To surrender to ignorance and call it God has always been premature, and it remains premature today." -Isaac Asimov
    1. Re:Not Bad by DorkRawk · · Score: 1

      "Think of the kids!" seems to be what people say when they are really excited about something fun, but aren't sure if they're too old to enjoy it on their own.... Lets build a big elaborate fort in the back yard!....for the kids..... Lets have fun making our computer make neat noises!... ummm... to entice kids to learn more....

  24. Re:40 yrs of a life / 1 click / "that sucks" / CTR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't take it to heart.

  25. Been done before kinda but still a good idea by Stevecrox · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I remember when I was younger microsoft released an encylopedia for kids, when ever you looked up an animal the noise it made would play (there was a button to make it replay.) It was something that did keep me entertained for hours, just going through all the different entries.

    Someone else has mentioned Wikipedia, would this not be a great extension to that? Primary school teachers could access certain pages/places and play appropirate sounds. Since it seems the type of kids encylopedia cdrom that I played with as a child has been replaced by wikipedia, wouldn't it be great if wikipedia took on the two great things about those?

    Encarta and "Encylopedia for kids" (by Microsoft) would often have short video sequences or sound clips to go with the articles. It was one of the best ways to gain an understanding of a process at times. Sure some pages might be quite dodgey if it was implimented but the wildlife,manufacturing,car/motorcycle history,science and engineering pages could be significantly enhanced by this sort of feature.

    I'm aware of wikimedia, but why hasn't the main wikipedia design be altered to do these things already?

    1. Re:Been done before kinda but still a good idea by Ambush+Commander · · Score: 1

      Great, then we'll have sound clips of "FUCK YOU!" sprouting up all over Wikipedia. ;-)

      On a more serious note, there are many problems with this idea. First and foremost, open sound recordings are few-and-far-between ("let's take pictures" but not "let's bring an audio-recorder to hear an elephant roar!") Then, there's the trouble of Wikimedia insisting on using a free media formats (namely Ogg) which have poor native support (you can't expect teachers to know how to download codecs, heh?) and a buggy/slow/experimental in-browser media player. Not to mention bandwidth concerns (no, not for Wikimedia, rather, for the school! Slow internet connections = slow downloads = restless kids). It worked well for Encarta, where the sound-clips were directly in your CD drive, but is more difficult to realize effectively on the Internet.

      That being said, Wikipedia does have an expanding collection of pronunciation and spoken article recordings.

  26. roi ? by magarity · · Score: 0

    Company director Dr. Krause has spent over 40 years collecting sounds
     
    First, I'd like to congratulate the good Dr on his foresight to begin collection 40 years ago. However, no matter what he's charging for this service a 40 year up front investment is a staggeringly risky move.
     
    Note to the humor impaired: the above is an attempt at a business joke.

  27. Some are missing by Brome · · Score: 2, Funny

    In Soviet Russia, Google Earth listens to you.

  28. This is a great idea by dinther · · Score: 1

    In contrast to all the negative comments I like to say that it is a great idea. Sound has an immediate and very powerful impact of the viewer. Just try to watch and action movie without sounds and the film will look very dumb. Sound is a far more than just added sound. It can really place you in the area you are viewing.

    Imagine looking at mount Everest and hear the wind howling around it's peaks. Or looking at Manhattan New York and hear the hustle and bustle of the city noise grow stronger and more defined as you zoom in. Hear the ocean waves crashing on shore, cranes and trucks at the port, bird and wind sounds over the forests and I can think of thousands other things you can do with sound.

    It is a natural step for Google earth and I am actually surprised nobody though of it earlier.

    But eh, I am still waiting to see the whole world in proper 10 meter elevation data. It's there so please use it Google.

    Great Idea!

    1. Re:This is a great idea by DeathElk · · Score: 1

      I agree. I remember the first few times I played Doom, I had no sound card. The game play was great, I remember being amazed. However once I installed a sound card, the entire game roared to life. I was totally immersed in the shotgun blasts and grunts of maimed beasts. Sound made the game real.

  29. Make a game of it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Just close your eyes, click, listen and guess where you clicked:

    e.g.: click!

    Mooing, oinking, a shrieking chimpanzee, baboon howls, clucking, grunting, snoring....

    The local zoo you say? Nope - Washington DC.

  30. Superman by SpeedyDX · · Score: 1

    Now you get to know what Superman feels like when he flies up in space and hears the sounds of the world. Hundreds of millions of people going to the can. Simultaneously.

    I wonder if he can differentiate between bathroom grunts and bedroom grunts. That'd be interesting to find out, eh?

  31. Sounds??? by mathcam · · Score: 1

    You mean there's more than just the Puget!?!?!

  32. It makes the Virtual Bicycle even more realistic.. by unclenate · · Score: 1

    Put this together with the virtual bicycle and you've got one nice Excertainment system! http://www.virtualbicycle.com/

  33. Re:40 yrs of a life / 1 click / "that sucks" / CTR by ampathee · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's not like he did it all to try to impress slashdotters.

  34. Boon for Hollywood by Max+Littlemore · · Score: 1

    America is undoubtedly the worst 1st world country when it comes to geography.
    .....
    A tool like this attached to Google Earth would help in keeping the interest of children.

    A tool like this could also help educate sound guys working on Hollywood movies. I've lost count of the number of movies set in jungles in Asia, Africa or South America where you suddenly hear kookaburras whip birds and bell birds. For all you geographically and/or ornithologically challenged types out there, that's a bit like using the sound of Tibetan gongs and chanting to signify that the bustling city scape you're looking at is New York.

    At least this would provide a tool to correct that great injustice.

    --
    I don't therefore I'm not.
  35. Sim City by Angelwrath · · Score: 0

    Just like the sounds in Sim City. Scroll over empty space - nothing. Over the city - cars and car horns.

  36. Re:Not very long... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This dude is bat-shit crazy.

    Of course, People said the same about Levi-Strauss, Jane Goodall, and probably Ben Franklin.

    And the guy who invented recording on a glass cylinder, recording Chopin playing his own Minute Waltz. But couldn't figure out how to play it back, so he buried it in his yard and died anonymously.

    OK while researching this post, I learned that last one was an AF joke, much more brilliant than OMG ponies. Anyway, crazy people are the best collectors, the most meticulous recorders.

  37. Interesting by cavefrog · · Score: 1

    But what would really be fun would be to tie in real-time sounds from such things as the gunshot camerals in LA, for example: http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/12/01/23 2248, or maybe the mics from surveilance cameras in London: http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=06/11/25/05 4246.

    1. Re:Interesting by jamshid · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and Google could develop some voice id'ing software that constantly monitors the surveillance mics. Since your address book will contain a voice id of your friends, you could query google to find where a friend is, or at least where someone that sounds like your friend is talking.

      I think that if time travel were possible, we'd already have had a someone from the future appear, bringing us the message "you must stop google".

  38. zoom to my location by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So if you zoom location, N 37deg 29.604' E 127deg 02.006', you should be able to hear a big fart rip right now. Good thing this is not available in smellivision... What other gimmick can they invent?

  39. Interesting sounds by Snafulligan · · Score: 1

    Well that's funny. I was just mousing over Miskatonic University and I heard a weird chanting sound like "Ia Ia Yog-Sothoth Fhtagn" followed by a flapping wings soun... R*@(*@(*@E@*... ^H^H^H carrier lost

    --
    Cthulhu saves... in case he is hungry later
  40. Re:brothels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    locate brothels in different countries and listen carefully how the bitches sound there....u will be amazed to realize a new thing...that all of them sound same...aaaa...aaa...harder....more...

  41. or by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    maybe the ability to zoom in on a location and SMELL the surroundings...

  42. Bernie Krause by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy Bernie Krause is actually really interesting. He played with George Harrison, did some early work with the Moog, traveled to Diane Fosse's gorilla camp, and helped get Humprhey the Whale out of the SF bay. He put out an autobiography a few years back called "Into a Wild Sanctuary" that's a very interesting read.

    As for actually intergrating this stuff into online maps... I'm skeptical but curious. I think the nature sounds could be interesting - hearing the wind on a mountain top or the birds in a rain forest - but don't all cities sound basically the same?

  43. Freesound by lonemonk · · Score: 1

    The creative commons site Freesound also tags sound to map locations, but it does so with Google Maps, not Earth. Here is a link from near my home:

    http://freesound.iua.upf.edu/geotagsView.php?lon=- 123.759596943855&lat=48.3681998651109&zoom=16