New Updates and More Access to Google Earth AI
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Google EarthArtificial IntelligenceRemote SensingMachine Learning
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Google Earth
Artificial Intelligence
Remote Sensing
Machine Learning
Google Earth has introduced new updates and more access to its AI capabilities, sparking discussion on its potential applications and limitations, as well as skepticism about its claims and potential impact.
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Hm, I'm quite skeptical about this claim.
https://www.cnn.com/2017/10/14/politics/noaa-nominee-accuwea... (note: old news)
Will this actually pay off for them? Who knows. But insurers are quite into ML for claims/underwriting these days, so I'd believe they're giving it a try.
Pay is good but hours are long, and you are often deployed far away from home.
100% of claims paid out instantly, so its kinda true.
I suspect you don't have an MBA /s
Hi, I'm Saul Goodman. Did you know that you have hurricanes? The constitution says you do! And so do AI.
https://googleearthcommunity.proboards.com/thread/10731/ulti...
"This looks almost certainly like a satellite view of a region in Western Australia, such as the Pilbara or the Hamersley Range. The dark areas are likely ancient, iron-rich rock formations (ironstone), and the surrounding soil is iconic of what's known as Australia's "Red Centre."
I gave it a try and look for the locations, specially the 3rd one that does indeed look like it could be in Chile.
For the 2nd picture I found an island in the French Polynesia that has very similar colors and characteristics, might be its around that area, 8°56'10.8"S 139°34'41.2"W (-8.936304553977038, -139.57811272908305)
For the 3rd picture I found many locations that look like your picture but really couldn't find one. The first one is around Mexico, though it probably isn't 27°32'39.0"N 114°45'00.5"W (27.544166, -114.750130). And the second one are islands close to Morocco 28°01'54.4"N 17°16'22.9"W (28.03198233652239, -17.27306308433365) though the angle is not the same... As a bonus for the 3rd picture, I did find in the Andes mountain something that looks like your picture: 33°38'11.7"S 70°07'01.4"W (-33.636446, -70.116968). So maybe you should also look around mountains.
At least from what I've seen in Chile the coast is usually very rocky and the water is usually lot of waves, and in the picture it looks really smooth. (Though I don't know how zoomed out the picture is)
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u3sVtwexp0o
[2] https://www.youtube.com/@georainbolt
(Applies more to QGIS than to overpass, though both could stand to improve a lot in terms of usability)
When there is a way to actually "search" satellite images with an LLM, it will be a game changer for businesses (and likely not to the ultimate benefit of consumers, unfortunately)
There’s already data for all of this: SSURGO soil maps, vegetation indices, climatology datasets, and more — that could help you find the “most something” in a given radius. But there are too many variables for a single AI to guess your intent. That’s not how people who actually farm, conserve, or monitor land tend to search; they start from a goal and combine the relevant data layers accordingly.
In fact, crop-specific fertility maps have existed for decades, based on soil and climate averages, and they’re still good enough for most practical uses today.
And the Gemini-in-Google Earth bit could lower the barrier for non-GIS folks.
edit, looks like they have ai too now. could be neat to play with after how long has it been. jeesh.
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