in 2030 is the next pictures
The typical Google Earth user would be searching for road directions, satellite pictures, street view photos, and locations, when visiting Google earth's website.
If you have a dish for your TV service then you're getting a television feed via a satellite feed. Likewise, digital imagery is sent from earth orbiting or deep-space satellites to ground stations for processing. For example, GeoEye and DigitalGlobe have a constellation of satellites that takes pictures of earth that are processed to display on Google Earth and Google Maps.
press import then click cancel then it should do it even though you clicked cancel
No, all the pictures are taken by satellite. ^^^WRONG There are MANY stitched and edited segments of the Google Earth database...most notably, in photographs featuring military bases, military operations, and other things the government feels they need to keep from the general public. Also, Google themselves heavily photoshopped pictures of the Google Campus in California...adding things that are not there in "real life", including a massive swimming pool with the Google logo.
in 2030 is the next pictures
Google satellites are closer to the Earth than the NASA satellites are to the moon. And those pictures are pretty good.
Go to Google Earth
Google Earth and Google Maps are great tools to view high-resolution satellite imagery of the Earth.
Yes, someone who works for Google does filter the pictures shown on maps in Google Earth. Otherwise, there may be something wrong with the picture if not.
yes
The pictures were taken by a satellite which can photograph a large area.
no you can't pictures are taken of Google earth so you can't do that
The pictures in Google Earth can only get so detailed. Beyond that, they get all pixellated.
yes on google earth
The typical Google Earth user would be searching for road directions, satellite pictures, street view photos, and locations, when visiting Google earth's website.
They are real photos