Sunday, August 5, 2018
Elemental
Saturday, August 4, 2018
Google Maps now has a "Globe" projection instead of Web Mercator
With 3D Globe Mode on Google Maps desktop, Greenland's projection is no longer the size of Africa.— Google Maps (@googlemaps) August 2, 2018
Just zoom all the way out at https://t.co/mIZTya01K3 😎🌍 pic.twitter.com/CIkkS7It8d
From Mashable by Jake Krol
Take
a look at a map today, and you might think North America is larger than
Africa or Greenland is larger than Mexico and China.
But that's not true in the slightest.
The issue derives from trying to represent a three-dimensional world on a two-dimensional surface.
Luckily for everyone, Google is solving this problem with the latest update to Google Maps.
Google announced Thursday it will begin showing the Earth as a globe rather than a flat "mercator projection" as it formerly had.
The result is that when you zoom out all the way in Google Maps, you'll now see a view of the globe from space, rather than the flat map that was previously shown.
What's best about this update is that it's coming to all desktop users regardless of the respective web browser, thanks to the global Web GL standard.
While this does confirm that Google Maps is not part of the flat earth movement, it also speaks to the importance and impact of the company's other mapping service Google Earth.
The latter has always presented the world in 3D and is used more for storytelling, exploration, and of course education.
Earth is limited to Google Chrome and as it uses a proprietary 3D rendering engine based on Native Client software that is exclusive to the browser.
Google Maps announced the change on Twitter and wasn't shy about the flattening issue fix.
In the announcement, the company notes that Greenland, which is 836,300 square miles, is no longer the size of Africa which is 11.73 million square miles.
The reason these two land masses look relative in size on a 2D map is to compensate for the circular shape of the Earth, which stretches the countries out.
The mobile version of Google Maps, both the apps and the website, still show the world as a plane. Google Maps was first released more than 13 years ago — hopefully, it won’t take another 13 before Google Maps mobile gets the 3D globe treatment.
Truthfully, Greenland is quite small in comparison to Africa, both in real life and now depicted correctly on this 3D Globe.
However, Google Maps has not been the only one struggling with this. Apple Maps is currently still showing a flat view of the world.
For what it's worth, even maps in school do this.
Thinking back to my elementary school days, I can clearly remember looking at the oval-shaped map being pulled down from above the chalkboard.
Maybe schools should switch to Google Maps then, especially since Chrome and Apple are duking it out for the education space, anyway.
Any discussion of spherical map projections is complicated by the fact that the Earth is not a sphere... The centrifugal force of the Earth’s rotation pushes it out into more of an ellipsoid that’s about 0.335% fatter at the equator than at the poles (the actual shape is even more complicated)
- Startfor : The problem with our maps
- Interact with projections
- Mercator tool
- Mercator Puzzle
- Mike Bostock Map Transitions
- Quora : Why does Google Maps keep using a Mercator projection, rather than another projection that more accurately represents the earth?
- GeoGarage blog : Advisory notice on "Web Mercator" / How to lie with maps / Mercator projection : the Greenland problem
Why the super-rich are taking their mega-boats into uncharted waters
A Forbes exclusive look at the travels of the Billionaire Yacht Club.
The Forbes interactive map shows the tracks of 17 of the most expensive privately owned yachts over the course of one whole year.
You can select to view the year's track of individual yachts by vessel name.
If you select an individual yacht on the map you can view the owner's name and details on the distance traveled and the locations where the yacht spent the most time.
The 'Destinations' button on the map allows you to view a heat-map view of the locations most visited by the super-rich.
he Mediterranean and the Caribbean are two of the most popular locations.
If you scroll down past the map then you can read some pen portraits of the boats' owners and a brief summary of where their yacht's traveled in 2017.
There are more ‘explorer’ super-yachts being built than ever before as adventurous billionaires seek out ‘the rarest of experiences’
News this week that the super-rich are kitting their yachts out to polar explorer standards has been greeted with joy by Inuits, who have never before encountered a PayPal co-founder in the wild.
“We absolutely recognize this trend,” says Stewart Campbell, the editor of Boat International.
“There are more ‘explorer’ super-yachts in build now than at any time before.”
Stronger hulls, bigger fuel tanks and ecological waste units make up the core of the new-look mega-boats.
Campbell points to Project REV, being built by the Norwegian industrialist Kjell Inge Røkke – a research station-cum-super-yacht due to span 182 metres when completed in 2020.
Aston Martin has unveiled its own submarine – yours for $4m (£3m) – while the London broker Edmiston is selling a yacht called Kilkea with an “ice-class hull” that can move through uncharted waters for 30 days without restocking – £55m and we’ll call it a deal.
While Monaco has its cachet, remoteness is now a status symbol in itself.
Remoteness costs.
It’s space that few but the Elon Musks and Richard Bransons can afford.
But anyone with a spare £100m can tack south from Tierra del Fuego.
“It’s just about adventure,” says Campbell.
“There’s a growing desire from ultra high net worth individuals to get to untouched places and have the rarest of experiences.”
Paul Allen, the co-founder of Microsoft, seems to have kickstarted the boom back in 2003, with his Octopus, which is presently moored in London.
The Octopus, which costs $384,000 a week to run, is sturdy enough that, in 2015, he used it to find a second world war battleship off the coast of the Philippines.
US-based individual involved in tech according some rumors.
Those who don’t find the sight of a billionaire on a quest for inner peace in oceanic solitude offputting will be heartened by the owners’ belief in the extreme robustness of their super-yachts.
It has just emerged that a lifeboat appeal at St Tropez has failed because the super-rich are apparently “too mean” to donate.
Privatising your own emergency rescue?
Now that’s the .0001% mindset.
- Masion Global : From ‘Explorer’ Vessels to Open-Plan Design, What’s Trendy in Yachts
- Boat International : Top 20 explorer yachts
- The Guardian : St-Tropez lifeboat crew say luxury boat owners too mean to help out
- GeoGarage blog : "Solemates", a superyacht controlled by iPad / Blue Planet gives super-rich their new toys ... / Meet the billionaire (and ex-fisherman) giving away his fortune to help save the ocean / Underwater aeroplanes: the new toy for the super rich / 'Super Falcon' submarine aims to fly underwater / Branson set to travel to ocean bottom / The last dive? Funding for human expeditions in the ocean may have run aground / Explorer recounts deepest-ever ocean expedition / James Cameron to dive very deep into Pacific Ocean Mariana Trench for 'Avatar' sequel /Sunken World War II aircraft carrier found by deep ... / US billionaire Paul Allen discovers wreck of Japan's ... /
Friday, August 3, 2018
Is this the Tesla of the seas? Silent zero-emission electric motorboat has a range of 80 nautical miles and is controlled using an iPad
Is this the Tesla of the seas?
Silent zero-emission electric motorboat has a range of 80 nautical miles and is controlled using an iPad
The 30-foot craft is powered by a 'completely silent' propulsion system and zero-emissions electric motor.
It has a range of 80 nautical miles and can seat up to eight people and includes a spacious interior
Q-Yachts, based in Helsinki, describes the vessels as the 'smoothest and most silent motorboat on the market'
The company has yet to reveal the price of the boat and when it will be available to purchase
The 30-foot (9-metre) Q30 craft, built by Finnish firm Q-Yachts, is powered by a 'completely silent' propulsion system and has an electric motor that produces no emissions.
It has a range of 80 nautical miles (92 miles/148km) and can seat up to eight people, with a roomy below-deck cabin providing space for a small sink, additional seating and storage closets.
Q-Yachts describes the vessel as the 'smoothest and most silent motorboat on the market', but has yet to reveal the vessel's price or release date.
The company, which is based in Helsinki, said the craft was designed so sailors could 'enjoy the journey, not just the destination'.
'We are positioning ourselves as the Tesla of the seas,' Q-Yachts sales director Joakim Hilden told SuperYachtNews.
'Even compared to Tesla, our electrical propulsion system is far more robust and rugged than when they launched their first cars.'
Dubbed the Q30, the vessel is propelled by an all-electric system called 'Oceanvolt' that has previously been used as an alternative power source for sailboats.
The propulsion system is low-voltage, meaning it operates at a relatively small revolutions-per-minute, making it quieter than conventional engines, Mr Hilden said.
The motor's shaft also goes directly into the engine, meaning there is no gearbox, a design feature that further reduces noise levels.
Take a look at the all-electric 'Tesla of the seas' motorboat
An all-electric motorboat that you can control with an iPad has been described as the 'Tesla of the seas'.
What are the specs of the Q-Yacht Q30 ?
- Cruising speed: 9 knots (10mph/17kph)
- Top speed: 15 knots (17mph/28kph)
- Range: 80 nautical miles (92 miles/148km)
- Length: 30ft (9m)
- Propulsion system: All-electric silent motor system 'Oceanvolt'
- Price/availability: TBC
While the engine system provides a quiet ride, it limits the boat's range and top speed, hitting just 15 knots (17mph/28kph) at its peak.
The Q30 can cover 80 nautical miles at its cruising speed of 9 knots (10mph/17kph) but this drops to just 40 nautical miles (46 miles74km) at top speed.
The basic battery pack allows for five hours of constant cruising, a figure that can be doubled with the addition of an extra pack.
Passengers can enjoy a two-person sunbathing platform or four-seat table up top, as well as a cosy below-deck lounge and hi-fi audio from a wireless Bluetooth speaker.
Dubbed the Q30, the vessel is propelled by an all-electric silent motor system called 'Oceanvolt' that has previously been used as an alternative power source for sailboats.
The propulsion system is low-voltage, meaning it operates at a relatively small revolutions-per-minute, making it quieter than conventional engines
The vessel's hull and deck are made of a lightweight vinyl ester resin and fiberglass that has been laminated with a shimmering white gelcoat.
Its shape has been designed to minimise the wake the vessel produces as it cuts through the water in an effort to further minimise noise.
An iPad nestled behind the wooden steering wheel controls navigation in the form of an interactive map, as well as interior and exterior LED lights.
Passengers can enjoy a two-person sunbathing platform or four-seat table up top, as well as a cosy below-deck lounge and hi-fi audio from a wireless Bluetooth speaker.
The vessel's hull and deck are made of a lightweight vinyl ester resin and fiberglass that has been laminated with a shimmering white gelcoat
The basic battery pack allows for five hours of constant cruising, a figure that can be doubled with the addition of an extra battery pack
Thursday, August 2, 2018
The 'monster' iceberg: What happened next?
From BBC by Jonathan Amos
It was a wow! moment.
The world's biggest berg, a block of ice a quarter the size of Wales, fell off the Antarctic exactly a year ago.
But what then? We've gone back to find out.
Weighing a trillion tonnes and covering an area of nearly 6,000 sq km, the colossus dubbed A-68 has kind of spent the past 12 months shuffling on the spot - rather like a driver trying to get themselves out of a tight parking spot at the supermarket.
Occasionally, the berg head-butted the floating shelf of ice from which it calved, but made only limited progress in moving north - its expected path out of the Antarctic's Weddell Sea towards the Atlantic Ocean.
"An iceberg as massive as A-68 is sluggish, and thus needs time to accelerate," explains Thomas Rackow from Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute.
"Compared to much smaller icebergs, A-68 is also less sensitive to offshore winds that could potentially drive the iceberg away from the continent.
In fact, since the calving event in early July last year, we could see the iceberg going back and forth due to the prevailing winds."
Dr Rackow says the frozen ocean surface probably also played some role in constraining the berg's movement, and wonders if the underside of the berg was catching on the seafloor.
It's a thought shared by Suzanne Bevan at Swansea University, UK.
"We know so little about the bathymetry (depth) in that area of the Weddell Sea," she told BBC News.
Given time, though, A-68 should pick up the pace as the currents grab hold of it.
And A-68 hasn't melted?
Nope.
It's extremely cold in that part of the world.
The berg has knocked off some of its sharp edges, but it remains much as it was - 150km long and 55km wide.
Two largish chunks have detached, one of them sufficiently big to get its own designation (A-68b) in the list of giant bergs kept by the US National Ice Center.
The American agency has officially now put A-68 at number six in its all-time ranking.
If you were wondering - a berg called B15 is the historic champ.
It was roughly 11,000 sq km in area when it broke away from Antarctica back in 2000.
And it's still going, albeit in pieces.
Astronauts on the space station recently photographed the largest remaining fragment of B15 passing the British Overseas Territory of South Georgia on its way to the equator.
A-68 will very probably travel this same "iceberg alley".
What's A-68 like if you go there?
Ella Gilbert from the British Antarctic Survey was the first to make a movie of the berg from close quarters.
The scientist was in a small plane gathering atmospheric data when she made a low pass along its edge.
"It took us an hour and a half to go from one side to the other," she says.
"It's scale is mind-boggling, fascinating - it's like another world.
It was possibly the most exciting thing I've ever done."
Ella is often asked why the berg broke away.
"It's complicated," she explains.
"The region is clearly undergoing a lot of change but you can't just say 'it was the climate'.
Iceberg calving is a natural process anyway.
If you put more snow in at one end, it has to come out the other end as icebergs."
Ultimately, it's expected A-68 will enter "iceberg alley" into the Atlantic
So, why should we be interested?
A-68 broke away from the Larsen C Ice Shelf - the floating extension of glaciers running off the Antarctic Peninsula.
The shelf is the subject of intense scrutiny because similar structures to the north have disintegrated.
Climate warming very probably was implicated in some of these losses, and so it is inevitable that people will ask what the future holds for Larsen C.
It is one of the biggest ice shelves in all of Antarctica and its collapse would allow its feeding glaciers to dump more of their ice into the ocean, raising sea-levels.
How likely is that to happen?
The answer to this question will only come with ongoing monitoring.
The first thing scientists want to understand is how the shelf will react to calving such a big berg.
The stresses acting on the shelf will almost certainly have changed.
"The models tell us we should expect the centre of the Larsen C Ice Shelf to speed up a bit, and the edges, where the berg was attached, to slow down," says Swansea's Adrian Luckman, whose Midas research group was most closely involved in monitoring A-68's break-away.
But this behaviour is very difficult to demonstrate because tidal movements push on the shelf and complicate the satellite measurements.
Tell me about a surprising discovery
Scientists have established that the surface of the Larsen C Ice Shelf can melt even during the deep freeze of permanent night in the Antarctic winter.
Weather station and satellite observations have established that a particular type of warm westerly wind, or Foehn, will flow down off the peninsula mountains to produce ponds on the surface of the shelf.
"You see this in May, which in the Antarctic is equivalent to late November.
Forty percent of the melt in 2016 occurred in this winter period - all because of the Foehn effect," says Adrian Luckman.
This is a process scientists will need to watch closely.
Some of those northern shelves that collapsed were destabilised by the presence of large numbers of meltwater lakes on their surface.
Larsen C is far from replicating such conditions but that may change in the coming decades if global warming progresses as expected and its effects impinge deeper into the Antarctic.
- Project Midas : A-68 anniversary
- Business Insider : Antarctica's monster iceberg is still alive 1 year after its birth — but the Maryland-size ice block is floating toward its doom
- GeoGarage blog : Image of the week : A-68 Adrift / Giant iceberg in the making

















