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#3 Best Neighborhood in Sapporo

Nijō Market

Sapporo's seafood market quarter

About the neighborhood

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The following is a timeline for Google Street View, a technology implemented in Google Maps and Google Earth that provides ground-level interactive panoramas of cities. The service was first introduced in the United States on May 25, 2007, covering five cities: San Francisco, Las Vegas, Denver, Miami, and New York City. By the end of 2008, Street View had full coverage available for all of the major and minor cities in the continental United States and was expanding its scope to include some of the country's national parks, as well as cities elsewhere in the world. For the first year and a half of its existence, Street View featured camera icon markers, each representing at least one major city or area (such as a park). Ten years after its creation, Street View had provided imagery for more than 10 million miles' worth of roads across 83 countries worldwide.

Key additions

In 2005, Google employees start the first tests of Google Street View using a van with roof-mounted cameras in the San Francisco area.

On May 25, 2007, Street View was announced.

On May 30, 2007, at the Where 2.0 Conference, Immersive Media Company was identified as the contractor that captured the imagery for four of the five cities initially mapped by Street View, using its patented dodecahedral camera array on a moving car. Immersive Media continued to do image capture for Street View until Google developed independent capability. Since July 2007, Google has used imagery that belongs exclusively to Google.

On April 16, 2008, Street View was fully integrated into Google Earth 4.3.

On May 5, 2008, Google improves the quality of Street View captures.

On May 12, 2008, Google announced that it was testing face-blurring technology on its photos of the busy streets of Manhattan. The technology uses an algorithm to search Google's image database for faces and blurs them, according to John Hanke, director of Google Earth and Google Maps.

On June 10, 2008, two other features included in the update were an effective mask of the "Google Car" and the application of face-blurring technology on all photos, which lowered the resolution across all photos, even the formerly high resolution images of San Francisco. Also, many metro areas nearby featured cities were included, but they did not receive their own camera icons.

On July 2, 2008, Google Street View was introduced outside of the United States for the first time, in France and Italy. This was also the debut of Google's new 2nd Generation Cameras. 19 camera icons were added, mostly showing small towns and areas along the Tour de France route and part of northwestern Italy.

On August 4, 2008, 28 icons of major metropolitan areas of both Australia and Japan were added to Google Street View. Included in the update were approximately 40 new U.S. hub cities.

On November 26, 2008, the Street View button and all camera icons were deleted. Instead of clicking the "Street View" button, this is now accessed using the "pegman" button in the left-hand corner. When the "pegman" icon is dragged over the map, blue polylines appear where Street View is available and a small window shows the current Street View. If this is dropped on the map the Street View opens and takes over the whole map window.

On December 1, 2008, New Zealand was added to Google Street View. Faces were blurred upon recommendation by the New Zealand Privacy Commission, but vehicle registration plates were not obscured.

On April 9, 2009, Street View became available with a full-screen option.

On June 5, 2009, Smart Navigation was introduced, which allows users to navigate the panoramas by double-clicking.

In January 2010, Google began to introduce the third generation of cameras, allowing better image quality.

In mid-June 2010, Google added blue dots to its maps that display user-submitted images in all locations around the world, including land areas where Street View is not available and bodies of water. These images can be pulled up on the screen in the same manner as a Street View image with the pegman by dragging it onto the blue dot.

On October 30, 2012, Google announced that users could contribute to Street View by creating a panorama-like image from the Galaxy Nexus smartphone to share on Google Maps.

On February 14, 2013, Wii Street U was released for the Wii U.

On November 6, 2013, Google reintroduces Pegman, which had been removed a few months prior, to make way for a new design, and even a new Pegman who introduces icons following the location.

On April 23, 2014, a new historical option was introduced to Street View. The date of panoramas can be selected from the timeline.

Starting in August 2017, Google allows users to create their own Street View-like blue paths, for the connected photospheres that are sufficiently close to one another.

On September 7, 2017, Google announces the arrival of a new generation of more efficient and precise cameras on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of Street View. This is the 4th generation of cameras, sporting a more refined profile and a blue color.

On December 3, 2020, Google announced that users could contribute to Street View by capturing video using their AR-supported phones using the Street View app.

May 24, 2022: Google announces the arrival of a new generation four camera on the occasion of the 15th anniversary of Street View for 2023, this one able to cover areas less accessible by car thanks to its lesser weight.

May 24, 2022: Google announces the history feature of Street View on iOS and Android, allowing users to view past shots of an area that have been captured repeatedly.

Timeline of introductions

For the virtual tours of museums, see Google Arts and Culture#Timeline of introductions

The following timeline lists the date of each location's earliest set of Street View captures. Imagery for each update was captured anywhere from one to twelve months before the stated release date.

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

2023

2024

2025

2026

Official coverage by country οr territory

Below is a table showing the countries available on Street View and the year they were first added. Plain text indicates that a country has only views of certain businesses and/or tourist attractions.

Current coverage

Bold with an asterisk (*) indicates countries with public street view available

Future coverage

The following countries are slated to receive official Google Street View coverage based on announcements from Google, governmental agencies or national newspapers:

Georgia

Kuwait

Unofficial coverage

Antarctica Part of King George Island

El Salvador Main cities and along the main highways connecting the main cities.

Martinique Main cities and tourist places in the whole overseas region of Martinique

Saint Pierre and Miquelon Main cities and tourist places in the whole overseas region of Saint Pierre and Miquelon

Spain Ghost towns in some parts of Spain including Tobes, El Alamín, Oreja, Boñices and Matandrino

Tonga Main cities and tourist places in the whole overseas region of Tonga in Grid Pacific

Zimbabwe Views of some highways and the central business districts of Harare, Chegutu, Rusape, Masvingo and two United Nations World Heritage Sites: Great Zimbabwe National Monument and Victoria Falls. The first instances of Google Street View in Zimbabwe were contributed by photographer Tawanda Kanhema

Barbados Main cities and tourist places in the whole overseas region of Barbados in Caribbean Development Bank.

Armenia Main cities and tourists places in the whole region of Armenia in Armenia 360.

References

External links

Street View coverage map and current driving locations

Available indoor views of public transportation facilities as airports and railway stations and transportation museums

Available inside views of university campuses

Views and mapping sites Earth

Street View

Street ViewOther Historypin

Google Maps pin

Google Maps Road Trip

Argleton

Programs Business Groups

Computing University Initiative

Contact Lens

Content ID

CrossCheck

Data Liberation Front

Data Transfer Project

Developer Expert

DigiKavach

DigiPivot

Digital Garage

Digital News Initiative

Digital Unlocked

Dragonfly

Founders' Award

Free Zone

Get Your Business Online

Google for Education

Google for Startups

Living Stories

Made with Code

News Lab

PowerMeter

Privacy Sandbox

Project Nightingale

Project Nimbus

Project Sunroof

Project Zero

Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab

RechargeIT

Sensorvault

Silicon Initiative

Solve for X

Street View Trusted

Student Ambassador Program

Vevo

YouTube BrandConnect

YouTube Creator Awards

YouTube Select

YouTube Original Channel Initiative

Year in Search

YouTube Rewind 2018

2019

Events AlphaGo versus Fan Hui

AlphaGo versus Lee Sedol

AlphaGo versus Ke Jie

Android Developer Challenge

Android Developer Day

Android Developer Lab

CNN/YouTube presidential debates

Code-in

Code Jam

Developer Day

Developers Live

Doodle4Google

Future of Go Summit

G-Day

Hash Code

I/O

Lunar X Prize

Mapathon

Science Fair

Summer of Code

World Chess Championship 2024

YouTube Awards

YouTube Comedy Week

YouTube Live

YouTube Music Awards 2013

2015

YouTube Space Lab

YouTube Symphony Orchestra

Infrastructure 111 Eighth Avenue

Android lawn statues

Androidland

Barges

Binoculars Building

Central Saint Giles

Chelsea Market

Chrome Zone

Data centers

GeoEye-1

Googleplex

Ivanpah Solar Power Facility

James R. Thompson Center

King's Cross

Mayfield Mall

Pier 57

Sidewalk Toronto

St. John's Terminal

Submarine cables Dunant

Grace Hopper

Unity

WiFi

YouTube Space

YouTube Theater

PeopleCriticismOther Android apps

April Fools' Day jokes

Doodles Doodle Champion Island Games

Magic Cat Academy

Pac-Man

Easter eggs

History Gmail

Search

YouTube

Logo

Material Design

Mergers and acquisitions

Operating systems Android Cupcake

Donut

Eclair

Froyo

Gingerbread

Honeycomb

Ice Cream Sandwich

Jelly Bean

KitKat

Lollipop

Marshmallow

Nougat

Oreo

Pie

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

version history

smartphones

Android Automotive

Android Go devices

Android Things

Android TV devices

Android XR

ChromeOS

ChromeOS Flex

ChromiumOS

Fuchsia

Glass OS

gLinux

Goobuntu

TV 2010–2014

2020–present

Wear OS

Machine learning models BERT

Chinchilla

DreamBooth

Gemini

Gemma

Imagen (2023)

LaMDA

PaLM

T5

Veo (text-to-video model)

VideoPoet

XLNet

Neural networks EfficientNet

Gato

Inception

MobileNet

Transformer

WaveNet

Computer programs AlphaDev

AlphaFold

AlphaGeometry

AlphaGo

AlphaGo Zero

AlphaStar

AlphaZero

Master

MuZero

Formats and codecs AAB

APK

AV1

iLBC

iSAC

libvpx

Lyra

Protocol Buffers

Ultra HDR

VP3

VP6

VP8

VP9

WebM

WebP

WOFF2

Programming languages Carbon

Dart

Go

Sawzall

Search algorithms Googlebot

Hummingbird

Mobilegeddon

PageRank matrix

Panda

Penguin

Pigeon

RankBrain

Domain names .app

.dev

.google

.zip

g.co

google.by

Typefaces Croscore

Noto

Product Sans

Roboto

NexusOther Android Dev Phone

Android One

Cardboard

Chromebit

Chromebook

Chromebox

Chromecast

Clips

Daydream

Fitbit

Glass

Liftware

Liquid Galaxy

Nest smart speakers

Thermostat

Wifi

Play Edition

Project Ara

OnHub

Pixel Visual Core

Project Iris

Search Appliance

Sycamore processor

Tensor

Tensor Processing Unit

Titan Security Key

Documentaries AlphaGo

Google: Behind the Screen

Google Maps Road Trip

Google and the World Brain

The Creepy Line

Books Google Hacks

The Google Story

Googled: The End of the World as We Know It

How Google Works

I'm Feeling Lucky

In the Plex

The MANIAC

Popular culture Google Feud

Google Me (film)

"Google Me" (Kim Zolciak song)

"Google Me" (Teyana Taylor song)

Is Google Making Us Stupid?

Proceratium google

Matt Nathanson: Live at Google

The Billion Dollar Code

The Internship

Where on Google Earth is Carmen Sandiego?

Other "Attention Is All You Need"

elgooG

Generative pre-trained transformer

"Me at the zoo"

Predictions of the end

Relationship with Wikipedia

"Reunion"

Robot Constitution

Italics denote discontinued products. Category

Outline

Encyclopedic content adapted from the Wikipedia article on Nijō Market, used under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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