Categories: Technology

Bing Maps completes most ambitious mapping project ever in the US, Western Europe next

Bing Maps has completed what it calls its “most ambitious mapping endeavor ever”, collecting 30cm resolution imagery of every square inch of Continental United States – in just two years.

The Global Ortho project as it is known, and which began in 2010, has collected 10.5 million kilometres worth of data at a resolution of 30cm (1 foot = 1 pixel). While higher resolution imagery exists in certain places, this project brings unequalled consistent quality and resolution to every corner of the United States – and by year’s end, Western Europe.

Area 51 and the Vandenberg Air Force Base were not allowed to be imaged from above for obvious reasons.

Microsoft has described the project’s scope and progress to date as “staggering”. Comparing the Global Ortho project to the USGS’s National Agriculture Imagery Program, the second biggest aerial photography project, Microsoft speculates that to acquire the same amount of imagery it would take the NAIP 42 years to complete.

To commemorate the project’s completion in the United States, Microsoft had a 200 foot long Bing logo drawn in chalk atop the parking garage situated near the Bing Maps Imagery Team’s building in Colorado. One last commemorative flight mission, dubbed “Golden Spike”, then captured the Bing Maps team on the rooftop adopting a ‘snow angel’ pose. The final flight imagery should be available to view in Bing Maps next week.

Bing Maps may finally have one-up on Google Maps which, due to massive variations in image quality, resembles a patchwork quilt in certain parts of the world, particularly Ireland.

To find out more about the Global Ortho project watch this video below:

Albizu Garcia

Albizu Garcia is the Co-Founder and CEO of Gain -- a marketing technology company that automates the social media and content publishing workflow for agencies and social media managers, their clients and anyone working in teams.

Recent Posts

WEF calls on stakeholders to ‘inoculate’ public against disinformation ‘super-spreaders’: report

Those who decry 'disinformation' the loudest almost never give any examples of what they're denouncing:…

1 day ago

Shift left, ship fast: How software teams can offer speed without sacrificing quality (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Even the biggest software companies understand that moving quickly is no longer a luxury; it's…

2 days ago

Extremists weaponize COVID, climate issues with conspiracy theories about state & elite control: RAND Europe

The RAND Europe authors are so stuck in their own echo chamber they don't realize…

6 days ago

Digital ID, vaccine passports are expanding to pets & livestock: UN AI for Good report

Humans, animals & commodities alike are all to be digitally tagged, tracked-and-traced equally: perspective The…

1 week ago

Teaching with tech: What’s changing and why It Matters (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Teaching has changed a lot over the years, from chalkboards to laptops, from printed worksheets…

1 week ago

‘Enormously intrusive’ collaborative sensing is beneficial to society: WEF podcast

The massive city-wide surveillance that collaborative sensing requires is a tremendous temptation for tyrants: perspective…

2 weeks ago