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Sounds bring Google Earth to life

Released on = May 15, 2007, 10:21 pm

Press Release Author = Katherine Krause, Vice President/PIO, Wild Sanctuary

Industry = Environment

Press Release Summary = As reported by BBC News last week, Wild Sanctuary, a
California company located in Glen Ellen, confirms that they are currently
generating KML programming that can layer relevant recorded sounds over locations
within the Google Earth format. With over 3,500 hours of soundscapes from all over
the world, Wild Sanctuary President, Dr Bernie Krause, says that the firm is in
talks with Google, although no official agreement has yet been made

Press Release Body = While homing in on visual feasts around the globe, users of
Google Earth will soon be able to listen to sounds from each site, urban to wild
nature.

As reported by BBC News last week, Wild Sanctuary, a California company located in
Glen Ellen, confirms that they are currently generating KML programming that can
layer relevant recorded sounds over locations within the Google Earth format. With
over 3,500 hours of soundscapes from all over the world, Wild Sanctuary President,
Dr Bernie Krause, says that the firm is in talks with Google, although no official
agreement has yet been made.

Says Krause, \"While a picture is worth a thousand words, a sound is worth a thousand
pictures. We're giving the map a voice.a sense of 'there' with 'where.'\"

\'Add-on\'
Dr Krause has spent the last 40 years collecting soundscapes, urban and rural, and
his recordings include tens of thousands of animal voices from a huge array of
habitats, including cities, deserts, mountains and the marine environment.
It is the largest soundscape collection in private hands, Krause acknowledges.
The idea would be to zoom-in on particular Google Earth sites and then have the
option to listen to the particular sound signatures from a distinct location.
Krause and his team will be presenting the new software feature at the Where 2.0
conference in San Jose, California on 29 May.
Dr Krause anticipates that up to two dozen sounds would be show-cased at first, but
many more would be added later. Wild Sanctuary is working in association with
30proof, a media design company, to develop the new feature.
In addition to the lively sounds, users would be able to access Google Earth to
display how the sounds can indicate changes over time, as with climate or usage
effects, global warming, or as a result of certain logging practices. He added,
\"People will be able to get a sense of before and after such alterations. We now
have evidence that from the sound perspective, even selective logging has a profound
effect on the natural world. The pictures of before and after look exactly the same,
but the sound is completely different.\"


Web Site = http://www.wildsanctuary.com

Contact Details = Related links:
. www.wildsanctuary.com
. www.30proof.com

Photo Notes:

. Photos available upon request.

Links & Blogs discussing this release:

Gizmodo UK
The Daily Mirror
Tech Spot
SlashDot
The Cleveland Leader
CrunchGear
and the BBC

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