Google Earth has long offered users the opportunity to explore their planet with just a few mouse clicks. Today, a few clicks have become a few flicks, with the release of Google Earth for iPhone and iPod Touch. Users will have the whole world in their hands – not to mention their pockets, purses, and backpacks – and can engage Google Earth as they never have before, zooming from location to location and experiencing the app’s unique features on Apple’s mobile devices. The Google Earth app displays the same imagery and offers the same navigational capabilities as the desktop client and at launch will feature layers with geo-located Wikipedia articles and Panoramio photos, as well as map labels and borders. Available in 18 languages, Google Earth can be downloaded for free from Apple’s App Store (accessible through iTunes) and will be compatible with first and second generation models of both iPhone and iPod touch operating on EDGE, 3G, and other WiFi networks. Navigation in Google Earth is simple and intuitive, letting users’ imaginations do the work of exploring an app that puts a trip around the world at their fingertips.
Whether a place of interest is thousands of miles away or just around the corner, Google Earth makes it accessible to the user, regardless of where they may be. For example, waiting in New York for a flight to San Francisco, a user could use Google Earth to learn about the City by the Bay and plan an entire vacation before ever fastening their seatbelt. After directing Google Earth to San Francisco on their iPhone, they could read Wikipedia entries about Cable Cars and Fisherman’s Wharf, check out user-contributed Panoramio photos of the Golden Gate Bridge, search for hotels and take a quick aerial tour around the city, all with a few screen touches.
Google Earth becomes even more practical after this user touches down on the West coast, as the app takes advantage of iPhone and iPod Touch’s mobile technology:
As of today, the globe is not only explorable, it’s portable as well. For more information, visit the Google Lat Long Blog.
Give Google Earth on iPhone a try, download it here.