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The American technology company Google has added Easter eggs into many of its products and services, such as Google Search, YouTube, and Android since the 2000's. [1] [2] Easter eggs are hidden features or messages that not many people know about, inside jokes, and cultural references inserted into media.
As a joke, Google Maps will provide directions when a clearly impossible route between North America and Europe (for example, between New York and London) is desired; however, one of the steps is "Swim across the Atlantic Ocean", with a travel time (29 days, 0 hours) and distance (3462 miles/5,572 km) calculated accordingly, between Le Havre in France and Boston in America.
Google Maps Pokémon Challenge. Google joined forces with The Pokémon Company, Game Freak, and Nintendo to develop a new Google Maps app for the iOS and Android, which allowed users to capture Pokémon while exploring the real world using Google Maps. The concept of the app would later be refined and released as Pokémon Go in 2016.
Fish for some trout, swim or canoe, or even rent a yurt for a fun overnight camping activity. 13. Bike 25 miles. You can walk, ride or run the iconic Cape Cod Rail trail, which goes through six ...
This means that everything that passes in front of the Google cameras (either mounted on a car, a boat, a person or an animal) will collect every Here are the most beautiful and awkward things on ...
To download offline maps: Tap your profile picture or the initial icon in Google Maps. Then tap “offline maps” and choose the select your own feature. Zoom in on the area you want to save, and ...
A town in Germany. Funny that it means "Ass man's houses" Assur: Please, please please don't move the "ur" to the front. Asylum: A very scary township in Pennsylvania with insane people. Aš: A town in Czech Republic. Name means "i" in Lithuanian. Athol: A town in Massachusetts, USA, likely named after the area of Atholl in the Scottish ...
Where's Wally? (called Where's Waldo? in Canada and the United States) is a British series of children's puzzle books created by English illustrator Martin Handford.The books consist of a series of detailed double-page spread illustrations depicting dozens or more people doing a variety of amusing things at a given location.