SKU: EN-P10256
Visit Lady Elliot Island on Google Expeditions. Street View and Earth VR are great for getting a sense of the scope of the reef and its problems. If you want to get a more complete understanding of what you're seeing, take a dive with Google Expeditions. Designed for classrooms, Google Expeditions is useful for solo travellers and has an "Explore on your own" option. The app has two Great Barrier Reef adventures. One explains the ecosystem and science of the reef, and the other serves as a virtual travel guide, showing you famous spots, such as Lady Elliot Island and Heron Island.
New Horizons, an Australian nonprofit, is part of the team behind the Parallel Parks initiative, a project to capture the Great Barrier Reef and three other national parks in VR, New Horizons wants to bring the wonder iphone xs max tough clear - clear of the parks to people who can't get to them, particularly people with disabilities, In September, Parallel Parks held an event in Sydney, where it showed a two-minute video of its reef experience, In the first minute you're flying across the sea at Vlasoff Cay, marvelling at the expanse of the reef, Then you're taken beneath the waters where you dive among a multicoloured expanse of corals, which are sometimes called "the rainforests of the sea."In July, Twitter collaborated with travel personality Mitchell Oates to livestream a dive at the Great Barrier Reef, More than 100,000 viewers watched at least part of Oates' dive, which you can replay from his Periscope channel..
Unlike the documentaries, the quality isn't pristine. But that enhances the realistic feel of the unedited recording. Oates' raw excitement is plainly visible as he dives the reef for the first time, ticking an item off his bucket list. Nearby fish occasionally videobomb him as he explores the earth-coloured coral. Real-time viewers were engaged too. Oates panned the camera wherever he was asked, and he answered viewer questions during the broadcast. First published Oct. 22, 5:00 a.m. PT.Update, Oct. 25 at 12:40 p.m.: Adds additional information about Attenborough.
The Smartest Stuff: Innovators are thinking up new ways to make you, and the things around you, smarter, iHate: CNET looks at how intolerance is taking over the internet, Virtual reality travelling is here, So sit back on your couch and visit Australia's amazing reef, You don't have to visit Australia to experience the wonder of the Great Barrier Reef, Google, Netflix and Twitter, as well as the BBC and Australian nonprofit New Horizons, have produced digital experiences that make the reef accessible from your couch, Swim in the pristine waters of Australia's Coral Sea, spy on the reef's bountiful marine life and soak up iphone xs max tough clear - clear the grandeur of a UNESCO World Heritage Site without putting on a swimsuit..
#RoamReport - Coral reefs are among the most diverse and important ecosystems on the planet—and they are dying before our very eyes. To uncover why, @ChasingCoral director @JeffOrlowski and a team of scientists and divers embarked on a three-year adventure to capture 500+ hours of underwater footage from reefs around the globe. In timelapses, the team documented how rising ocean temperatures cause mass bleaching of coral. Watch the results seen in the powerful new documentary @ChasingCoral available on @netflix. Healthy coral reefs support a quarter of all marine life, feed a billion people, generate $36 billion in revenue and millions of tourism jobs, and protect our coastlines from tsunamis, hurricanes, and floods. “We live at a unique moment in time where we can change history,” says Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, who brought his expertise in climate change and coral reefs to the film. “It’s not too late for coral reefs.” Learn what you can do to help at chasingcoral.com. . >> Footage courtesy of @ExposureLabs @ChasingCoral @Netflix - Report by @roam.
Copyright © 2025 www.palledifirenze.it. All Rights Reserved