Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Photography
  5. Legacy Archives

Google recruits users to photograph what Street View cannot by expanding Views

Add as a preferred source on Google

Which gives you a better idea of the most fun neighborhood to stay in when you visit Tangier: A sprawling map of the area’s web-like streets, or a nighttime photo from the balcony of the hotel you intend to visit?

Google’s betting on the latter with its latest new feature for Google Views, which lets users pin photos from their Google+ account to Maps, visually documenting what Street View cannot. Pop open a map of the world and it’s peppered with red pins representing all the publicly shared photos Google users have taken, from mountain views to shuttered storefronts.

Recommended Videos

If that functionality sounds familiar, it’s because Google Views already allows users to document their travels with Street View-style panoramas, known as Photo Spheres. But you need an Android phone, or Google’s Photo Sphere app for iOS, to carefully stitch those 360-degree views together. The kind of traditional photos most people are actually shooting have been locked out until now.

Related: Now you can take 360-degree photos with Google’s Photo Sphere app on iOS

“What Views is letting us do is let people supply images of the places they go, knowing that’s also probably the places that other people go,” product manager Evan Rapoport told Digital Trends in a Monday interview at company headquarters. “It’s the first photography community that connects photographers to travelers.”

Welcoming photos makes Google Views perilously similar to another Google-owned service, Panoramio. But Rapoport, who also handles that service, insists it will remain alive and thriving. The difference, he contends, will be in the type of photos each service hosts. Panoramio will continue to host scenic vistas and postcard shots of icons like the Eiffel Tower or Taj Mahal, while Views will cater to all types of photography, including snapshots.

That’s not to say photographersare unwelcome. In fact, Google’s team of testers included Colby Brown, a noted professional photographer whose landscape photography literally spans the globe. In contrast, his work appears on Views alongside the likes of Arroz Marisco – a pseudonym for an anonymous amateur photographer who goes out of his way to document places people care about.

Users can add photos by logging into Google, going to Views and clicking the orange photo button in the upper right. Any public photo uploaded to Google+ is a game, and you can manually drop a pin to indicate where it was taken if the location wasn’t automatically recorded with the photo as a geotag.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
Those murmurs of a $300 price hike for the iPhone 18 Pro series look increasingly likely
Memory costs, a new 2nm chip, and a margin squeeze Apple can't fully offset.
Apple iPhone 17 Pro in Cosmic Orange

A third independent supply chain analysis is now pointing in the same direction as the previous two: the iPhone 18 Pro Max will be more expensive at launch. In addition, Apple might have to settle for a slightly thinner margin on the device than it usually charges for other products. 

Counterpoint Research's bill-of-materials estimate for the 12GB plus 1TB iPhone 18 Pro Max shows a cost rise of nearly $300 compared to the same configuration in the iPhone 17 Pro Max. 

Read more
After Samsung and Apple, Oppo could be next to join the wide foldable club
Oppo could crash Samsung and Apple’s wide foldable party
Settings on the Oppo Find N2's open screen.

Samsung is reportedly preparing to introduce a shorter and wider foldable, while Apple's first-ever foldable iPhone is rumored to use a wide passport-like design as well. Now, a new leak suggests that Oppo may be planning a similar device, adding to the growing crowd of brands in this category.

The news arrives from known Chinese tipster, Digital Chat Station, who claims that Oppo is developing a wide-screen foldable that could arrive in the first quarter of 2027.

Read more
Google’s own Photos app just gave Android users another reason to envy iPhone
A Google Photos redesign that arrived on iOS months ago is now rolling out to Android through version 7.82.
Google Photos AI

Google Photos on Android is finally getting the cleaner bottom navigation bar iPhone users have had since February. That’s a strange thing to say about a Google app on Google’s own mobile platform, but here we are.

The update replaces the old docked bar with a floating pill that sits above the bottom edge of the screen. It no longer covers the photos underneath, and it puts Gemini-powered Ask Photos beside the main navigation.

Read more