Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Google Earth VR lets you cruise the globe like Superman

Add as a preferred source on Google

Virtual reality has a number of interesting applications. The ability to create a virtual world and then allow users to explore and manipulate it in ways that would otherwise be impossible has value for education, engineering, medicine, and. of course, gaming. It’s no wonder, then, that VR remains one of the most exciting fields in computing today.

When it comes to exploring the world, no application takes a more holistic view than Google Earth, which has long provided maybe the easiest way for anyone with an internet connection to fly around the globe and see almost anywhere that’s accessible to Google’s various resources. Therefore, it makes perfect sense that Google would make a Google Earth VR version, as has now been announced on the Steam community.

Recommended Videos

Google Earth VR comes a year after Google Earth itself celebrated its 10th anniversary. The app started out as a novelty but quickly evolved into something much more, and it is becoming the place where oddities like alleged UFOs and military bases were discovered. Google Earth has been used to discover long-lost civilizations and to identify illegal marijuana crops. Suffice it to say, the app has become a powerful way to visualize our planet, and bringing it to VR is a natural step in its storied evolution.

 

For now, Google Earth VR is launching on the HTC Vive, and it provides the ability to explore the same 196.9 million square miles as the 2D version of the app. The same cinematic tours are present, as are highlighted destinations to explore such as the Amazon River, the Manhattan skyline, the Grand Canyon, and the Swiss Alps.

Google Earth VR is free to play via Steam. While an HTC Vive is required for now, the app will support other VR platforms next year. The systems requirements for the game mimic those of VR systems in general, requiring a relatively hefty Windows 7 or later PC with at least an Intel Core i5-6500 processor equivalent or higher, 8GB of RAM, and at least an Nvidia GeForce GTX 970 or AMD Radeon R9 Fury.

Mark Coppock
Former Computing Writer
Mark Coppock is a Freelance Writer at Digital Trends covering primarily laptop and other computing technologies. He has…
Windows 11’s modern Media Player is somehow worse than the version from 17 years ago
The modern Media Player for Windows 11 is slower and heavier than the classic version
Windows 11 media player user interface

Microsoft has released a new Insider Preview update for the modern Windows 11 Media Player. However, the app is facing criticism after tests revealed it uses more memory and opens local video files more slowly than the classic 17-year-old Windows Media Player.

The update adds some useful fixes, including better captions, clearer codec errors, and improved file recognition. But the biggest complaints remain higher RAM usage and paid codec support for some common video formats. The update is not available to everyone yet. Media Player version 11.2605.14.0 has only arrived on Experimental Insider builds as part of Microsoft’s June 12 Insider Preview releases.

Read more
If you have a Mac, you should try this free and beautifully-designed disk space tool
Radix is a free open-source alternative to paid Mac disk analyzers
File, Electronics, Mobile Phone

Running out of storage on a Mac is common, but Apple’s built-in storage tools are not always great at showing what is actually taking up space. You usually get broad categories, but finding the exact folders, downloads, app files, or old projects causing the problem can still take some work.

Radix is a free, open-source Mac app that tries to make that process clearer. It is a disk space analyzer that scans a folder, drive, or volume and displays the results in an interactive sunburst chart. Rather than digging through folders manually, you get a visual overview of how storage is being used across your drive.

Read more
This free Mac app puts stunning glassy widgets on your lock screen
WidgetScreen brings weather, calendar, battery, and music widgets to your Mac lock screen
Aquatic, Water, Animal

The Mac lock screen has always felt a little underused. You see the time, your wallpaper, and not much else. macOS already supports desktop widgets, but once your Mac is locked, that extra information disappears.

WidgetScreen is trying to fix that in a pretty simple way. The free Mac app, made by UK computer science student Sam Cook, adds glassy widgets to the lock screen so you can quickly check things like the weather, clock, calendar, battery, music playback, countdowns, and system information.

Read more