Faroe Islands use sheep to get on Google Maps.

Source of this post is at the bottom:-

Cameras strapped to sheeps’ backs have enabled the Faroes to be documented on Google Street View.

As methods of gaining international recognition go, putting your sheep population to use is one of the more unusual. But in a country where there are seven sheep for every five humans, it might not be such a bad idea.

With a population of 70,000 sheep and just 50,000 people, the remote Faroe Islands have previously struggled to get international recognition on Google Maps. Wounded that their roadways haven’t been documented for the rest of the world’s perusal, one local resident (alongside the tourist board) decided it would be a good idea to employ the islands’ woolly creatures in order to help visitors explore the landscape.

Off the radar of many travellers, the Faroe Islands is made up of 18 islands in the North Atlantic, between the Shetlands, Iceland and Norway. Last year the country’s tourist board petitioned Google to let it be featured on Google Street View by mounting cameras onto the backs of sheep, calling it “Sheep View”. Their bid was a huge success - and now Google has announced that Google Street View is now available in the Faroes.

The initiative was launched by local resident Durita Andreassen. Keen to share her homeland’s natural beauty with the world, Andreassan petitioned the internet giant alongside the Faroese Tourist board. They equipped a few sheep with solar-powered 360-degree cameras to collect images which could be uploaded onto Google Maps.

After hearing about the move, Google supplied the country with a Street View Trekker and 360-degree cameras via its Street View Camera Loan programme.

Speaking to The Independent, Levi Hanssen from Visit Faroe Islands said: “We’re delighted that the Sheep View project surpassed all of its goals. 2017 has seen a substantial increase in visitor numbers and people all around the world, who previously had never heard of the Faroe Islands, now know that our islands exist.

"We managed to not only put the Faroe Islands on the world map, but also on Google Street View, which is fantastic.”

Following the success of Sheep View, the Faroese are now campaign to have their language included on Google Translate. With fewer than 80,000 people around the world speaking it and a growing tourist market, the tourist board is concerned that foreigners are unable to look up basic phrases.

Hanssen - the project manager for the Faroe Islands Translate scheme - told The Independent that they’re building a :video database that visually and audibly logs the Faroese language" for the first time in history.

"Our dream is to have Google Translate but, in the meantime, we will have our self-made Faroe Islands Translate,” he said.

As with Sheep View, they have created their very own version of the service, this time with the help of local people who are translating live by video. <— (Check this out. It’s Cool.)

At this rate, however, it won’t be long before they get their way with Google.

SOURCE:

O’Shea, J Ronan. “Faroe Islands use sheep to get on Google Maps.”

independent.co.uk.

http://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/faroe-island-google-maps-sheep-tourist-board-locals-denmark-atlantic-ocean-a8032911.html

Date Accessed: November 03, 2017

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Check this out @LucioV @ErmesT @NarenChandra @HelloSamsonR @OSAMA @MahabubMunna

I found the story interesting.

Thank you.

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Eheheheh I know this story from the beginning, sign up for the Italian Trusted Talk of november: https://www.localguidesconnect.com/t5/General-Discussion-SVtp/Sign-up-for-a-Street-View-TrustedTalk-in-November/m-p/482847#M9829 and ask @Kiko-ITA for more details…

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Hi @Badruddeen ,

I was there for the final phase of the project in August 2016 (I was on the same plane that you can see in the video, the one where David down the stairs with the trecker) and took also this pano that was the start of a project (VisitFaroeIslands360) that it’s currently running.

If you need any info, don’t hesitate to contact me :slight_smile:
If you understand Italian, join us the trusted talk of Monday, we will talk also about that project and aerial panos.

The curious thing is that the Faroe Islands has the Street View published just a few days ago, this is the article in Faroese of the 29th of October that announces the Street View on the islands.

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Hi @Kiko-ITA

Kiko, Nice. And thank you for giving us more information in this regard. Nice 360, I love it.

Sorry I could not understand Italian but I am curious. :slight_smile:

And I particularly like their online live video translation service too.

Cheers


@Kiko-ITA wrote:

Hi @Badruddeen ,

I was there for the final phase of the project in August 2016 (I was on the same plane that you can see in the video, the one where David down the stairs with the trecker) and took also this pano that was the start of a project (VisitFaroeIslands360) that it’s currently running.

If you need any info, don’t hesitate to contact me :slight_smile:
If you understand Italian, join us the trusted talk of Monday, we will talk also about that project and aerial panos.

The curious thing is that the Faroe Islands has the Street View published just a few days ago, this is the article in Faroese of the 29th of October that announces the Street View on the islands.


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Hi @LucioV

Thanks, @Kiko-ITA explained more and its interesting.

Thanks Lucio.


@LucioV wrote:

Eheheheh I know this story from the beginning, sign up for the Italian Trusted Talk of november: https://www.localguidesconnect.com/t5/General-Discussion-SVtp/Sign-up-for-a-Street-View-TrustedTalk-in-November/m-p/482847#M9829 and ask @Kiko-ITA for more details…


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Interesting and funny , I like it :grin::grin::grin::grin:

Very creative way @Badruddeen :grin::grin::grin:

And lucky @Kiko-ITA to be there :slight_smile:

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Hi @OSAMA

The whole project is interesting and yes @Kiko-ITA being part of it makes it more interesting. Unfortunately I can’t speak Italian so I can’t join their discussion about this. @LucioV

Cheers.


@OSAMA wrote:

Interesting and funny , I like it :grin::grin::grin::grin:

Very creative way @Badruddeen :grin::grin::grin:

And lucky @Kiko-ITA to be there :slight_smile:


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Faroe Islands it’s a very fantastic place, I strongly suggest to go there in summer, where the daylight it’s about 20 hours.

There is a special day, around 24th of June, where you can seat at the top of a designed mountain, looks the sunshine and less than half hour later start to see the first lights of the sunrise on the opposite side :slight_smile:

If there is interest by other I can try to arrange a Trusted Talk about Faroe in English too.

In the meanwhile I leave you with one of the views of the more characteristic places of the Islands the Gasadalu waterfalls :

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@Badruddeen , I remember seeing “sheep view” during last year’s Google Hardware Launch in San Francisco. It got a huge roar of laughter with mostly reporters in the roomwhen the sheep came on and the incredible angles and heights herds of sheep can get themselves into.

I “unsolution” your post as the solution since you only tagged a list of Local Guides here in the Connect Community to look at your post. I did mark Kiko’s post as the solution since he had relevant information to your post.

Finally, please cite “The Independent” as your post source at the very beginning of your post, instead of your current “original article” link at the very bottom since this post is word-for-word copy of a hardworking journalist’s time and energy spent in the Faroes Islands covering and bringing light to this story. You don’t want to be associated with copyright infringement since you are not the true author of these words.

Cheers,

Karen

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Hi @KarenVChin

Karen, proper citation added. I agree that I should have done a proper citation when I posted the article instead of simply writing “Original Article” and the link initially. @Kiko-ITA @LucioV

Thanks for the head up.

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