Skip to main content

Google Maps adds a nifty new feature to Immersive View

Google Maps has boosted its Immersive View feature with a new element that lets you explore a planned route in a whole new way.

Announced on Wednesday at its annual I/O event that also introduced a bunch of cool new devices, Immersive View for routes lets you see every segment of your trip before you set off, whether you’re driving, walking, or cycling.

Recommended Videos

The feature builds on the core Immersive View tool, which Google announced at last year’s I/O event. Immersive View was built by using computer vision and AI technology to fuse together billions of Street View and aerial images for a digital model of the world that you can explore in great detail.

Immersive View for routes expands on this by allowing you to visualize a planned route and also preview useful information about your upcoming journey.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai described the feature as an “entirely new way” of viewing a journey while demonstrating the feature during his keynote on Wednesday:

Google Keynote (Google I/O ‘23)

As the video shows, the Immersive View for routes offers a smooth, multidimensional experience that lets you check out bike lanes, sidewalks, intersections, and parking before you set off.

Google Maps’ Miriam Daniel explains in a blog post that it also includes a time slider to let you find out more about the air quality through the day, and how the route will likely look according to the weather forecast, so you can be properly prepared for your journey.

Daniel adds that the Immersive View for routes also uses gathered traffic data to simulate how many cars might be on the road at any given time, “because a route during a quiet afternoon can look very different during rush hour.”

The feature looks like another great addition to Google Maps, which has been on a monumental journey of its own since the first version of the tool landed 18 years ago.

Immersive View for routes will be rolled out “in the coming months” for Amsterdam, Berlin, Dublin, Florence, Las Vegas, London, Los Angeles, New York, Miami, Paris, Seattle, San Francisco, San Jose, Tokyo, and Venice, with more cities expected later.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Your Google Assistant just lost a bunch of features ahead of the move to Gemini
Google Assistant messaging shortcut

We've only just learned that Google Assistant is being replaced with Gemini, and now, it turns out that some features are being quietly retired as a result. Some will be available as part of Gemini, but devices that don't yet have access to Google's latest AI companion may not have an immediate replacement. Here's what's going away.

As spotted by 9to5Google, Google Assistant will lose a total of seven features, and this will affect Android, Nest Hub, and Nest speakers users.

Read more
Google Gemini set to close gap on ChatGPT with rumored new feature
Gemini Live App on the Galaxy S25 Ultra broadcast to a TV showing the Gemini app displaying the transcribe of a conversation and the steps taken

The Gemini app offers a whole bunch of useful things, but it's lacking one thing: Video analysis based on uploads from your PC or phone. That might be about to change, though, as looking into the APK code reveals that Google is working on a video upload feature. This could soon help Gemini analyze and summarize videos uploaded directly by users; it'd also help it rival ChatGPT, which already offers such a feature.

Android Authority went on a deep dive into the APK source code of the Google app beta and came up with some interesting findings. Given that this was found in the official Google app, there's a good chance it'll eventually make it into Gemini, but just to be extra safe, read the following with a little bit of skepticism.

Read more
Google removed a useful but little-known Play Store feature
Person holding Samsung Galaxy smartphone showing Google Play Store.

The most recent update to the Google Play Store app has quietly removed a useful app-sharing feature that you probably didn't know existed. The feature first came onto the scene in 2021 and allowed Android users to use the "Quick Share" option to send apps to others.

With the latest Play Store update (version 45.2.19-31), the feature is officially kaput. If you never used it or knew about it, don't feel bad. App-sharing wasn't widely advertised, and even users who did know rarely used it.

Read more