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587 points by Kortaggio 4 months ago · 125 comments · 1 min read

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https://pudding.cool/2025/07/street-view/

KortaggioOP 4 months ago

This write-up about the site is also fascinating: https://pudding.cool/2025/07/street-view/

deanc 4 months ago

This would be an interesting additional layer for google maps search which I often find to be lacking. For example, I was recently travelling in Gran Canaria and looking for places selling artesan coffee in the south (spoiler: only one in a hotel which took me almost half an hour to even find). Searching for things like "pourover" and "v60" is usually my go-to signal but unless the cafe mentions this in their description or its mentioned in reviews it's hard to find. I don't think they even index the text on the photos customers take (which will often include the coffee menu behind the cashier).

  • robertlagrant 4 months ago

    Seems like searching for V60 would get you a lot of Volvos! Is anyone photographing these words in coffee shops that would let them be surfaced here?

    • deanc 4 months ago

      Yeah, that can be somewhat of a problem in bigger cities ;-) It's pretty common for people to have taken a photo of the menu in cafes but as mentioned it seems google isn't ingesting or surfacing that information for text search.

  • mockingloris 4 months ago

    It could be. If they didn't think about it, now they can.

    Could easily seeing myself come back to this.

    └── Dey well; Be well

m_kos 4 months ago

GitHub of the person who prepared the data. I am curious how much compute was needed for NY. I would love to do it for my metro but I suspect it is way beyond my budget.

https://github.com/yz3440

(The commenters below are right. It is the Maps API, not compute, that I should worry about. Using the free tier, it would have taken the author years to download all tiles. I wish I had their budget!)

  • LeifCarrotson 4 months ago

    I would wager the compute for the OCR is cheap. Just get a beefy local desktop PC, if it runs overnight or even takes a week that's fine.

    It's the Google Maps API costs that will sink your project if you can't get them waived as art:

    https://mapsplatform.google.com/pricing/

    Not sure how many panoramas there are in New York or your metro, but if it's over the free tier you're talking thousands of dollars.

  • daemonologist 4 months ago

    The linked article mentions that they ingested 8 million panos - even if they're scraping the dynamic viewer that's $30k just in street view API fees (the static image API would probably be at least double that due to the low per-call resolution).

    OCR I'd expect to be comparatively cheap, if you weren't in a hurry - a consumer GPU running PaddlePaddle server can do about 4 MP per second. If you spent a few grand on hardware that might work out to 3-6 months of processing, depending on the resolution per pano and size of your model.

    • swores 4 months ago

      Their write up (linked at top of page below main link, and in a comment) says:

      > "media artist Yufeng Zhao fed millions of publicly-available panoramas from Google Street View into a computer program that transcribes text within the images (anyone can access these Street View images; you don’t even need a Google account!)."

      Maybe they used multiple IPs / devices and didn't want to mention doing something technically naughty to get around Google's free limits, or maybe they somehow didn't hit a limit doing it as a single user? Either way, it doesn't sound like they had to pay if they only mention not needing an account.

      (Or maybe they just thought people didn't need to know that they had to pay, and that readers would just want the free access to look up a few images, rather than a whole city's worth?)

      • Antrikshy 4 months ago

        Any possibility this is user-submitted panoramas, and maybe they don't charge for those?

  • ks2048 4 months ago

    It says 8 million images. So, 13.2 images/second for one week.

    I'm wondering about more the data - did they use Google's API or work with Google to use the data?

  • puppymaster 4 months ago

    i just hashout out the details with claude. apparently it would cost me ~8k USD to retrieve all Taipei street images from gmap api with 3m density. Expensive, but not impossible.

ge96 4 months ago

Tangent, there are these videos on YT of people walking through cities, the ones I like in particular are through Tokyo/Japan. I was thinking it would be cool to build a 3D map from that, it is possible but not my field. I think some companies have done it too. But there is a lot of data on that. Maybe free robot training (walking through a crowd like delivery).

I believe it's a combo of SLAM/photogrammery/VIO but you don't have an IMU so that part would have to be estimated from the video. Maybe the flickering of the lights with the frames probably too fast.

ex. https://youtu.be/ohlzQNCpT7M?si=zH764fDlHqPKyjin&t=537 ex. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZi2GeEGdvM

  • at-fates-hands 4 months ago

    There was a guy a long time ago, who did YT videos of the tech markets in Tokyo and it was really surprising some of the best places to get parts for smartphones or robots were completely non-descript buildings in the heart of the city. He specifically went to places that most people wouldn't know about unless you really had great local information.

    If someone were to do what you're saying, it would be a huge win for people visiting and being able to find these places. I would love to see this.

    • ge96 4 months ago

      You reminded me of Strange Parts who was in China, able to pick up random stuff like an iPhone motherboard from a lady selling it on the street.

    • quinncom 4 months ago

      Do you think those videos of tech markets in Tokyo are still online? I would enjoy seeing them.

  • pimlottc 4 months ago

    Similarly it would be great to have a tool to do it with stills, like reconstruct a floor plan based on real estate photos. Even if it were partially manually, it would be pretty handy.

    • ge96 4 months ago

      Matterport seems to do this at least offering you a 3D tour of say an apt complex

      edit: although this is not what you're describing, this is literally using a 360 camera

      Apple's Room Plan is pretty legit measuring walls/objects in a room but also requires being in the room/moving it around

baby 4 months ago

Interesting how they censor the word "fuck" like it's going to affect your brain if you read it fully spelled or something

dang 4 months ago

Related. Others?

All Text in NYC - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42367029 - Dec 2024 (4 comments)

All text in Brooklyn - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41344245 - Aug 2024 (50 comments)

jjwiseman 4 months ago

This is a super cool project. But it would be 10x cooler if they had generated CLIP or some other embeddings for the images, so you could search for text but also do semantic vector search like "people fighting", "cats and dogs, "red tesla", "clown", "child playing with dog", etc.

wilson090 4 months ago

This would probably make John Wilson's job a lot easier (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_To_with_John_Wilson)

rocauc 4 months ago

Reminds me of NY Cerebro, semantic search across New York City's hundreds of public street cameras: https://nycerebro.vercel.app/ (e.g. search for "scaffolding")

  • harikb 4 months ago

    What is surprising to me is how low res the public street camera are. Combine that with the glare of car headlights ... :(

  • silverpiranha 4 months ago

    Ah yeah, this was the winning project at an NVIDIA and Vercel hackathon awhile back

jjwiseman 4 months ago

The creator gave a talk that has more details on how it was done: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfODe92DzLU

IIRC he found a way to download streetview images without paying, and used the OCR built-in to macOS (which is really good).

jacobajit 4 months ago

I feel like street-view data is surprisingly underused for geospatial intelligence.

With current-gen multimodal LLMs, you could very easily query and plot things like "broken windows," "houses with front-yard fences," "double-parked cars," "faded lane markers," etc. that are difficult to generally derive from other sources.

For any reasonably-sized area, I'd guess the largest bottleneck is actually the Maps API cost vs the LLM inference. And ideally we'd have better GIS products for doing this sort of analysis smoothly.

  • bongard 4 months ago

    Yes. I work at a company that is using street view to identify high-rise apartments with dangerous cladding for the UK gov. Also could use it for grouping nearby properties which were clearly built together and share features. Helps spread known information about buildings. You can also get the models to predict age and sometimes even things like double-glazing.

    • dfworks 4 months ago

      I made this - https://london publicinsights.uk as well as operate a public records aggregator that has indexed, amongst other things, planning applications. I wonder if it could be of use?

r24y 4 months ago

Searching "Fool" gives a lot of OCR errors, some of which are due to occlusions: https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=fool&p=3

"Surgery of the Fool" is my personal favorite.

pxeger1 4 months ago

This must be great for OSINT. I wonder if intelligence agencies already have something like this for the whole world.

WorldPeas 4 months ago

hah, it can find all the KEST GAK stickers now: https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=kest

fifilura 4 months ago

First search for SAMO!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SAMO

But difficult to figure out if any of them are original.

I liked this one, but it is most likely newer. It is on top of the City-as-school building where Basquiat attended, so it is probably a tribute.

https://www.alltext.nyc/panorama/DZz7Gp1PtROe78ailUpvlA?o=11...

  • jdee 4 months ago

    The first search I did was IRAK, the second, FAILE. Ghosts of graf.

artur_makly 4 months ago

this is why i love HN.. dang it even found my childhood bagels store in Queens! https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=bagels+jackson+heights <heart>

ninju 4 months ago

There's a lot of PIZZA in New York City!

  • andsoitis 4 months ago

    > There's a lot of PIZZA in New York City!

    New York is consistently rated alongside Naples as having the best pizza in the world.

IAmGraydon 4 months ago

As others have mentioned, the idea is so cool, but the text recognition is abysmal.

OG_BME 4 months ago

Is there an API? I'd love to make a music video like the one in https://pudding.cool/2025/07/street-view/

daemonologist 4 months ago

This is exceedingly fun.

A game: find an English word with the fewest hits. (It must have at least one hit that is not an OCR error, but such errors do still count towards your score. Only spend a couple of minutes.) My best is "scintillating" : 3.

telcal 4 months ago

The first text I thought to search was "as old as hills". https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=as+old+as+hills

As seen on the sign of a liquor store near where I used to live. More info revealed https://lostnewyorkcity.blogspot.com/2014/03/the-mystery-of-...

dmje 4 months ago

“Sex” -> https://www.alltext.nyc/panorama/-FQLvskTncufoBXtcfi0aA?o=66...

NtG_UK 4 months ago

Finally, this guy’s OCR-friendly long game pays off! https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=BNE

  • vincnetas 4 months ago

    what's BNE?

    • k1t 4 months ago

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/BNE_(artist)

      BNE is an anonymous graffiti artist known for stickers that read "BNE" or "BNE was here". The artist has left their mark in countries throughout the world, including the United States, Canada, Asia, Romania, Australia, Europe, and South America. "His accent and knowledge of local artists suggest he is from New York."

amadeuspagel 4 months ago

All the dotcoms in NYC: https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=.com&sm=e

ragazzina 4 months ago

The next step should be to create a Street-View-style website for navigating around New York City, where only the text is visible and everything else is left blank/white.

anonu 4 months ago

Surprisingly, sushi is huge in Manhattan and not so much in the outer boroughs. My relative assessment from looking at the heatmap: https://www.alltext.nyc/map?q=sushi&m_lat=40.7313&m_lon=-73....

Also - a huge difference between UES and UWS, with more sushi spots on UES. Maybe its denser?

lIl-IIIl 4 months ago

OCR mistakes can be hilarious. This was read as "STAR FUCKS COFFEE":

https://www.google.com/maps/@40.785843,-73.95097,3a,20y,56.6...

rehanahmed 4 months ago

I searched for "Google" expecting no results and I ended up with a heatmap of every streetview pic ever.

https://www.alltext.nyc/map?q=google&sm=e&m_lat=40.7532&m_lo...

msephton 4 months ago

Found the classic EE UNSH (Embee Sunshade Co) which used to be EM EE UNSH (at least in a photo of mine taken 18 years ago) https://www.alltext.nyc/panorama/SSQGgn90zcClm6MdOlDOsA?o=31...

lildvlpr 4 months ago

I immediately looked up "Blob Dylan"

vincnetas 4 months ago

My explorations "obey", "injured?", "fuck trump", "fuck obama"

  • komali2 4 months ago

    I was trying for various graffiti slogans, turns out the anarchy "(A)" is basically the most difficult thing in the world to search for lol, other political ideologies much easier to find. It did amusingly lead me to search for just "anarchy" which led to 4 pages of bus ads for a show by the "Sons of Anarchy" guy.

    EDIT: Lol, "communism" leads to 39 pages of Shen Yun billboards.

theodric 4 months ago

Cool concept, but the accuracy seems quite low. The hits for "pedo" are pretty hilarious, though! https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=pedo&p=2

djha-skin 4 months ago

The word search for "fart" shows the tool's limits. No entry I saw actually said the word fart, but was listed as doing so -- "fart nawor" (hearts around the world irl), the penny farting (the penny farthing irl), etc.

  • nedt 4 months ago

    Under the search button there is a drop down. Enable "exact match" and filter low ocr confidence. Still has many false positives, but you'll also see the "fart king".

IIAOPSW 4 months ago

Surprisingly I can't seem to find any doors with notices from the sheriffs department or building department embarrassingly plastered on them. Am I misremembering how these are phrased verbatim or are certain things censored?

anonu 4 months ago

Awesome project.

My only suggestion would be to remove duplicates. Many of the items are just the same thing from different angles. Of course, this is a tough technical challenge to solve that most likely cannot rely on location alone.

stevenking86 4 months ago

Easy to find a favorite graffiti artist of mine this way: https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=Hektad

tills13 4 months ago

I _love_ this but it's pretty bad. I searched for "Morgue" and one of the matches was the "2025 Google" watermark which it thought was "Big Morgue"

Again, a complex problem and I love it...

ivanjermakov 4 months ago

This would tremendously help in making of a "Lavish" music video: https://youtu.be/flYgpeWsC2E

artur_makly 4 months ago

37,975 bagels in nyc! *w/ some dupes https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=bagels

da-x 4 months ago

I'm not sure it's working well.

https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=linux

don_searchcraft 4 months ago

There are definitely some mistakes with the OCR, seeing quite a few instances of OPEN being mistranslated as OBEY

henkytanky 4 months ago

I searched "norse" , but it didn't give me any good result at all, lots of hallucinations when you check the sources it found.

rkagerer 4 months ago

Some entertaining misreads:

https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=Sex

zniturah 4 months ago

Reporting a bug : 4123262 matches for Google.

ya1sec 4 months ago

amazing. look up some graffiti writers you know

dumbfounder 4 months ago

Search for “fart” if you want a good laugh.

egypturnash 4 months ago

I typed in "fart" and none of the results on the first page were actually the word "fart".

cobbzilla 4 months ago

Searching for “foo” is humorous, it’s mostly restaurants with signs that say “food” but the “d” is cropped.

ivape 4 months ago

I’d love to see a mash up of this and the historical street view archive from the city archives.

shibeprime 4 months ago

520 matches on "hotdog" 8084 matches on "massage" in no particular order

IncRnd 4 months ago

This is pretty cool! I'm curious what was used for OCR? Amazon Mechanical Burp?

querist9 4 months ago

I like it. I am hoping there is a similar one for Austin, TX

dioxis 4 months ago

The N word yielded interesting results.

hbarka 4 months ago

“Andrew Yang” “Mamdani” “Eric Adams”

  • komali2 4 months ago

    Mamdani is just one dude's gynecology clinic. I wonder when the data was pulled?

    edit: I found mentions of Gaza bombings and there's cars with like #gaza on it so my guess is sometime in the last 2 years.

    I could of course look it up but this is a game now for me, like when I found a hella old atlas in a library and tried to figure out the date it was published just by looking at the maps.

4782294782 4 months ago

Hope he gets to enjoy the freedom of soccer balls hitting the wall outside his flat 16/7.

moritzwarhier 4 months ago

I could spend hours sending nonsensical queries to this site (but probably shouldn't).

Enviable idea.

https://www.alltext.nyc/search?q=this+is+not

brentm 4 months ago

Pretty cool

zxh 4 months ago

When you search 'google'... you'll see... lol

domo__knows 4 months ago

PERU ANA

tomglynch 4 months ago

"$1 Pizza"

8bitsrule 4 months ago

Gosh! Maybe one of these days someone will take time off from this cultural wonderment to construct a simple, easy to use, text-to-audio.file program - you know, install, paste in some text, convert, start-up a player - so that the blind can listen to texts that aren't recorded in audiobooks. Without a CS degree.

  • repeekad 4 months ago

    I think the issue is the compute power needed for good voice models is far from free just in hardware and electricity, so any good text to audio solution likely needs to cost some money. Wiring up Google vertex AI text to speech or the aws equivalent is probably something chat gpt could walk most people through even without a CS degree, a simple python script you could authenticate from a terminal command, and would maybe cost a couple bucks for personal usage

    A service you can pay for of that simplicity probably doesn’t exist because there are other tools that integrate better with how the blind interact with computers, I doubt it’s copy and pasting text, and those tools are likely more robust albeit expensive

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