Sunday, 26 January 2014


The Art of Hiding Technology

Home electronics should integrate seamlessly into a home's design and décor. This course reviews the three-pronged approach to hiding technology-advance planning, design philosophy, and product selection-which are available for minimizing the visual impact of electronics without compromising performance. Specific challenges and recommendations related to hiding video displays, projectors, speakers, controls, cameras, and equipment racks-among others-will be addressed. This course speaks to innovative and creative ways to lessen the visual impact of electronics by making them low-profile, hidden or camouflaged, or even invisible! Attendees will also walk away with an understanding of how to properly engage a trained home technology professional in their next project.
  • Review different residential systems and technologies and determine how different installed options relate to the health, safety, and welfare of the client
  • Discuss how advance planning, design philosophy, and product selection affect the proper functionality of the installed products without compromising design integrity and aesthetics
  • Discuss methods and strategies for hiding technology in safe, convenient, and secure methods
  • Identify preferred timeline for engaging an electronic systems professional in the project
Request this course!
Continuing Education Credit Values:
Association:AIAAIBCAIBDIDCEC*NAHBNARI
Credit:1.0 LU1.0 Core LU1.0 CEU0.1 CEU1.0 Cr Hr1.0 CEU
Course Number:CIO023CIO023CIO023100966CIO023CIO023
Subject Code:N/AN/AN/A2.2N/AN/A
Designation(s):Health, Safety, and WelfareCore LUN/AGeneral KnowledgeMultipleAll
SAN FRANCISCO — A mysterious four-story barge floating near Treasure Island here has people wondering what Google is up to.
A local TV station and CNET offer two theories behind the contents of the boat, which is stacked with shipping containers.
CBS-affiliate KPIX, citing an unnamed source close to the project, says Google is constructing an Apple Store-like marketing center for Google Glass.
CNET says it might be a water-based data center, citing a patent filed by Google for such a thing in 2007.
Google had no comment.
A barge similar to the one in San Francisco is in the waters off Portland, Maine.
The search giant plans to have the barge towed to San Francisco's nearby Fort Mason, where it will be open to the public, the unnamed source told KPIX.
CNET, quoting an anonymous source identified as an independent marine engineer, says Google wants to build a backup data center in the event of a natural disaster. The barge in San Francisco would be one of a dozen data centers worldwide, the source said.

26 Places Google Doesn't Want You To See

Space Research Facility

Space Research Facility
Why is the European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC), which is part of the European Space Agency, blocked in such a dramatic way on Google Maps? It even has a visitor's center open to the public, so it's not like we aren't supposed to know it's there...

Russian Missile Site

Russian Missile Site
Not much is known about this mysterious locale, but Wikipedia says it's "possibly a Russian ICBM Complex, near town Egvekinot, Russia, officially claimed as gold-mining facility Kanchalano-Amguemskaya Square."

Baker Lake, NU, the Inuit nation in northern Canada

Baker Lake, NU, the Inuit nation in northern Canada
A man indentified as "Dr. Boylan" believes that the blacked out area seen above and those found in several other locations are blocking the locations of extraterrestrial beacons.

Ramstein Air Force Base, Germany

Ramstein Air Force Base, Germany
This NATO air force hub is a retreat for the Operation Iraqi Freedom forces, and as such could definitely be considered a terrorist target. That could explain why the facility is partially blanked out on Google Maps.

Pacific Northwest, USA

Pacific Northwest, USA
Here's one that gives us chills. What exactly are we not seeing here? The site is close to the Washington-Oregon border and is rumored to have something to do with FEMA, HAARP or, really, anything at all. Prison Planet readers inspected the site in person and could find no identifying details other than an ominous fence and unmarked entrance.

Szazhalombatta Oil Refinery, Hungary

Szazhalombatta Oil Refinery, Hungary
One of the strangest acts of alleged "censorship" is this Hungarian oil facility, which is simply rendered green. That's right — the grounds are deleted, the buildings are missing, and what you have left is flat grass.

Huis Ten Bosch Palace, Netherlands

Huis Ten Bosch Palace, Netherlands
You wouldn't think the Dutch Royal Family would be a prime target for madmen, but the Huis Ten Bosch Palace remains heavily pixilated on Google Maps no matter the angle. (The surrounding area and trees therein, on the other hand, come in crystal clear at close range.)

Unknown area, Russia

Unknown area, Russia
Another one that is so mysterious, no one has a clue what it is. One commenter on the website Siberian Light speculates it's either "a radar station or missile interceptor," while another notes that the image of the surrounding area appears to have been copy-pasted from another part of the country.

Mobil Oil Corporation, Buffalo, NY, USA

Mobil Oil Corporation, Buffalo, NY, USA
Some have criticized Mobil of Buffalo, NY for blurring their facilities, saying the oil corporation doesn't have much of a case for being a terrorist target (terrorists hate snow, you know.) On the other hand, we can't be sure what their reasoning is.

North Korea

North Korea
You've no doubt heard about this country, one of the members of the supposed "Axis of Evil," but few have ever visited. You won't see it on Google Maps, either, as the entire country exists in images but without highway markers, street names, or any other identifying details.

Reims Airbase, France

Reims Airbase, France
Why is the Reims Airbase in France blocked out? Perhaps it emits a particularly foul body odor. (Just kidding, we love the French.)

Indian Point Power Plant, New York, USA

Indian Point Power Plant, New York, USA
Everyone from Democratic Governor Mario Cuomo to former Republican Congresswoman Sue Kelly has called for the Indian Point Power Plant to be shut down. On top of environmental concerns, the upstate New York structure is, according to experts in the energy field, not strong enough to withstand an earthquake like the one that recently devastated Japan.

Volkel Airbase, Netherlands

Volkel Airbase, Netherlands
It's pretty ridiculous how blatantly blurred this one is, but then again, WikiLeaks did publish a diplomatic cable that confirmed the presence of nuclear warheads at this base.

HAARP Site, Gakona, Alaska, USA

HAARP Site, Gakona, Alaska, USA
HAARP (High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program) is one of the most controversial operations currently active in the United States. The Gakona, AK site and its ionospheric testing is believed by some conspiracy theorists to be the cause of everything from floods to earthquakes, although the evidence of this is very minimal.

Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, Salinas, CA, USA

Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca, Salinas, CA, USA
Here's the strangest bit of censorship on Google Maps: the Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca in Salinas, California. It's heavily whited out, in fact, as if an angry hand did the trick. The weirdest part is the facility is just what it sounds like: a seemingly-harmless racetrack

Babylon, Iraq

Babylon, Iraq
While the surrounding area (including its surprisingly rich farmland) is visible, the city of Babylon, Iraq itself is all blurry. You can bet it has something to do with the insurgents there...

Tantauco National Park in Chile

Tantauco National Park in Chile
Why is this refuge for Endangered Species completely washed over on Google? Mashable, which seems to have discovered the strange censorship, doesn't have a clue.

"The Hill" aka Elmira Correctional Facility

This maximum security prison in upstate New York is understandably blacked out... we guess. After the Attica Prison Riots and several incidents worldwide of uprisings and mass escapes, officials could be worried about a possible helicopter-led breakout.

This Russian Guy's House

This Russian Guy's House
What? Some rich guy's personal paradise is blurred on Google? According to Wikipedia, what you're seeing here is "a private palace of the Gazprom CEO Alexey Miller." Why is he given preference over the rest of us? Perhaps we just aren't powerful enough to convince Google to blur our own homes.

Colonel Sanders

Colonel Sanders
Here's the strangest of them all: Col. Sanders, the face of Kentucky Fried Chicken, appears in exactly zero Google Street View images. That's because, as a Google spokesperson notes, Sanders was a real person and everyone is supposed to be blurred on Google sites...

The Faroe Islands, Denmark

The Faroe Islands, Denmark
This is a rumored military installation in a country we previously thought as "harmless." Wonder what they're really planning...

Hungarian Oil Refinery

Hungarian Oil Refinery
The Sz�zhalombatta Oil refinery in Hungary... and that's all we know.

NATO Headquarters, Portugal

NATO Headquarters, Portugal
This one would be hilarious if it weren't so sinister. Whoever doctored the image of the Portuguese HQ for NATO simply copy-pasted another piece of Google Earth over the actual layout of the building. Weird.

Seabrook Nuclear facility, New Hampshire

Seabrook Nuclear facility, New Hampshire
This is believed to be the Seabrook Nuclear Power Station in the northeast corner of the United States. Are you as fearful of nuclear power as we are?

Missile silo, Spain

Missile silo, Spain
According to a researcher with WikiMedia, "On this lot there is a small building with something almost like a silo in the middle. This location is not blocked in Yahoo! Maps. There is no image for this location in Virtual Earth yet."

Atomic site, France

Atomic site, France
We're not sure what "The Marcoule site of the Commissariat � l'�nergie Atomique" means, but we're pretty sure the word "atomique" is the keyword here.