Friday, November 2, 2012

Search Answer: What Beach Am I On?

Daniel Russell?knows how to find the answers to questions you can?t get to with a simple Google query. In his weekly Search Research column, Russell issues a search challenge, then follows up later in the week with his solution?using whatever search technology and methodology fits the bill. This week?s challenge: What beach is he on??

First off, I have to say I was impressed at the number of people who just recognized the scene. I hadn?t expected that so many people would look at the picture and say, ?Oh yeah, that?s the beach at Copacabana?I recognize the mountain on the left and the pattern on the sidewalk.?

And yes, the mountain on the far left is a dead giveaway (it?s Sugarloaf), but only if you?ve seen it before. But I?m getting ahead of myself.?

Looking through the comments, it?s clear that most solutions came in two ways.?

The most common solution was that the searcher immediately recognized my hint ?Nearby there?s a very famous statue that?s clad with an exterior of steatite that?s placed in a very, very prominent location? was a reference to the famous ?Christ the Redeemer? (or Cristo Redentor, in Portugese). The statue is prominently placed atop Corcovado (a local mountain top that?s a truly impressive location).?

Most people had to look up what steatite was with a quick?

[ define steatite ]

and recognize it as soapstone.? If you get this part, the rest is easy.? A query like:

[ statue covered in soapstone ]

leads directly to the?Cristo Redentor?statue in Rio, perched on Corcovado. ?

In my case, I went to Google Earth, found the statue, and looked to see what direction the right hand is pointing. As you can see in Google Earth, it?s almost exactly due east.? Draw a line, and it hits the beach at Ipanema. ?

BUT! If you then check the picture of the Mystery Beach against a Streetview of the beach at Ipanema, you?ll quickly find that this really isn?t it, and it has to be the next beach to the east. (Why?? Because the beach at Ipanema faces due south. You can?t see any mountains from Ipanema?you can spot islands, but not mountains on the mainland. In particular, you can?t see that big Sugarloaf mountain.) Thus, it has to be Copacabana, which is also more-or-less in the direction that the statue is pointing. ?

2. The other main solution path?was to notice the pattern of waves in the sidewalk and then do a search for:

[ wavy pattern sidewalk beach ] ?

This search leads to both Ipanema and Copacabana as possible answers.? (Which surprised the heck out of me!? I didn?t even think about this as a possible solution path.) Interestingly, if you leave the term ?beach? out of the query, the results aren?t nearly as good. Again, as with solution 1, if you check the Streetview, you?ll note that the beach at Ipanema has a hexagonal pattern in the sidewalk. Copacabana has a cool wave pattern.?

So, the rightest answer is?Copacabana.? But if you thought it was Ipanema (a beach equally famous in song and story, listen to ?Garota de Ipanema??aka??The Girl from Ipanema?), I?ll count your answer correct as well.

After all, when I was digging through my files to find this picture, it was labeled ?Ipanema-2010.jpg??so I had it wrong as well!?

Search lesson #1:? Picking up on ALL of the cues in the photo (wavy lines in the sidewalk, the appearance of the mountains on the horizon) is a great way to verify that your guess is correct. Streetview to the rescue here?we can nearly match the photo with a Streetview image. It?s important to notice that the sidewalk is very different at Ipanema. See the streetview shot of the beach at Ipanema below. ?

Search lesson #2:? As reader?Drop the Gloves!?pointed out, you can right-click on a Google Map to bring up the??What?s here??menu option. That?s how he found out that the location was Ipanema. This is a great tool to know when you?re looking at a map and can?t quite figure out what?s going on. It doesn?t work everywhere (we don?t know the name of every possible feature on the planet), but it works often enough (and nearly always in cities) to be really useful.?

To everyone who picked up on the wave vs. hexagonal pattern difference in the sidewalks?excellent job! You?re all super-searchers in my book! I hadn?t thought of that as a possible solution path. Nicely done. ?

Answer: What beach am I on??| Search ReSearch

Daniel M. Russell studies the way people search and research?an anthropologist of search, if you will. You can read more from Russell on his SearchReSearch blog, and stay tuned for his weekly challenges (and answers) here on Lifehacker.

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/ljl1typPj30/34777699109

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