- Google Maps celebrates its 20 -year’s birthday
- These are some of the most popular places and placements in its history
- Google has also shared some practical tips and tricks
Happy birthday, Google Maps: The honorable app is 20 years old, and to celebrate, Google has listed some of the most popular places on its cards, as well as sharing a lot of Google Maps tips and tricks that you may not have encountered On before.
The list of “Some of the most reviewed and most photographed places” on Google Maps in the past few decades includes restaurants, parks, monuments, museums, castles and more-hard eight BBQ in Texas to Cologne Cathedral in Germany.
Google has also shared some of the locations that are most popular in immersive views of Google Maps, where you can actually see earth -level photography around and inside places: Eiffel Tower, Golden Gate Bridge, Big Ben and Griffith Observatory are included.
At the end of Round-up there are also some fun Street View Photobombs with animals snapped by the Street View cameras. The list is worth checking fully – see how many spots you have visited and how many you could plan to see in the future.
Leave a tip
Continuing the birthday celebrations, Google has shared a list of 20 things you didn’t know you could do with Google Maps. If you already knew about any of these tips and tricks, you can consider yourself above average when it comes to technical knowledge.
A couple that caught our eye is the recently added Gemini AI integration that we previously reported and the air quality report you can find, no matter where you are traveling to – tap on the lagicon (upper right corner) to find the.
Google also mentions offline card function (press your profile picture then Offline card in the mobile app) and the lists have that allows you to bookmark destinations and share them with others – switch to You The tab in the app to find your lists.
Here is a bonus tip that Google doesn’t mention: If you use your phone with one hand, you can still zoom in and out of the card with double-tapping on it, push your finger or thumb up and down. You are welcome.



