Google Sightseeing takes you on tour of the world as seen from satellite, using the free Google Earth program, or Google Maps in your web browser. Each weekday your guides James and Alex present new weird and wonderful sights as suggested by readers.
Giant writing in Mexico: “PROMESAS“. Using my excellent Spanish skills I translated this to “Promises”, although who’s promising who what I can’t tell you.
The letters seem to be in the area to the northeast of Mexico City. Perhaps a bitter commentary on the lengthy string of promises broken by politicians over the years.
the place hava a television network which was stolen by an other important network. they have legal problems for years and the goverment don’t make anything. One network is “Canal 40″ and the other is TV Azteca.
“Fred, can you email me a screenshot so I can fix this? james @ this domain will work. Thanks! ” James Turnbull
“I can’t get it to come up at all in a new Firefox tab, just the text frame and a blank picture panel. ” Fred
“Hi John, Apologies for the ad: we’re currently redesigning the whole site for launch next month and will considering moving/removing this...” James Turnbull
“This is a great article, but when I go to the article online, there is a “Ads by Google” blue box covering up the scale and a chunk of the map...” John H
does anybody know where´s that?
The letters seem to be in the area to the northeast of Mexico City. Perhaps a bitter commentary on the lengthy string of promises broken by politicians over the years.
Given that only an outline is visible, they might even be empty promises, although I don’t know if the expression translates into Spanish.
the place hava a television network which was stolen by an other important network. they have legal problems for years and the goverment don’t make anything. One network is “Canal 40″ and the other is TV Azteca.
If Rick’s comment is true this letter is in the chquihuite Hill near of Mexico City