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posted by cmn32480 on Wednesday August 19 2015, @02:35AM   Printer-friendly
from the does-it-account-for-the-weather dept.

Wired has an article on Google's new Project Sunroof, a utility to tell a homeowner how much they will save with solar power.

If you're considering solar power but aren't quite sure it's worth the expense, Google wants to point you in the right direction. Tapping its trove of satellite imagery and the latest in artificial intelligence, the company is offering a new online service that will instantly estimate how much you'll save with a roof full of solar panels.

On Monday, the company unveiled Project Sunroof, a tool that calculates your home's solar power potential using the same high-resolution aerial photos Google Earth uses to map the planet. After creating a 3-D model of your roof, the service estimates how much sun will hit those solar panels during the year and how much money the panels could save you over the next two decades. "People search Google all the time to learn about solar," says Google's Joel Conkling. "But it would be much more helpful if they could learn whether their particular roof is a good fit."

The service is now available for homes in the San Francisco Bay Area, central California, and the greater Boston area. Google is headquartered in California, you see, and project creator Carl Elkin lives in Boston. Based in the company's Cambridge offices, Elkin typically works on Google's search engine, but he developed Project Sunroof during his "20 percent time"—that slice of the work week Googlers can use for independent projects.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 19 2015, @04:50AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 19 2015, @04:50AM (#224803)

    > than there was 10 or 20 years ago, but there is now the trade off that many utilities won't let you connect or won't do net-metering.

    What are you smoking?

    10-20 years ago net-metering didn't even exist for 99% of the market. Today, at least 43 states have net-metering. [seia.org]

    And the number of utilities that flat out won't let you connect for a grid-tie system? Zero.