This means you will still have map coverage even if you lose mobile coverage. Google Maps automatically downloads your route when you begin. After this, you need to navigate around and press the + button whenever you want to add a stop. After this, swipe up and choose the ‘Measure Distance’ option. On a mobile, you need to press and hold on your screen. When on a desktop, right-click on any spot and then choose ‘Measure Distance.’ This will be the start point and any click after that will see a straight line drawn toward it. When going on a trail not covered by Google Maps, you can measure the distance almost instantly. Also, when you swipe up, you can get a bird’s eye view, while swiping down gives you the classic view. You can change the orientation by pressing your index finger and thumb on the screen and spinning it around. Once zoomed in, you can swipe up or down to zoom in or out. You can now zoom in by double tapping or holding your finger against the screen. This comes in handy when you have one hand on the screen. You no longer need two hands to control your Google Maps app. Once you click it, choose the ‘Last’ option and then click on ‘Set.’ Google Maps will then show you the complete list of transport options and different options on how to get there. You then need to select public transport at the top of your screen. You need to start by picking your starting point and your destination. It can be viewed on Roku, Peacock, and other streaming platforms.Google Maps has a lot of public transport information and you can now figure out when is the last time to get home using this mode of transport. It’s free on Fresno’s broadcast channel 51.4. “The Hidden Map” will air six times between Friday, April 23, and Sunday, April 25 on NBCLX. We had to be strong to survive,” she says. “Our faith and our resilience and our determination to survive despite that unspeakable horror and injustice. And for Hovannisian, the story is far from over. There is sadness in this story, as well as the discovery of treasures and the truth that historic Armenia and Armenians still exist– in this hidden map. “He is almost pained by the fact that these relics are all over historic Armenia as much as the Turkish government tries to get rid of every trace of everything Armenian,” says Hovannisian. ![]() Hovannisian has produced a documentary called “The Hidden Map.” She traveled historic Armenia with Scottish explorer Steven Sim who has been documenting these vanishing Armenian ruins for 30 years. You talk about the genocide in Turkey and you can go to prison,” Hovannisian says. ![]() “They don’t just deny the genocide, they continue it by continuing the destruction by making it illegal to talk about the genocide. That reality became a mission to trace her family’s origin, and she found the historic Armenian cities and villages that once flourished, are now rubble in a country that denies their existence. “And so the stories of my grandparents and my grandmother’s silent tears and my grandfather’s horrid screams in his nightmares– those all became part of my reality,” says Hovannisian. She remembers their painful stories from her childhood. Her grandparents were survivors of the 1915 Armenian Genocide. Journalist and Fresno native Ani Hovannisian has been drawn to those lands like a magnet. (KSEE) - It’s a story planted in Fresno, with roots that grow far deeper to the historic ancestral lands of thousands in the Valley, what’s now Eastern Turkey, but once Western Armenia.
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