How do you get to the TARDIS on Google Maps?

How do you get to the TARDIS on Google Maps?

How to do it:

  1. Click this link.
  2. Move your mouse around a bit. The standard Google Maps directional arrows should pop up, with one little addition: a pair of double arrows. Click those.
  3. Bam! You should now be in the TARDIS’ bigger-on-the-inside (smaller-on-the-outside) interior.

Where is the TARDIS located?

To amuse us little people, Google has created one of the single greatest internet easter eggs in the history of easter and eggs: You can now find the TARDIS on Google Maps, at a location marked as “Police Telephone Box.” (The address appears to be “Earl’s Court Rd, London, Greater London SW5 9RB, United Kingdom,” which …

What does the acronym TARDIS stand for?

Time And Relative Dimensions In Space
TARDIS, of course, stands for Time And Relative Dimensions In Space. Or Time and Relative Dimension in Space, if you’re a purist.

Why is the TARDIS a phone booth?

To keep the design within budget it was decided to make the outside resemble a police telephone box: this appearance was explained as being as a result of the mechanism, a “chameleon circuit”, that changes the outside appearance of the ship the millisecond it lands (in order to blend in with its environment) being …

Is the TARDIS still on Google Maps?

To visit the TARDIS, open Google Maps in a computer browser, make sure you’re in Street View, and then: Select Street View & 360 from above the images. It shows the TARDIS just in front of the Earl’s Court station for the London Underground.

What does TARDIS mean in school?

Time And Resource Distribution In Schools. Community » Educational. Rate it: TARDIS.

Is TARDIS real?

The Tardis actually is kind of real A time machine – much less a police-box-shaped time machine named Time And Relative Dimension In Space – seems too crazy to be believed.

How big is the Tardis?

The TARDIS has a height of 10′ (305 cm) and a width and depth of 5.04′ (153.5 cm). It is much bigger on the inside. The TARDIS is a time machine used by The Doctor, in the long-running science-fiction television show, Doctor Who. The name is an acronym, short for Time And Relative Dimension In Space.