The Apple Maps service is infamous for its unreliability, but as it all seems to have solved a mystery that exists for several centuries. Apple maps discovered his monster Loch Ness.
- The Apple Maps service sent passengers in the middle of a landing strip
- The Australian Police issued a warning for Apple Maps
The hunters of Loch Ness's monster monster felt honored as the mythical monster appeared in an Apple satellite image for iOS Maps. Of course, the monster was not there when they tried to search for it on Google Maps, says Huffington Post.
The Loch Ness monster exists only in myths, and all the pictures that have appeared so far have been proven to be hoaxes. So there are no specifics data for the creature and it has never been found.
Yesterday, this image was presented by almost all Greek blogs and news outlets websites it showed a creature swimming underwater south of Dores, near Inverness.
Mysteriously, the image in the water appears only in some iPads and iPhones. You say Nessie was at last? Probably not, says Huffington Post..
Of course, Andy Dixon, who discovered the "monster" with his friend Peter Thain, insist that the photo depicts the legendary monster.
The Daily Mail that presented the event also has an interview from the two friends: “We were watching satellite broadcasts from different parts of the country and I thought we would try it at Loch Ness as well.
"I could see something big under the water and I pulled it with my phone. My first thought was that he was the monster and I contacted Gary Campbell of the Official Loch Ness Monster Club. ”
Update.
We're updating this article to add new revelations Huffington Post. As the by clicking here, skeptics point out that the Apple Maps image appears to depict a ship traveling, and that due to the low resolution of the photo it is indistinguishable. Mick West of Metabunk.org, a website that specializes in investigating and debunking "mysteries" of this kind, claims that the image depicts the waters being raised by a traveling boat. But he reports that the vessel is barely visible, due to the low contrast of the Apple Maps image.
For the sake of truth, Mick West has published his own edited photo on Twitter.
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