November 15, 2024

Mobile Companies Crave Maps That Live and Breathe

As mobile phones become all-in-one tools for living, suggesting where to eat and the fastest way to the dentist’s office, the map of where we are becomes a vital piece of data. From Facebook to Foursquare, Twitter to Travelocity, the companies that seek the attention of people on the go rely heavily on location to deliver relevant information, including advertising.

Maps that are dynamic, adapting to current conditions like traffic or the time of day, are the most useful of all.

The importance of such maps to mobile services helps explain why Google is deep in negotiations to buy Waze, a social mapping service used by millions of drivers around the world, for more than $1 billion. Although a final agreement has not yet been struck, people with knowledge of the discussions say that an acquisition could be announced as soon as this week.

“Context is everything — where you are, what other people have said about where you are, how to get there, what’s interesting to do when you get there,” said Charles Golvin, a principal analyst at Forrester Research who studies mobile technology.

Google and Waze declined to comment on the possibility of an acquisition of Waze by Google.

Google, of course, is no slouch when it comes to maps. The search giant’s Maps service, painstakingly compiled by the company over many years and augmented by suggestions from tens of thousands of users, is considered the gold standard of mobile maps.

For users of smartphones that run Google’s Android software in particular, maps and directions are smoothly integrated into the address book, calendar and location-sensitive applications like Web searches and dining recommendations. Even for people with other phones, Google Maps still provides the back-end technology for many applications.

“We’re seeing maps become the canvas to everyone’s app,” said Eric Gundersen, chief executive of MapBox, which provides mapping tools to a number of popular apps like Foursquare and Evernote. “The map is alive; the map is responsive.”

But largely missing from Google’s Maps — and from those of other players in the field like Microsoft and Apple — is the social component. The map is simply presented by the company.

With Waze, the mob is the map, and like a mob, it can be churning with energy. The start-up, which has only a few employees, has generated many of its maps by tracking the movements of its nearly 50 million users via GPS. In any given month, about one-third of them are firing up the app, and as they drive, they can share information about slowdowns, speed traps and road closures, allowing Waze to update suggested routes in real time. The most dedicated fans can also edit the maps directly to improve their accuracy.

“It’s not just crowdsourcing. It’s personal participation,” said Di-Ann Eisnor, Waze’s vice president for platforms and partnerships.

That sense of contributing to the common good is part of Waze’s appeal.

“They created this culture where you can really help others,” said Bret McVey, a graphic designer in Omaha who has contributed about 280,000 changes to Waze’s maps in the year he has been using the app.

Waze rewards such passion with points and badges, and the top 500 or so map editors can get direct access to Waze employees around the clock to deal with problems, like adapting the maps of Oklahoma to show road closures after this spring’s tornadoes.

In Los Angeles, said Ms. Eisnor, about 10 percent of drivers use Waze. In places like Costa Rica and Malaysia, Waze users helped create the first useful navigable maps of the country, she said.

The communal energy of Waze’s users drew the attention of Facebook, which held discussions about acquiring Waze last month. Facebook users can already sign in to Waze with their Facebook identity and share their driving with their friends, and Waze recently added new integration of its maps into Facebook’s Events feature. After the talks ended without a deal, Waze turned its attention to Google.

For Google, analysts and industry executives said, Waze would provide two benefits.

One is that user passion. “This is less about direct revenue that Google can get and really about keeping Google customers in the Google sphere and using Google services,” Mr. Golvin said.

The other is to keep a useful map out of the hands of competitors like Apple, which has struggled with its own map service, and Facebook, which is battling Google to connect its users with their friends.

Jeff Carpenter, of Des Moines, who is a volunteer editor for both Waze and Google Maps, views the second point — keeping Waze from others — as the main reason that Google would buy its much smaller rival. “I don’t think there’s anything in Waze that Google couldn’t have done over time,” he said.

Google, which also allows users like him to contribute edits, used to take months to integrate the changes. Now the company allows some changes instantaneously, he said, and others are quickly reviewed. Mr. Carpenter said Google’s maps were also better integrated into other applications. Waze must be used independently, which makes it much harder to use.

If Google does buy Waze, however, it needs to be careful to court Waze’s dedicated users. “It’s important for them to roadmap what’s going to happen, for the community,” Mr. Carpenter said. “Without the contributors, they really have nothing.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/11/technology/mobile-companies-crave-maps-that-live-and-breathe.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Gadgetwise Blog: Apps to Track Hurricane Irene

A screenshot from the Hurricane Express app.

As Hurricane Irene makes its way up the East Coast, you may be tempted to hunker by the TV or computer with your three-day supply of batteries, water and MREs to track the storm’s progress.

But you can feel free to go out and test the tensile strength of your umbrella thanks to a number of phone and iPad apps that will keep you current on Irene’s position.

At the top of the list has to be Hurricane Express, a recently released 99-cent iPhone app specializing in – what else? – hurricane tracking.

With information from the National Hurricane Center, the app provides lots of raw data for wonky storm chasers, but also moving radar maps, maps showing the forecasted storm track, wind maps and others as well. You can also check the curated Twitter feed from weather organizations and weather pros, or check the news feed with bulletins and videos.

An upgraded version, called Hurricane, also gives historical data on past storms, which you can compare to current conditions. Usually $4, it is on sale for $2.

The one real drawback is is that the maps are a little hard to see in detail on the phone. For that reason, it may be worthwhile to try Hurricane HD for the iPad ($4), which is easier to read, includes historical data, and can also show multiple storms simultaneously.

Like Hurricane Express, iHurricane HD is dedicated to tracking storms, but unlike that app, iHurricane is free and runs on the iPhone and the iPad. The app shows the current and forecasted path of a storm on an interactive chart. Touch the line and you get details of the eye of the storm at that position, how far away it is from where you are and the speed with which it is approaching. You can also sign up for e-mail alerts to get news of bad weather in advance.

The iHurricane app also has several predictive charts and bulletins, but those can be hard to read on the phone’s small screen. This app is best seen on the iPad.

Serious weather geeks will revel in the raw radar data displayed by the $10 Radarscope app. The app shows feeds from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and lets you see the sweeps from specific radar stations. If you know how to spot a “hook echo” that indicates a mesocyclone – often the precursor to a tornado – this is the app for you. You’ll be able to read not only precipitation data, but the speed at which storms are moving. The uninitiated will at least be able to read the clearly written storm alerts, but if you don’t have a degree in meteorology, you might give this one a pass.

NOAA Radar US offers a map using the same data as Radarscope but with less detail, making it easier to read. It looks more like the moving weather maps you may be used to seeing on the TV news. But it is a pretty scant app, not even offering NOAA weather alerts. You get more news from the free app NOAA Now, but no maps.

Many weather apps are great at telling you at what is happening in your area right now (Weather HD is by far the best looking, with lush animations), but few give you much on the encroaching storm. Weather Underground’s, Weather Quickie appears to provide little more, opening to a very abbreviated look at current weather, but click on “complete forecast” and you get comprehensive predictions. You’ll see current conditions, a radar map, marine forecast and tides, forecasts and warnings that are elaborate and in plain English. You can even listen to a NOAA radio broadcast for your area.

Weather Quickie is packed with plenty of features for both the weather freak and those who just want to know if they need an umbrella to go out, but there is one annoying feature: Every time you try to go back to a former page, you are taken all of the way to the first page, so you have to tap again to get back to the detailed forecast. It’s as annoying as the frequency with which radio stations are playing “Rock You Like a Hurricane.”

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=99919f28ca2187cbb03a44f75bde7412