Police slam Apple Maps after dodgy directions strand motorists

Australian police have recommended motorists avoid using Apple Maps, after incorrect navigation data led to six people needing rescue after getting mistakenly directed to a National Park. The official iOS Maps app, which replaced Google Maps in iOS 6, locates Mildura, Victoria, over forty miles away, in the midst of the Murray Sunset National Park. “It’s quite a dangerous situation,” Victoria police inspector Simon Clemence told ABC Australia, pointing out that “if it was a 45-degree day, someone could actually die.”

Although launched with great fanfare by Apple, user-feedback to Apple Maps was critical from the start. While US data was relatively complete, mapping information outside of the US was particularly underwhelming, with out-of-date businesses still listed, locations not aligned to their actual position, and occasionally misaligned mapping tiles.

Apple has promised rapid updates, and indeed CEO Tim Cook said last week that server-side modifications had already been made to correct many of the issues. However, that hasn’t stopped several people in Australia from getting lost after over-reliance on the directions of the app.

One couple, for instance, spent five hours in the National Park after their car blew a tire. “We had the shelter of the car,” driver Victoria Wake said, “but obviously you don’t want to keep running the car and putting the air conditioner because you don’t know how long you’re going to be there.”

According to Clemence, it’s another indication that drivers are being too trusting of their technology, at the cost of common sense. “I’m sure they were getting a bit suspicious and wary by the time they realised that perhaps something was wrong, but a lot of people put too much faith in sat navs” he pointed out. ”We would be calling for people not to use the new Apple iPhone mapping system if they’re traveling from South Australia to Mildura.”

Meanwhile, Google is believed to be readying its version of Google Maps for iOS for imminent release, with leaked whispers that the software is seeing the “finishing touches” applied. However, there’s some skepticism around whether Apple will approve the rival app for inclusion in the App Store.


Police slam Apple Maps after dodgy directions strand motorists is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Microsoft Research’s CO-GPS Delivers Better GPS With Improved Battery Life

We all know that using a device that has GPS navigational capabilities would drain the battery life of said device at an incredible rate, but sometimes, that is a necessary evil, especially when you are constantly on the road and need to get around in an unfamiliar territory. The reason behind it is this – GPS eats up your battery fast because of the sheer amount of information that it has to receive before computing and processing it, resulting in your location. Majority of the standalone GPS receivers retrieve their data from the satellites orbiting the Earth directly, before it spends up to 30 seconds or so to process the information. Microsoft Research hopes to put an end to the long wait with their technique that they call, Cloud Offloaded GPS (CO-GPS).

CO-GPS will see all the relevant computing work done in the cloud, and the designed prototype known as CLEO managed to push raw GPS data to the cloud for processing, ending up with high precision location information alongside a dramatic reduction in power consumption. We are talking about three orders of magnitude less power consumed compared to what modern day smartphones use. For illustration’s sake, a pair of AA batteries will theoretically enable CLEO to sustain continuous GPS sensing ( at 1s/sample granularity) for 1.5 years (!).

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: LG’s 55-inch OLED HDTV Gets FCC Approval, Galaxy Camera with Verizon LTE support outed by Samsung product page ,

TomTom updates its Android app to make it, you know, work

TomTom updates its Android app to make it, you know, work

We’ve journeyed with the TomTom Navigator app for Android and it’s been great — except for one brake-punching problem. Version 1.0 was only compatible with phones that happened to have a display width of 480 pixels (WVGA or FWVGA), which meant that our Galaxy S IIIs, Nexus 4s and other favorite handsets all had to be left at home. That issue has now been fixed in v1.1, along with some other, less fundamental niggles. In particular, you can now download the large offline maps to microSD rather than filling up internal storage, and TomTom also says map downloads can be completed with the app running in the background — although there’s no mention of downloads being resumable. One thing that certainly hasn’t improved is the price — if you want to travel across the USA and Canada, for example, you’ll find that Navigator for Android is precisely $50 more costly than Google’s offline offering or Nokia Drive for Windows Phones.

Continue reading TomTom updates its Android app to make it, you know, work

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Source: Google Play

Vice Magazine Just Accidentally Revealed Where John McAfee Is Hiding (Updated)

Next in line at the great journalistic jungle buffet is Vice, which sent down two dudes to chat with paranoid/fugitive John McAfee and reprint his various insane thoughts. And more: they forgot to clear GPS data in an uploaded photo. More »

Suunto Ambit update lets athletes build their own GPS watch apps

Suunto Ambit update lets GPS watch athletes build their own sports apps

Extending watches with apps is one thing if you’re building for a smartphone companion with a traditional, developer-centric app model. It’s quite another when it’s a GPS watch, and athletes are building their own apps — yet that’s what Suunto has managed with a 2.0 firmware update to its Ambit outdoor watch. The revamp uses a simple web interface to let us build free sports apps based on criteria as simple as distance and speed through to more specific measurements like heart rate and pressure. Adding predictive routines and arbitrary values allows for situation-specific code we might not get elsewhere, whether it’s estimating the finish time of a marathon or guessing just how much post-run beer is possible before the guilt sets in. On top of the new software platform, the 2.0 update brings a handful of major extensions from Suunto itself, including support for ANT+ and Foot POD sensors as well as an interval timer. The apps and upgrades help justify a relatively steep $500 price for the Ambit by turning it into a Swiss Army Knife for the wrist; when features are dictated more by imagination than a developer’s whims, they might just save the cost of an early hardware replacement.

Continue reading Suunto Ambit update lets athletes build their own GPS watch apps

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Source: Suunto (PDF), Movescount

Dad Builds Quadcopter to Walk His Son to the Bus Stop

Some of you will think this guy is the best dad ever, while others will think he is lazy. Personally I think he’s pretty awesome. Paul Wallich has entrusted a quadcopter to walk his son to the bus stop.
Guy Builds Quadcopter to Walk His Kid to the Bus Stop
The quadcopter was keyed in to track a GPS beacon in his son’s backpack. This is high-tech parenting at its best. This flying drone can follow his child from a set distance and make sure the kid stays safe and out of trouble, while pop watches the remote video camera from the comfort of his computer screen.

Getting this device to follow his kid was the tricky part. An RFID solution would have required a bulkier antenna than the craft could really carry. So he used a navigation program that keeps the copter a set distance away from the GPS beacon it is following. This kid is hopefully pretty popular right now thanks to his dad’s inventiveness.

Now he just needs to rig it to fire projectiles at any bullies his son encounters on the way to school.

[via iEEE Spectrum via Geekosystem]


Google Maps Navigation now available in Mexico

Android Police noted on Wednesday that Mexico had appeared on the list of countries with Google Maps Navigation support. Soon after, Google announced via @GoogleMexico on Twitter that Maps Navigation is now available for Android in Mexico. Users can grab the beta app via the Google Play Store.

Mexico is one of many countries that have been added to the service in the recent past, joining the likes of France, Germany, Denmark, Hong Kong, and dozens of other locations. The app is currently in beta, something it will remind you of frequently when you go to use it. As many users can attest to, however, it works exceptionally well.

Navigation can be launched by tapping the blue triangle icon, at which point one will be presented with a few different options, including viewing starred locations and adding directions. Directions can be either typed or spoken, something more convenient for those times you need last minute help while behind the driver’s wheel.

The app can be toggled between driving and walking, allowing users to utilize it in a variety of situations. Certain requirements can be specified when getting directions, such as only routes that avoid toll roads or highways. Navigation can also be used to view a map with one’s present location, which is tracked with a blue dot as the user moves around.

[via Android Community]


Google Maps Navigation now available in Mexico is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google Maps Navigation for Android comes to Mexico

Google Maps Navigation comes to Mexico

For the past few months, Mexico has been sitting in limbo as far as Google’s mapping services were concerned: you could see Mayan ruins in Street View, but you couldn’t get directions to them from your phone. Google has redressed that balance now that Google Maps Navigation is reaching the country. Anyone with an updated version of Google Maps on Android can get turn-by-turn directions, traffic and nearby points of interest as they cruise towards Veracruz. Mass transit navigation appears to be the lone (if glaring) omission for Mexican use. While we’d like all mapping options to be available, it’s good to know that drivers can more smoothly cross the vast expanses of Mexico City.

[Thanks, Luis]

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Via: CNN Expansión (translated)

Source: Google Mexico (Twitter)

Google Maps comes to Nunavut, lets you Street View your way to an Arctic Char fishing hole

Google Maps comes to Nunavut, lets you Street View your way to an Arctic Char fishing hole

Think it’s cold in Chicago? You’ve probably never wintered in Nunavut, Canada’s northernmost territory. This past August (long before the temperature in Cambridge Bay hit negative double digits), Google explorers ventured above the Arctic circle to bring the mapping giant’s Street View tech to the village of 1,500, complete with a walk down Omingmak Street and a peek around the Youth Recreation Complex (which, fittingly, houses an ice hockey rink). You can even stroll past Our Lady of the Arctic Catholic Church or toss a few darts at Ikaluktutiak Elks Lodge No. 593. So, what are you still doing hanging around here? Hit up our source link below to grab your lil’ slice of ice before the thermometer hits 0 this spring.

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Via: TechCrunch

Source: Google Maps, Google Blog

TomTom updates for iPhone 5 and iOS 6 (but loses Google Local Search)

TomTom has updated its iOS app to play nicely with iOS 6 and the iPhone 5, though the company has stripped ill-fated Google functionality out at the same time. The new version of the app, v1.12, works hand in hand with Apple’s own Maps app, showing up as a routing option in the iOS 6 software, but removes the Google Local Search feature as Google itself has discontinued it.

“Due to the discontinuation of the Google Local Search service, TomTom has decided to remove the feature” the company said of the update. “You can still search for locations using TomTom Places. Alternatively you can search Google in your browser and use the Copied Address feature to plan routes to these locations.”

TomTom Places is the company’s own driving-centric database of search results, bringing up POIs including gas stations, markets, restaurants, and more. It’s included in the app, along with live traffic updates and lifetime map updates.

The app is priced at $59.99 for the US and Canada version [iTunes link], while the UK and Ireland version is £39.99. TomTom recommends using iTunes to install the update, as there’s the possibility that you could lose your settings and saved locations otherwise.


TomTom updates for iPhone 5 and iOS 6 (but loses Google Local Search) is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.