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Mapping

Google optimizes Earth for Android tablets

Google has updated its version of Google Earth for Android to take advantage of the large screen size and processing power of tablets.

In a blog post yesterday, product manager Peter Birch said the update added support for fully textured 3D buildings, as well as a new action bar making it easier to search the imagery and navigate layers of information. Google Earth started life as the company's virtual globe, but now incorporates street-level imagery and even extends out to space.

"Moving from a mobile phone to a tablet was like going from a regular movie theatre to … Read more

Gigwalk launches spot job marketplace for people just walking around

There's an untapped army of workers walking around out there, and an unharvested sea of jobs for them. That's Gigwalk CEO Ariel Seidman's belief, as his company launches its open marketplace for real-world on-the-spot jobs and tasks.

The idea is this: If you need something simple done at your store or other physical location, as long as it's something almost anyone can do, you can put a job up on Gigwalk for people to grab. Example jobs include: Verifying (with a photo) the placement of a traffic sign, or evaluating the quality of service at a retailer. Jobs like that are currently in the system here in San Francisco.

Some of the jobs I saw in the preview did seem like thinly veiled guerrilla marketing efforts (watch a video on your laptop at a given coffee shop, for example). Seidman told me Gigwalk reserves the right to remove jobs it doesn't feel are appropriate.

I have yet to see what I would consider jobs of physical labor appear on Gigwalk, like "Help me load this huge dresser into my van," but there's no reason these kinds of gigs couldn't appear here as well. See also: TaskRabbit and Zaarly. Seidman says Gigwalk's primary competitor, at the moment, is Craigslist, although Gigwalk is obviously more focused and structured.

Gigwalk is primarily designed to be a marketplace for much smaller gigs, for people who might want to make a few bucks when they're out and about. Seidman says in early testing, Apple Store employees on their way to work were enthusiastic users of the service. It also seems like a nice way for people with nothing to do to make some extra money--as long as they already have enough money to have a smartphone with a data plan.

There are various checks and levels in the service. You can't accept a job unless your phone geolocates you at the right spot. All job results get evaluated by the people who requested them, and users earn "street cred" for jobs well done; some jobs can't be accepted unless you are above a certain street cred level.

In addition to limiting jobs to users with cred, posters can also request only Android or iPhone users, for example. You can't limit jobs to people by gender (which you might want to do if a job is to try on a particular item of clothing at a retailer) or other demographic, but you can ask for certain criteria in a gig posting.

It's obvious how Gigwalk makes money: It takes a cut. The minimum fee for a single job is $3. Gigwalk takes money from its posters in advance, which makes for nice, front-loaded accounting. The company launched a closed precusror to this open service a while ago, as a way for mapping customers like TomTom to assign map verification tasks out to consumers.

The service is opening up today. I have high hopes for it. It's clever, the app is well-designed, and I believe it may actually be able to tap into the genuine need that marketers and other people have to collect information from real people in the the real world. And of course it gives those people a simple way to make a little extra money. It brings Web efficiency to the real world. … Read more

Google: Map your own neighborhood

Google Map Maker, the crowdsourced mapping Web app launched in 2008 and available in 183 countries, is finally coming to the United States. It's an important addition to Google's mapping services here and could make for maps that are vastly more detailed and useful than they are currently.

In some countries (like Romania, Tech Lead Lalitesh Katragadda told me) Map Maker users have been responsible for creating whole maps from nothing. Here in the U.S., the editing features will allow the addition of more commercial data (stores and other businesses locations) and highly specific street information that's currently missing, like temporary closures due to construction projects. Google Maps, Google Earth, and Google's mobile products will all use this data. Google's route-planning services will take traffic-related updates into consideration.

Katragadda envisions small-town property or business owners taking an interest in how Google represents their location, adding features like nearby park paths to maps to possibly make their neighborhoods look more attractive.

Anyone can edit, sort of Any logged-in Google user can edit a map, but changes from newbies aren't automatically reflected on live maps that the world can see. Users' updates go through a vetting process that asks previously blessed users to approve or deny edits (or send them back for revision). As users get better at getting edits posted without edits, they get closer to unlocking the capability to update public maps without having to go through an approval process, and to becoming moderators themselves to other users' edits.

The idea, Katragadda says, is to make "living and breathing" Google Maps. Fully approved users will see their updates go live "in minutes," and see traffic direction use the updates shortly after that. So owners of mobile businesses, like the new hotness in dining, food trucks, will want to get approved quickly. However, today's announcement does not have a mobile map editor component; the editor requires a full Web browser.

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Google Maps for Android adds new location, check-in features

Google has tweaked Google Maps for Android once again. Starting today, smartphones running Android 1.6 and up will see new location history and check-in features in Google Maps 5.3.

The first addition is for maps users who have enabled Google Latitude on their profile. If you choose to, you'll now be able to view stats and graphs of your location history, including estimates that break down how you allocate your time at work, home, or elsewhere.

Maps' second feature expands the pre-existing Latitude check-in option to let followers and friends know you're at home when you'… Read more

Google digitizing lists of Japan shelter dwellers

Expanding its efforts to help restore contact among people separated by the Japanese disasters, Google said today it's creating computerized versions of lists of people at emergency shelters.

"To help the many people in shelters get word of their whereabouts to loved ones, we're...asking people in shelters to take photos of the handwritten lists of names of current residents and e-mail them to us," Google said in a blog post. Google scans the data to add to its Japan person-finder site, "but it's a big job that can't be done automatically by … Read more

Have onboard Wi-Fi? See what's happening below

Have you often looked out the window of a plane and wished you could find out about what you're seeing down below? Thanks to a new service that went into alpha testing today, you could soon do just that.

Known as MondoWindow, the service aims to let anyone onboard a Wi-Fi-enabled plane get real-time information about the places they're flying over. And as the service gets more sophisticated, it will likely add all kinds of additional features like audio programming, videos, and games, all related specifically to the places you can see five miles below you.

MondoWindow comes … Read more

Google.org's human aims could be good business

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--Some of Google's next big opportunities may not come out of its traditional product development organization; look out for the do-gooders.

It's been almost two years since Google announced a philosophy shift at Google.org to focus more on attacking "problems in ways that make the most of Google's strengths in technology and information," Larry Brilliant, the former head of Google.org, said at the time. One of the first successes from that shift--Google Earth Engine--may not only help developing countries get accurate data about their environments for the first time, but … Read more

Google closing door on real estate in Google Maps

Google is taking the real-estate listings in Google Maps off the market.

Citing "low usage, the proliferation of excellent property-search tools on real-estate Web sites, and the infrastructure challenge posed by the impending retirement of the Google Base API," Brian McClendon, vice president of Google Earth and Maps, said today that the listings would disappear by February 10. For a few years Google has allowed Google Maps users to search for both rental and for-sale listings in a given area, relying on listings uploaded by real-estate companies.

Search Engine Land notes the comment of a U.K. real-estate … Read more

Garmin debuts four apps for iPhone, Android

Although technically one of the first GPS manufacturers to market a mapping app for portables with its Garmin Mobile 10 software for PDAs and Palm, Garmin has been notably absent from the smartphone navigation app marketplace as of late (discounting the aging and ridiculously overpriced Garmin Mobile for Blackberry). Today, Garmin jumps back into the fray, challenging apps from TomTom, Magellan, and Navigon with not one, but four of its own GPS-centric apps, including the new StreetPilot navigation app for iPhone and three new GPS apps for Android devices.

The StreetPilot name hearkens back to the original Garmin StreetPilot GPS … Read more

TomTom iPhone app gets crowdsourced Map Share corrections

The TomTom navigation app for iPhone gets an update to version 1.6 this week and gains a crowdsourced map correction tool that's been available on TomTom's line of standalone GPS devices for some time now.

Map Share, as the service is called, is a free, user-generated maps correction engine that lets you make small edits to your locally stored maps with the touch of a few buttons from within the TomTom app. Possible changes include edits to street names or posted speed limits, changing the direction of traffic on, for example, a one-way street, modifying turn restrictions … Read more