Apple Maps is now used three times as often as Google Maps on iPhone and iPad - Apple Maps is now used “three times as often” as Google Maps on iPhones and iPads, according to a report on Monday by the Associated Press (via The Boston Globe). In total, the mapping service is seeing “more than five billion map-related requests each week,” it said.
Apple has been steadily improving its maps experience since it was introduced in 2012 to replace Google Maps as the standard mapping service on iOS devices - despite it being widely slammed for many errors at launch.
The initial release of Apple Maps was so bad, in fact, that it
eventually led to Apple executive Scott Forstall’s resignation after he refused to issue a public apology. Chief executive Tim Cook had to issue the apology instead.
Three years on, though, and there appears to be a light at the end of the tunnel for Apple Maps.
According to the AP report, “Apple now gets data from more
than 3,000 sources for business listings, traffic and other information.
In adding transit, Apple sent teams to map out subway entrances and
signs.”
“That results in more precise walking directions, as stations can
stretch for blocks and the center point used by some services isn’t
necessarily the closest. Apple also started sending out vehicles with sensors to map roads, similar to Google’s longstanding practice.”
So why is the service getting so much traction among users?
There are certainly a few factors that are helping it along, and it’s
partly to do with the fact that most iPhone and iPad users are not that
tech-savvy. They just want the basic functions, and for the device to
work without causing them a headache. Installing a competing mapping app
like Google Maps probably isn’t top of their list — or even anywhere in
their sphere of thinking.
When such users ask Siri for directions or open up a location
in Safari or Mail, they don’t mind that it loads that data in Apple
Maps. They probably don’t even know that their choice to set a default
mapping service in iOS - something Android users are spoiled for (though
Apple Maps isn’t available on Android) - doesn’t even exist.
The question the AP report poses is whether this is more
about providing a competitive advantage for Apple, or convenience for
users. Blatantly, the former is almost impossible to argue against -
even if you’re not the skeptic. Apple is gaining a huge competitive
advantage here.
But so long as the scales settle on an equilibrium whereby that
resulting “convenience” is met with an experience for users at least as
good as the “next leading competitor” (in this case Google Maps), then
it’s no longer such a nightmarish situation as Apple-Maps-by-default
used to be.
And, even if it’s three years too late, Apple probably deserves some credit for finally getting its **** together on Maps. Source: Venturebeat
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