Google Maps My Tracks!
Saturday, February 14th, 2009Since the launch of Android-powered phones, Google has been active in releasing geolocation-related features. Last week, we covered the launch of Latitude, the service from the Mountain View-based search engine that lets you share your “exact” location with your friends on the spot. This week (Thursday to be precise), Google released My Tracks, a new application that enables users to easily share their outdoor activities with others.
From the official Google Blog:
My Tracks records tracks of outdoor activities using the phone’s built-in GPS. It shows these tracks on a map and presents live statistics, including an elevation profile. And here’s the best part: it lets you easily share your activities with friends and the world using Google Maps, as well as archive your training history with Google Docs.
(the Google Latlong blog also covers the launch)
Where Latitude received mixed reactions from the blogosphere for being a creepy app, My Tracks comes to the rescue to show how useful and fun geo-tracking can actually be. My Tracks is not pioneering this GPS application: hem, Map My Tracks is another independent application that does about the same, except that their app can be installed on over 100 different Web-enabled phones.
Stephen Shankland from Cnet tested the new app. He identified two main glitches with My Tracks: First, enabling GPS tracking on the G1 is extremely battery-consuming, where a Garmin device will last two days on two AA batteries. Second, it seems like Google isn’t accurate enough with its GPS tracking technology yet: altitude is never accurate, and you’re lucky if the marker of yourself on the map doesn’t put you 20 feet (or more) from where you actually are. On the good side of things, Stephen Shankland appreciated the sharing features associated with the app:
The ability to Twitter and e-mail links to maps is nice, and I e-mailed myself the KML file of my trip with no trouble, letting me view it in Google Earth at my leisure.
There are ups and down to Google’s new app. Nonetheless, what we are seeing here is the integration of geolocation technologies settling in our daily lives at the speed of light. Most people still don’t see how this technology applies to their daily needs, but faster then they will know, the technology will be embedded in their phones, and will become a main component of their daily activities! And once again, the businesses that did not ignore their geo-marketing potential will live happily ever after!



