Posts Tagged ‘latitude’

Google’s Geo-Feed

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

Yesterday, the Google geo development team released the Latitude GeoRSS feed into the wild through an API. I find it surprising that Google is opening up its users’ geo-data this fast. Here’s why:

In this very young geo-location space, Google is taking a major lead with Android. It turns them into one of the rare Web-based service that tracks directly users’ location. Android’s numbers aren’t tearing the roof off, but they are not bad either: In March, AdMob reported that Android phones experienced a 44% monthly growth are in the first months after launch, while the iPhone got a 88% monthly growth rate (however, I would like to compare the marketing spend of both companies for the launch, Apple obviously had more buzz).

The reason this is an advantage for Google is mobile advertising. The Web on mobile will probably become the most profitable advertising channel for brands and local advertisers alike. A plethora of ad networks are popping up in this space. However, while focusing on serving ads, those ad networks will have to buy the geo-data juice from data providers… Like Google: Latitude encourages mobile users’ to share their location voluntarily and regularly. Payday!

So why is Google releasing its geo-juice so fast?

We have tried to make this process as easy as possible, but we realize there is an entirely different set of people (you guys, the developers!) that want to do more interesting things with their location.

In other words, they are creating a developers’ ecosystem around their geo-data center, which creates many benefits:
- Start developing geo-advertising solutions on Google’s platform
- Develop good ideas for Adwords to integrate later
- Maybe develop an economy around Latitude (and Android?)
- Pioneer to become a leading geo data provider.

However, Google’s Achille’s heel in this story is its social networking potential: It’s close to being null. On Google, you search, you create documents, you watch videos, but Google doesn’t connect you with your close ones the way Facebook does. Their social graph algo is known to be a bit screwy. So they will need the help of somebody else to capture our location while we socialize on the go.

I have enabled the ’share your location publicly’. I don’t find it scary. I have the feeling that nobody really cares where I am anyway (except advertisers). And it’s not that accurate anyway. But I really like updating my gtalk with my location. Geekilicious!






Google Maps: Your Personal Crime Watcher

Friday, April 17th, 2009

So you thought that finding a purse through Latitude was the most offbeat news this week in the geo-consumer space? Well, I have a better story for you.

You have probably heard of those two Domino’s Pizza employees who created a video where our biggest phobia about fast-food employees are re-enacted. It’s been all over the news for the past two days. Well the way those two got caught is extremely far-fetched.

First, as it was saying on the Youtube page of the video before it was taken down:

This is a great lesson on why you never post something like this on the Internet. These Domino’s workers posted this on youtube earlier today (April 13, 2009) It was removed later this day but re-uploaded because these people deserve to be fired. If you want these people fired then Favorite, comment, and rate 5 stars so the word gets out and these people fired.

So the employees posted the video online for just a few hours, before taking it down, but alas the deed was done. It was re-posted right away by somebody else, and the virality of the social Web did the rest. But that’s not it. From the video, it is pretty hard to know in which of the 6,000 stores worldwide this hoax happened. That’s where it gets good! As the ABC reports:

Readers of the consumer affairs blog consumerist.com, which posted the video early in the week, tracked Hammonds down through her YouTube account and identified the store from matching an exterior shot in a video with an image on Google maps.

I told you that was far-fetched. They matched an exterior shot of one of the employees’ video with an image on Google Maps, which made it possible to track the location of the store where the joke-gone-wrong happened. I am personally baffled. I don’t know which image search engine they used for this, but hats off! That is some military-level image search that only a pizza corporation can afford to save the reputation of its brand :)

So what now? Are Google mapping technologies the next crime fighter? Your neighborhood’s eye and ear? It spots your stolen purse. It detects a fart on your pizza. What’s next?

Once Google Got Your Latitude, It Is Mobile Business Time!

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

One day you ask yourself if being tracked through GPS is not a tad disturbing, if this is something people would adopt, and the next day you read that tracking your friends on a map is now possible 24/7. Google announced yesterday the upcoming release of Latitude, A simple service that will ping your location every once in a while, and let a selected few of your choice know about it.

Latitude will be accessible for all G1, iPhones, Blackberry, and javascript-enabled phones in general. The privacy settings give users leeway in terms of public accessibility: Google’s servers don’t track movements, they merely provide the last waypoint where a user was marked. This means that you can’t track anyone’s daily pattern of movement. You can also determine the specificity of your beacon, showing an exact city block or just the city itself. Only friends on your contact list can see your location. You can set up different privacy levels for each contacts though.

Latitude is not a mobile-only experience. There is a Latitude gadget for iGoogle to spot friends from your laptop (Gmail contacts of course). Latitude will track your mobile location, and through Gears, it will also track your laptop position.

Shegeeks‘ blogger Corvida brings an interesting point in a blog post on Louis Gray’s blog: Location-aware services such as Loopt and Brightkite should thank Google for publicizing a service that they do better than Google for the moment.

Brightkite introduces me to new people to hang out with. [...] The amount of information available for specific check-in spots is amazing! I can see who’s been there, how many times they’ve been there, check out their profile and see if we have similar interests. Hey, they might even be friends with me on Twitter! For this sole reason alone, Brightkite and other similar services have nothing to fear for now. In fact, they might want to thank Google.

I shared a few comments in this post, where I argue that Google is more interested in building a back-end geolocalization technology that would seamlessly integrate with other Google products. latitude is just a way to get things started.

On the Fast Company site, Chris Dannen brings up the idea that Latitude could work in perfect harmony with Local Business Center, Google’s own Yellow Pages:

You don’t have to be Al Gore to see the potential; if advertisers can tap into your location and mash it up with locations of their outlets or services and your browsing history, you’ll be hit with perhaps the most targeted ads humankind has ever known. Imagine having your mobile phone kindly inform you that you’re two blocks from your best friend, and in between you both, there lies a Starbucks where you two can meet.

That sounds like something Google would do. Mapping technologies over at Google are not ready yet to support such a complex operation. Google Maps is barely in its early monetization days, so everything is going to remain pretty experimental for the next 2 or 3 years to come.