Google continues to rub salt into Apple’s iOS 6 mapping wounds, after the search engine giant added interior layouts of certain buildings – just in time for the Black Friday sales and Christmas shopping.
Although the feature has been available for users of the company’s Android-based smartphones, Google has now extended the features to PC Web browsers, allowing users to see the interiors of more than 10,000 locations around the world, including retail stores.
While Apple’s maps are currently directing to coffee shops erroneously located in various bodies of water or leaving whole swathes of the planet unmarked, Google’s interior mapping feature helps users navigate airports, shopping centres, libraries and museums.
However, iPhone users and other non-Android based devices that offer Web-browsers are also in luck, as the addition of the Web interface means other smartphones and tablets can use the feature.
The indoor maps are currently available for select venues – including train stations and airports – in certain countries. A list of some participating locations across the globe can be found on Google’s support page.
In the United States, Google offers indoor maps for more than 20 major airports, including Chicago’s O’Hare and Atlanta Hartsfield-Jackson, more than 50 shopping centres, including the Mall of America and a smattering of hotels, hospital, convention centres and casinos across the country.
In an effort to expand its listings, Google is reaching out to venue owner interested in adding their floor plan to Google Maps by asking them to visit the Google Maps Floor Plan tool to help customers get acquainted with their location.
It’s been an interesting couple of months for mapping applications, which are one of the most critical components of any successful smartphone platform.
Earlier this month Nokia introduced Here, a cloud-based solution that will extend Nokia’s considerable mapping expertise to multiple screens and operating systems. In the coming weeks, Here will be available as a free mapping and location service for iOS users, and in early 2013, Nokia plans to release a Here software development kit (SDK) for Android device makers.
Nokia also announced 13 November that is partnering with Mozilla to build a mobile Web version of Here Maps for the latest version of the company’s Firefox browser, planned for 2013, and is purchasing Earthmine, a Berkeley, Calif.-based company that makes “reality capture and processing technologies” that will become integral parts of Here’s 3D map-making capabilities.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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