Google Maps, the online location application that helps users get directions and other geographical information from all over the world, is headed indoors at select shopping arcades, retailers and airports.
Google upgraded Maps for Android to let smartphone and tablet users in the United States and Japan see where they are and what places they might want to check out while they are indoors. Google is comparing the new directions to the physical map directories that shoppers find in malls, or those that travelers use to find their way inside airports.
Google Maps 6.0 for Android will display detailed floor plans when a user is looking at a map on the app and zooms in on a building where an indoor map is available. Users’ approximate locations will be indicated with a blue dot icon within several metres.
The software takes the strain off the footwear by helping users to find the food court in a massive mall, or find a specific gate or restaurant in an airport, by looking at Google Maps on an Android phone. Example indoor maps have been posted on Google’s corporate blog post.
Participants in the indoor mapping app include Mall of America in Minneapolis (pictured, showing floor selector) and retailers Ikea, The Home Depot, Macy’s and Bloomingdale’s in the United States. In Japan, participating parties include Daimaru, Takashimaya and Mitsukoshi.
Airports involved with the new programme include San Francisco International Airport in Google’s home state, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, Chicago’s O’Hare, Narita International in Japan, and and more.
Google, which will add new indoor maps, invited business owners to participate in its programme by submitting their floor plans. The effort is an extension of Google’s bid to organise the world’s information online for the purpose of converting it to advertising dollars. Squeezing more ad money out of mobile services is a company priority.
The tricky part about mapping indoor stores and other locations is that Google must get permission first, which can be challenging. Google will have to find ways to coax intensely private states or countries to let it use its topographic information and other data online for the whole world to see.
European Commission publishes preliminary instructions to Apple on how to open up iOS to rivals,…
San Francisco jury finds Nima Momeni guilty of second-degree murder of Cash App founder Bob…
US Supreme Court says it will hear appeal of TikTok and parent ByteDance against ban…
Japanese start-up Space One destroys Kairos rocket for second time shortly after launch, as country…
World's biggest EV battery maker CATL aims to build 1,000 battery-swap stations next year, rising…
Facebook has 'severely restricted' news content from Palestinian outlets since October 2023 amidst bias concerns,…