Mark Hendrickson comes to that conclusion in The State of Location-Based Social Networking On The iPhone. Among the things that need to be enhanced: location updates in the background (Apple does not allow this yet), stability, ability to invite friends knowing they are supported handsets.
There’s a round up of the six most popular apps including Moximity which headed to private beta last week. One differentiator: it’s launching in one geography at a time. First up: hometown of Austin, TX. Also unique: the app pulls in your contacts from Facebook who are also on the service. There’s more coverage of the company in its local paper.
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/29 at 06:00 AM |
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HelloMetro, based in Southern Indiana, is considering a relocation to Louisville, where it could expand, adding 15 jobs.
Spatial Data Integrations, a Louisville company, plans a new freestanding building. It would also add 15 jobs.
- Business First
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/26 at 06:00 AM |
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This demo was shown at the Emerging Technology Conference at MIT yesterday:
In what was perhaps a more compelling demo, [Microsoft Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig] Mundie showed a video of a woman in Seattle looking at a live scene through the camera on an ultra mobile pc device. On screen, the client was pulling data from a web based service to tag items in the scene — the names of buildings, the number of public transportation buses, information about how far away taxis were via GPS, etc. That’s the sort of useful, real world application that makes Microsoft’s vision of the future exciting.
Microsoft sees a bit of client-side computation, whereas Google sees a “dumb client” per blogger Josh Catone.
- SitePoint blog
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/26 at 06:00 AM |
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The first implementations will be for Chase cardholders. “The first applications will allow cardholders to receive notifications to their mobile devices about transaction activity on their accounts; obtain offers from a range of merchants; and use the built-in location-based technology developed by Google to map nearby merchants where they can redeem Visa offers and locate ATMs that accept Visa.” Are we finally going to see the long talked about location-based offers?
- ITWire
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/26 at 06:00 AM |
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We just wrapped up the final session of the AGI GeoCommunity ‘08 Conference. I’ll be providing more about key papers and ideas over the next few days. But I want to share what just happened because, frankly, it confuses me.
Before lunch Mark Bishop a product manager at MapInfo presented a paper titled “The Hype of Web 2.0.” He did a terrific job of defining the differences between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0 complete with a picture of Tim O’Reilly and lots of examples of (non-map/non-geo) webpages. Toward the end there was a video of a MapInfo implementation of “slippy maps.” AJAX is Web 2.0. The presentation was lively, though Bishop had to encourage audience participation (sort of ironic since Web 2.0 is about that!).
I was a bit antsy since the presentation didn’t address geo (much) nor provide any specific suggestions regarding how geo could/should/would take further advantage of Web 2.0. Further, I thought we were all pretty set with understanding, if not implementing, Web 2.0 ideas, so I wondered how this presentation fit into this geospatial conference.
Apparently I was the only one who thought so. The presentation was selected by the entire attendee group as their favorite presentation. Perhaps Web 2.0 has been bandied about so much attendees needed a refresher course and this was it? Perhaps attendees never felt comfortable with Web 2.0 concepts and this was a first definition for them? Perhaps attendees keep their heads down doing their GIS work and don’t think much about the technology ideas going on around them? Perhaps this is a difference between the US/UK interaction with technology? Perhaps “favorite” was interpreted in a different way than I did? Any other ideas?
by Adena Schutzberg on 09/25 at 10:27 AM |
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