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Tagged: google, lbs

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

The OnStar Story

Jeff Joyner from OnStar General Motors started the day looking at one of the earliest location-based services, OnStar. It all started back in 1995 with a project then called Beacon. It morphed from a $2000 add-on for Cadallic owners in 1996, that supported some nine calls per day to a factory installed solution in 2000 that supported 5000 calls per day. By 2005, OnStar added month car diagnostic e-mails to car owners who had the service. In 2009, OnStar went to China and in 2010 GM began looking at injury severity after accidents. In 2011 the solution supports apps such as those to remotely lock a car or find it in a parking lot. In 2011, OnStar supports about two calls per second.

Among the other interesting tidbits, were the types of calls collected per month:

  • 2500 automatic crash reports (or air bag deployed)
  • 5600 emergency calls (subscriber needs help)
  • 7000 good samaritan calls (subscriber calling about others in need)

I also found it fascinating that GM saves $2-$3M in warranty costs, by sending those monthly “car checkup” reports.

Joyner also shared a touching recorded call of a young girl who noticed her mother was not driving the right way to get home. She pushed the OnStar button and police stopped her Mom. It turns out Mom was having a diabetic reaction and was in fact not “ok.”

I find it interesting that back in the 1990s the pull of location-based services and cell phones/cell phone technology was safety. I know my Dad loved it when I first got a cell phone for work. He felt better I could get help (via AAA) or call him at any time. Today, in 2012, the number of location-based apps and energy focused on safety seems so very small. The efforts seem so focused on marketing and entertainment.

Enterprise Location Intelligence: The BI/LI/Cloud Story

Sean Maday of Google, Chris Ovens of Esri and Glenn Kronschnabl of CoreLogic shared their “vision” of the state of Business Intelligence, Location Intelligence and the cloud.

Maday restated the irony of the current abundance of data, but balkanization of that same data and highlighted Google role as making those data useable. He also announced the rebranding of Google Earth Builder as Google Maps Engine. Ovens joined Esri from SpotOn Systems and started by not doing the “location advantage talk.” Instead he focused on his role on the  location analytics team, one that needs to adopt geospatial perspectives into the CIO’s world instead of dragging that CIO into our world. Kronschnabl highligted CoreLogic’s goal of offering a data play as well as a technology play,

The questions yielded some interesting comments from the panel (paraphrased):

Maday (Google) - Do analysis elsewhere; When you want to visualize, come to Google.

Kronschnabl (CoreLogic)  - Back in the day (I was with Cognos), adding location/mapping to BI was 4 or 5 on agenda, so “check box mapping” was enough. Now it’s expected by customers due to Google’s redefining expectations.

Kronschnabl (CoreLogic) - Customers now want APIs, but we still ship data. Our emphasis is on making the data easy to consume. We don’t know all the questions our customers may need to ask, so it’s best to put data in cloud and let users go wild.

Maday (Google) - Google’s play in the enterprise geo space does not involve the company offering professional services. Instead, Google offers platforms to support consumers, we blur with Fusion Tables, but don’t, for example, support multiple heatmap algorithms.

Maday (Google) - Google has done a lot of indoor mapping. (Google Indoor Mapping coverage)

Overs (Esri) We sort of do indoor mapping - facilities mapping. There are two ways to think of it:  geocentric-spatial at center vs geo-enabled take spatial to the existing systems.

Maday (Google) We think OpenStreetMap is a great thing, but it’s large cumbersome, needs styling, needs processing needed. But lots of Googlers contribute to it.

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/22 at 07:46 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: esri, google, lbs, li12, onstar

Wednesday, February 01, 2012

According to the Washington Post, the impending initial public offering (IPO) by Facebook, with its expected windfall of cash from investors, might encourage some employees to go looking for housing. But the prospective home buyers are a bit picky. You see, they might not want to live next to someone who works for Google, for example, or any other competitor for that matter.

“You get a Yahoo guy against a Facebook guy against a Zynga guy against an Apple guy against a Google guy, then it's not just about the house,” real estate agent Carol Rodoni told the paper. “It's about the egos.”

So, how might you go looking for a house that wasn't near a competitor. Well, without violating privacy laws, might you start by see how your friends (...and their friends) are using location-based social media? If people are checking in with Google+ might they be a Google employee versus someone who is a checking in with Facebook Places? If they check in with foursquare does that mean they lean one way or another? What about Tweets with location enabled? Could you mine Tweets that indicate that a neighborhood favors Apple products and thus indicates an enclave of Apple employees, that is, given a proximal location to Cupertino, for example.

Seems like a great opportunity to map neighborhoods by social media preferences. Although mining that kind of "big data" could mean you might need a database appliance. Or maybe someone will come up with a simple solution that we might find in the app store soon? But which app store?

Think about it.

by Joe Francica on 02/01 at 11:15 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

But wait, there are more privacy hearing scheduled! This one with the Consumer Protection, Product Safety and Insurance Subcommittee.

A Senate Commerce subcommittee has scheduled a 10am hearing on mobile privacy for May 19, titled "Consumer Privacy and Protection in the Mobile Marketplace."

Among those invited to testify are Bret Taylor, chief technology officer at Facebook, Catherine Novelli, vice president of worldwide government affairs at Apple, and Alan Davidson, director of public policy at Google.

There's no word yet on who has accepted this invitation.

- PC Mag

Continue reading...

by Adena Schutzberg on 05/17 at 04:37 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Monday, March 14, 2011

"While audiences at sxsw tend to look ahead, [Google location lead Marissa] Mayer's speech felt like something of a recap, with only a hint of what's to come."

- Time
 

Why Gowalla hasn't stopped moving: Josh Williams, the CEO of Gowalla talks about competing with Foursquare and Facebook.

- C|net

"Ask announced a couple weeks ago that it would be debuting a new mobile app called Ask Around here at SXSW. WebProNews caught up with Ask.com Chief Product and Technology Officer Lisa Kavanaugh to talk about it a little." From the announcement (I missed it, sorry!): "Ask Around is about using location as a common denominator and allowing location-based Q&A to blossom into conversation – giving you a window into the real-time dialogue unfolding around you."

- Web Pro News

"... the service can best be described as a mix of Quora and Foursquare."

- IntoMobile

Foursquare talks about the future

- Web Pro News

SCVNGR's Priebatsch: Want to Win More? Change the Rules‎

- PC World
 

by Adena Schutzberg on 03/14 at 04:43 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: google, gowalla, lbs, sxsw 2011

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Girl Scout Cookie Locator app!

If you want to find out where the cookies are being sold, the app can show you.
The free app, which is available for iPhones and iPod Touch, uses GPS or manually entered ZIP Codes, cities or states to find the sales in your neighborhood. It will map the locations and add the sale information to the iPhone or iPod calendar.

I hoped to read that actual Scouts built the app, but no, apparently they did not. You can also find sales sites on the Web, but that’s not as cool. Sales start Feb 11.

- Al.com blog

Google announces check in for Latitude including automatic check ins, alerts to remind you to check in and the ability to check out.

- Google Mobile Blog
- Intro video

SubwayArrival uses subway commuters’ locations and generates the relative location of the train they’ve just rode on. “In short, the mobile phone looks for changes in base station ID, periods of no service, and large distances travelled. When all three of these criteria have been met the server know the user has emerged from a subway trip. This information is sent to a central server which compiles the information and displays to all users the current location of subways.”

Alex Bell, a graduate electrical engineering student at Columbia University wrote it and like other VGI-based apps, it only works when its used.

- Huffington Post

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/02 at 06:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: google, lbs, vgi

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