not sure what you are going for--a sort of town hall debate over the merits of 
google's decision? it's easy to forget that parcel data was rarely even visible 
on a public website until several months ago. so i'll applaud google for 
getting title search/parcel aggregators scared to hell. no doubt their decision 
entire methodical and for sure had been several years in the works. i'm certain 
it's a matter of months (not years) before they drop major provider for 
business listing data and will go it their own with the small business center. 
it's pretty clear that consumers don't mind sacrificing quality for price. 
android turn by turn on VZN is case in point. price trumps quality when it 
comes to consumer markets. mike dobson has written some very insightful things 
on his blog about google's mapbase.

no question people are perplexed (vexed, even?) by the seemingly unnecessary 
open map smackdown b/w map maker and OSM. if the geo response to haiti is any 
indication, we can expect google to seed more coverage a la AND to leapfrog OSM.

but this is why everybody should come to where2 this march/april and attend the 
panel i am moderating "Base Map Smackdown" with head of TIGER, head of product 
for OS, our own SteveC and hopefully another participant (uh-hum, you know who 
you are, please respond to me offpost!)

i


Ian White :: Urban Mapping Inc
690 Fifth Street Suite 200 :: San Francisco CA 94107
T.415.946.8170 :: F.866.385.8266 :: 
urbanmapping.com/blog<http://urbanmapping.com/blog>

On Feb 1, 2010, at 11:12 PM, Brian Russo wrote:

So as many of you know Google dumped TeleAtlas last October in favour of 
home-grown data. Personally I found this choice over leveraging OpenStreetMap a 
poor one, but that's another topic.

Point is that since October, Google Maps' data quality has been very spotty. 
From acceptable results to the truly mythic; there's just no way to know 
anymore what to expect. This isn't just some academic exercise anymore as 
Android hits more mobile phones and more "ordinary" people take for granted 
routing & geocoding. Personally I've witnessed this firsthand on numerous 
occasions. Friends that nearly missed flights due to bad directions. Wasting 
half an hour lost because Google Maps (and Bing and OSM and Yahoo) had no 
knowledge of an entire subdivision that's several years old [1]. I'm sure 
everyone has anecdotes.

Really I'm not trying to focus on Google Maps - other providers have this 
issue, and the problem exists elsewhere (and certainly is nothing new to geo 
data). However the widespread commoditization/adoption of GIS technology and 
map data is a done deal and is amplifying this more than ever before with no 
"man in the loop" to QC. I think unless consumers start paying attention then 
this will develop into a real mess.

What do you think? Lost cause? Will be overcome by events?

 - bri

1. 
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=Honolulu,+Hawaii+96822&ll=21.486995,-158.061655&spn=0.007358,0.016512&t=h&z=17
<ATT00001..txt>

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