Seriously, Apple. Get a grip and make friends with Google. Apparently, because they wanted all the mapping glory to themselves, Apple has chosen to end their relationship with Google maps on their iPhones. Apple's excellent information-gathering source? Yelp. A cheesy, irritating, customer-supplied ratings site. Because of this, the Apple maps are ridiculously lean on practical information. And with that, Apple has an uprising on their hands. We, as a people, don't really like change, and we especially don't like change when the replacement is exponentially worse than what we already had.
I simply can't live without a decent mapping app, and the Google app was stellar. I haven't had to mess with the new maps app, for reasons I've whined about earlier this week. So it's not an issue right now, but I am definitely going to be needing a decent maps app to get me around this town.
Apple apologized for its crappy maps app today. Read the article about that below:
Tim Cook Issues Apology For Apple Maps
The Huffington Post | By Catharine Smith
Apple CEO Tim Cook has issued an official apology for the company's half-baked Maps app.
Cook wrote that the mobile mapping product "fell short" of the quality he said the company is committed to delivering.
"We are extremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better," he conceded in a letter to users, posted by Apple on Friday morning.
Apple announced in June that it would drop the popular Google-built maps feature from iOS and would release a homegrown Maps app with iOS 6. Since the glitchy new app launched, users have been vocal about its tendency to mislabel or erase cities, move famous landmarks and warp scenes in 3D Flyover mode, to name a few complaints. Many are also disappointed that Maps doesn't provide transit directions, which was a go-to feature for many fans of the Google-made maps in iOS.
Cook in his letter promised users that Apple is working to better Maps and suggested a handful of third-party apps that users could turn to in the meantime. Wrote Cook, "While we’re improving Maps, you can try alternatives by downloading map apps from the App Store like Bing, MapQuest and Waze, or use Google or Nokia maps by going to their websites and creating an icon on your home screen to their web app."
This is a far cry from the paltry statement Apple distributed last week, shortly after Maps became available and the outcry began to rise over bugs in the app. "We launched this new map service knowing it is a major initiative and that we are just getting started with it," an Apple spokeswoman said at the time, per Mashable. "[T]he more people use it, the better it will get."
Sources told The Verge this week that Apple apparently announced its own Maps app while it still had another year left on its mapping contract with Google. At least part of the disagreement between the two companies was over a voice-guided navigation feature that Google had included in its Android app but had left out of Apple's iOS app.
BuzzFeed reported recently that Apple is beefing up its Maps staff to keep pace with Google, which already has a seven-year head start on its mapping products and currently employs about 7,000 people for various maps projects.
Google is said to be working on a new maps app for iOS 6. The company could submit the app to Apple for approval into the iTunes App Store by the end of this year, according to anonymous sources who spoke to the New York Times.
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