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Apple Maps Has Surpassed Google Maps in Detail in 3.1 Percent of the US (theverge.com)

An anonymous reader shares a report: iOS 12 began the rollout of Apple Maps' long-awaited redesign, which will deliver maps with far more detail using data collected by Apple directly. The updated maps currently only cover around 3.1 percent of the USA, focused around Northern California, but already some interesting differences are starting to emerge between Apple's maps and those that Google uses for its own navigation software. The differences are documented in excruciatingly fine detail in a post by digital cartography blogger Justin O'Beirne. The good news for Apple is that the sheer amount of natural cartographical detail its map contains far outstrips what Google currently offers. Vegetation detail is a particular highlight, with Apple's maps even showing grass between two lanes of a highway, or around the borders of individual houses.

7 of 135 comments (clear)

  1. Parks? by poptix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Historically green areas on maps (paper & digital) have been City, State, or Federal parks, now it's just any old patch of grass?

    TheVerge was right, 'more detail, less information'

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    1. Re:Parks? by LordKronos · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly. It's a neat little feature to be sure, but if I really want to see where vegetation is, I switch to satellite view, which actually distinguishes between grass, small vs large trees, dense vs sparse patches of trees, crops, etc. The only case I see in that article where the vegetation detail is sort of useful is in identifying beaches.

      But yes, when you look at those maps, you can still see the distinction between regular vegetation and parks, but it's very subtle and takes much more effort to distinguish. When I'm in an unfamiliar town and have a little time to kill, I'll actually be looking for parks to take my kids to, not random vegetation in the median.

      Finally, that rest of that article just shows a bunch of cases where Apple is fixing things google already had correct, and several more where Apple is still wrong (and google is correct).

  2. So, for 96.9% of the U.S. google is better... by QuietLagoon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now I know to look to Apple's maps if I want to see the grass between highway lanes in the 3.1% of the US that Apple shows it. Let me ask, does this difference really matter to most of the people who use these maps? Or is this nothing more than marketing hype?

    1. Re:So, for 96.9% of the U.S. google is better... by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not marketing hype. Rendering different details actually may be relevant. Unfortunately Apple seems to think that the green should be representative of trees rather than showing the boundaries of city parks or national parks as they are traditionally labelled.

      It matters. It's marketing hype. It's also a stupid backwards idea that makes the map less useful.

  3. Fuck me by nagora · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That is exciting news!

    I guess "Google maps are more detailed than Apple's in 96.9% of US" didn't really score enough Apple fanboi points, did it?

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  4. Re:I'll just stand in the road, car yonder is tiny by Merk42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, for 96.9% of the U.S. google is better...

    You really can't see the upcoming future on this one, eh?

    Now that Apple has got a system down why can they not scale it t quickly close the gap.

    Will you be singing the same tune I wonder when within a year Apple has 60%+ better coverage.

    It makes sense to me that Apple could easily surpass Google Maps in detail, as Google in recent years has really lost focus and does not spend much time improving long-standing services.

    and with a competitor (Apple) increasing coverage, I'm sure Google will just idly sit by and not do any updates or anything like that.

  5. Re:I'll just stand in the road, car yonder is tiny by squiggleslash · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Will you be singing the same tune I wonder when within a year Apple has 60%+ better coverage.

    Apple isn't going to have 60%+ "better coverage" in one year. It's taken them this long to reach 3.1%, and in the meantime there's absolutely no reason to believe Google isn't improving its processes too. Indeed, I suspect for Google they can throw a switch - do you think the images they currently serve are served at their highest resolution, or just at an optimal quality for use right now?

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