Sunday 1 July 2012


Apple's iOS 6  Maps app compared to 

Google Maps

If you downloaded the developer beta of iOS 6 and tried out its most distinctive feature - Cupertino's own Maps app - you might have noticed something's lacking compared to the previous Maps app, which was powered by Google's tech.

That something is not only Street View, which can be somewhat compensated by the Flyover function in iOS 6, but the actual level of street detail that the fledgling new maps and navigational software of Apple reveals.

Granted, the app is still in beta, and there could be many more changes before the final version of iOS 6 is released, but if it doesn't match Google Maps by that time, many users who were accustomed to the detailed cartography coming from Mountain View, might want to have Google's navigational solution as an alternative app while Apple and Tom Tom iron out the kinks. Have a look at the current differences in the slides below, with Google Maps on the left.







          THE NEW APPLE MAPS ON IOS 6

























I've been testing the beta version of Apple's new mobile operating system, iOS 6, all week. 
One of the features I've been testing the most is Apple's new Maps app. That's because Apple decided to ditch Google Maps and go with a bunch of other companies like Tom Tom and Waze.
(By the way, there seems to be a lot of confusion about this. Apple has always made the Maps app on iPhone and iPad. It wasn't a Google app. Apple just used Google Maps data for the app.)
In short, I don't think the new Maps app will be as good as the current one that uses Google Maps data. 
Here's why:
  1. There's no public transportation data. Instead, Apple will rely on third-party developers to fill in public transportation information like subway times, bus stops, etc. With the current Maps app, you can easily get this information from Google. You don't have to install a separate app.
  2. There's no Street View data. Since Apple ditched Google Maps data, Street View is gone. To make up for it, Apple added something called Flyover, which are gorgeous photorealistic 3D maps. Unfortunately, Flyover only works on the iPhone 4S, iPad 2, and new iPad.
  3. Turn-by-turn directions don't work on older iPhones. It'll only the iPhone 4S and new iPad will support turn-by-turn directions. This was a killer feature a lot of iPhone users were waiting for. Unfortunately, many of them won't get it.
  4. The new iOS maps don't have as much information as Google Maps do.  Google Maps does a much better job at labeling streets, landmarks, and businesses than Apple's new Maps app does. You simply get more information from Google.
In almost every instance, the new iOS Maps is downgrade from the current Google-powered version. Yes, I know Apple will make Maps better over time. It does that with all its products. But I've never known Apple to take an existing product, strip it of some key features, and then start building it up again. Bizarre.
Maps is arguably one of the most important apps on the iPhone. And it really looks like Apple is going to screw it up this time.