Based on an alpha product, the final product will suck.What I hope is that there's an option to keep Gmaps. Based on iPhoto, Apple's maps suck... especially outside the US.
I'm sure Google is already working on a 3rd party Google Maps app for iOS.What I hope is that there's an option to keep Gmaps. Based on iPhoto, Apple's maps suck... especially outside the US.
What I hope is that there's an option to keep Gmaps. Based on iPhoto, Apple's maps suck... especially outside the US.
this thread hilarious in retrospect. armchair ceo's all up in there
http://9to5mac.com/2012/06/04/apple...-mac-lineup-and-multiple-accessories-at-wwdc/
Jesus christ if they all get retina'd at once.
I have to base my opinion in what's out there right now. Google has been working on their mapping solution for a very long time, even in a small country outside the US where I live (in Portugal) it has a lot of detail (mapping and user data built over several years), street view, etc. Do I believe Apple's solution will be on par with it over here? Absolutely not. But I'm sure that if you live in, say, Manhattan, it will have the same detail and fancy 3D buildings.Based on an alpha product, the final product will suck.
Okay.
Yeah. Depending on what I see, I may delay the shit out of this update. Really nervous.there wont be an option to keep it, I bet. thats too much of a core feature for Apple to build a new option and allow the old one to stick around.
but I absolutely share your concern about Apples mapping solution. If its not as good as Google maps - or sacrifices useful features for that whiz band 3D stuff - then itll be a real downgrade for iOS overall. And outside the states... oh man. Im already worried that itll be sparse as hell in Canada. This one really gets me nervous since its such an important feature.
http://9to5mac.com/2012/06/04/apple...-mac-lineup-and-multiple-accessories-at-wwdc/
Jesus christ if they all get retina'd at once.
Google's maps aren't always so great outside the US either. There are stores listed on it near me that have been closed for years, and none of the public transport data is accurate.What I hope is that there's an option to keep Gmaps. Based on iPhoto, Apple's maps suck... especially outside the US.
What I hope is that there's an option to keep Gmaps. Based on iPhoto, Apple's maps suck... especially outside the US.
Yes please.http://9to5mac.com/2012/06/04/apple...-mac-lineup-and-multiple-accessories-at-wwdc/
Jesus christ if they all get retina'd at once.
Damn, this might just be the biggest WWDC ever.http://9to5mac.com/2012/06/04/apple...-mac-lineup-and-multiple-accessories-at-wwdc/
Jesus christ if they all get retina'd at once.
I don't think you understand how it works.No one should want a retina display on a Mac.
Everything will look terrible on it.
11" and 13" Air have nailed pixel density on a laptop.
No one should want a retina display on a Mac.
Everything will look terrible on it.
11" and 13" Air have nailed pixel density on a laptop.
Nothing in this post makes any sense. When you compare a retina MBA vs a non-retina MBA the non-retina one will look blurry by comparison.
Please stop calling it a "retina" display.
http://9to5mac.com/2012/06/04/apple...-mac-lineup-and-multiple-accessories-at-wwdc/
Jesus christ if they all get retina'd at once.
What do you propose we call it?Please stop calling it a "retina" display.
Please stop calling it a "retina" display.
Please stop calling it a "retina" display.
It's gotten to the point where I can't tell if people are losing it because it's not a complete lineup of pixel-doubled displays or if they're still mad that Apple picked a word for it at all.Please stop calling it a "retina" display.
It's gotten to the point where I can't tell if people are losing it over the loss of purity because it's not a complete lineup of pixel-doubled displays or if they're still mad that Apple picked a word for it at all.
I don't think you understand how it works.
Nothing in this post makes any sense. When you compare a retina MBA vs a non-retina MBA the non-retina one will look blurry by comparison.
well if you guys are so clever, I suggest you download a non-retina iPhone app onto your retina display'd iPhones and get used to looking at that for fucking ever, since that's what the internet will look like on a retina display Macbook with HiDPI mode.
We already have the retina iPad with the low res web. People still live. It's not a good enough reason to hold high dpi back.well if you guys are so clever, I suggest you download a non-retina iPhone app onto your retina display'd iPhones and get used to looking at that for fucking ever, since that's what the internet will look like on a retina display Macbook with HiDPI mode.
Pretty much.We already have the retina iPad with the low res web. People still live. It's not a good enough reason to hold high dpi back.
The two sides bickered over a Google Maps feature called Street View, which lets people see an actual photo as if they are standing in the street. Apple wanted to incorporate Street View on the iPhone just as Google already offered it for Android phones. Google initially withheld the feature, frustrating Apple executives, according to people on both sides of the debate.
Apple executives also wanted to include Google's turn-by-turn-navigation service in the iPhone—a feature popular with Android users because it lets people treat their phones as in-car GPS devices. Google wouldn't allow it, according to people on both sides. One of these people said Google viewed Apple's terms as unfair.
Google executives, meantime, also bristled at Apple's refusal to add features that would help Google. For instance, Google wanted to emphasize its brand name more prominently within the maps app. It also wanted Apple to enable its service designed to find friends nearby, dubbed Latitude, which Apple refrained from doing, said people on both sides.
Meanwhile, Apple's geo team worked on features that might be able to one-up Google. Apple kept the details secret, even in-house. When one member of the geo team asked another what he was working on, he did little more than shrug, says one person familiar with the matter.
Apple had catching up to do. Employees worked on mapping designs to sub out Google's from the iPhone. They began work on a navigation app that resembles an in-car GPS device, says a person familiar with the project.
Apple also began licensing data about road-traffic conditions and local businesses from around the world. Apple needed more data for a critical step: building its new "geocoder," the code that translates longitudes and latitudes into actual addresses.
Apple wasn't pleased with Google's geocoding in part because Google's geocoder wouldn't let Apple use it unless Apple also showed a Google map every time it did so.
So Apple engineers worked on building their own geocoder. In a sign of the geo team's growing importance, Apple moved it into the esteemed iOS software unit, which is run by Scott Forstall, who oversees many of Apple's top priority projects.
Apple quietly launched its geocoder last fall inside its latest iPhone software. It has remained all but unnoticed outside a small circle of software pros.
Since Apple released its own geocoder, every time iPhone users open its map app, it is Apple's technology that translates their position, not Google's. Software developers can also use a version of the Apple technology, CLGeocoder, to build apps that let users, for instance, tell their friends what neighborhood they are in or search for nearby eateries.
Members of the Google Maps team in recent months have told colleagues they worry about Apple replacing their program, given that as many as half the people who access Google Maps own Apple devices, says someone familiar with the matter.
So do most Android users just not use Internet services or something? They have the superior Google Maps experience and larger market, but half of the traffic still comes from Apple?
Anyway, I'm hoping they do mapping better than Google's subpar mapping in China/Hong Kong, but won't get my hopes up too high since I don't think they have that many people based over here focusing on services.
So do most Android users just not use Internet services or something? They have the superior Google Maps experience and larger market, but half of the traffic still comes from Apple?
Anyway, I'm hoping they do mapping better than Google's subpar mapping in China/Hong Kong, but won't get my hopes up too high since I don't think they have that many people based over here focusing on services.
WSJ on iOS Maps (not much on iOS 6, more about behind the scenes politics): http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304543904577398502695522974.html?