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Traffic Mapping For Your Mobile Phone
In late July, Google
announced that it will be offering live traffic
information to mobile phones in more than thirty
U.S. cities. Plans to provide the traffic feature to
PCs are still in the works. The Google traffic
feature will be released as an update to the free
Google Maps for Mobile service, which has been
available for 18 months for download on the Google
web site. Google would not disclose how many
subscribers it has, but it says the number is
growing rapidly.
The feature expands Google's mapping technology into
an area where Microsoft Corp. and Yahoo already have
a presence, but in different ways. Yahoo and
Microsoft offer real-time traffic information on
their Web-based mapping services for PCs. Microsoft
has chosen to move into the mobile “space” by
licensing traffic-monitoring technology for mobile
devices to a Kirkland-based startup, InRix Inc.
Yahoo currently has no mobile traffic service.
MapQuest, an AOL property, offers traffic reports
over cell phones for $2.99 per month.
With typical bombast, Microsoft announced that when
operable, the InRix mobile service will actually
predict upcoming traffic problems – however
currently the MSN mobile mapping technology provides
no traffic information at all.
In the cities where it works, the Google feature
will show traffic conditions on most major highways
- indicating green for clear roadways, yellow for
medium congestion and red for high congestion or
stopped traffic. Google Maps will work on most
Java-enabled phones offered by Cingular and Sprint
and all color BlackBerry devices. The service does
not currently work on phones from other major
carriers such as Verizon or T-Mobile USA. Google
Maps sends the data – obtained from an undisclosed
source - every five minutes.
Although Google's free service doesn't identify
traffic hazards or accidents, it will let drivers
know if there is a clogged road. Google also shows
the expected drive time for a route when phone users
search for driving directions. It has introduced a
feature that lets users save their favorite
locations and frequently used driving directions for
future use.
The three search engines are not alone, however. In
February, Rand McNally Traffic began offering a
downloadable mobile application that delivers news
of real-time traffic flow, accidents, weather
conditions and road closures to 94 cities. Rand
McNally Traffic is available on Sprint, Nextel, AT&T
Wireless and other services for $3.99 a month.
Media giant Clear Channel Communications' Total
Traffic Network feeds content in 125 markets in the
country to 15 services. One of them provides the
information to subscribers with Sprint mobile phones
for a $9.99 monthly subscription. That service is
relatively new. In addition to weather conditions
and traffic information, the service also provides
data on gas station prices.
Cell phones are rapidly turning into GPS devices,
with localized information as an added feature. It
remains to be seen how many people will turn to
their cell phone screens for traffic news, one eye
on the road and another on the phone. In some states
and several local jurisdictions, it is already
illegal to use a handheld cell phone while driving.
Some of these jurisdictions allow hands free use,
but that won’t help with a visual feature. It will
be interesting to see if this new functionality is
limited by governmental concern over safe driving
habits.
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