- cross-posted to:
- apple@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- apple@lemmy.ml
Archived version: https://archive.ph/hguLn
Excerpt (and context):
Apple Maps’ offering might surprise people who remember its disastrous launch in 2012, which the Guardian described as the company’s “first significant failure in years”. Users were more than furious – they were lost, sometimes dangerously so. In Australia, police had to rescue tourists from the huge Murray-Sunset national park, after Maps placed the city of Mildura in the wrong place by more than 40 miles. Some of the motorists located by police had been stranded for 24 hours without food or water. In Ireland, ministers had to complain directly to Apple after a cafe and gardens called “Airfield” was designated by the service as an actual airport.
But mostly the map was just glitchy and unhelpful, its directions always a little off kilter. Users revolted and Apple made a rare retreat, allowing Google Maps to be used as the default on many iPhone apps and apologizing for the product.
Here in Norway they had a solid regression last year.
I mean in some areas the maps are about as accurate as your 2004 sat-nav, if you ever had one.
Roads that where there are missing, outlines are suddenly grossly imprecise.
Find my shows meaningless address information with a random number at the end.
Honestly have no idea wtf is going on.
Probably one of the European mapping companies demanded more money than Apple was willing to pay. Report all the problems, they’ll get fixed one by one. Apple will also detect problems automatically by comparing traffic data collection to their map.
Have seen zero improvements after the regression, but I think you overestimate people’s willingness to help improve something that has worse data quality than open street map.
If it’s broken and I have a better alternative I’m not using it.
Ugh that sucks. That really shouldn’t happen