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Apple Maps to expand community crowdsourcing features, Siri + Passbook integration

Maps Transit

Apple is looking to expand its efforts in crowdsourcing data to improve its Maps app for iOS and OS X, according to hints in a new job listing on the company’s site.

So far Apple’s efforts in crowdsourcing data to improve its Maps app has been limited to its own data collection projects and the “Report a problem” function in the Maps app. It also collects crowdsourced data from iOS’s Frequent Locations feature if users allow it. But the new job listings hint at Apple’s interest in expanding the user feedback feature, including through Maps integration in Siri and Passbook.

The job posting is seeking a “Community Client Software Engineer” for the Maps team to work on “building and extending the Maps application to allow Apple to crowdsource improvements to the Maps experience.” More specifically, Apple wants someone to work on developing new data crowdsourcing features through “high-level UI development and architecture of the “Report a Problem” feature of the Maps application.” It also hints at collecting crowdsourced data through Maps integration with apps like Siri and Passbook:

You’ll also be working on the frameworks and plugins that enable Maps to integrate deeply and seamlessly with parts of the system such as Siri and Passbook, to extend and enhance the feedback experience.

Apple has improved on its Report a Problem feature that allows user-submitted corrections somewhat since first launching Maps, but it doesn’t include features like real-time crowdsourced traffic alerts. Those have been made popular by apps like Waze, the maps app with a focus on user submitted data that Google acquired last year.

Apple recently resumed its own crowdsourcing efforts for Maps using Ground Truth contributors around the globe following some shake-ups on the Maps team. Troubles for the Maps team might not be over, however, as last month we reported Apple had lost a top Maps app manager, who served as Senior Engineering Manager, Maps Apps & Community, following a notable number of exits in recent months.

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Comments

  1. Taste_of_Apple - 9 years ago

    Can’t wait to see this happen.

    • herb02135go - 9 years ago

      I’m skeptical of anything that’s crowd-sourced due to my experience with Waze.

      Crowd-sourcing gave the world President George Bush.

      Of course I don’t use Apple Maps anymore and gave up on it even when I did use an iphone. Simply unreliable.

      • Taste_of_Apple - 9 years ago

        Gave up on Waze too. Haven’t had many issues with Apple Maps. Aside from Google Maps, it has been solid for me 99% of the time. Depends on where you live.

      • standardpull - 9 years ago

        I agree. Waze was a good idea until Google let the social aspect it run out of control just like MySpace did in 2003. And then Google loaded Waze up with pop-up ads.

        I guess that’s one way Google can induce Android users to migrate over to the considerably weaker Google Maps – just annoy and/or kill off all their Waze users. After all, Google bought Waze for their user base. And not so they would have to have to maintain two mapping products. Expect Waze to be dead in two years, once their data licensing agreements need to be renewed.

  2. Greg Kaplan (@kaplag) - 9 years ago

    what is that image from? is it just a concept or something? If so there’s no source listed and it’s misleading. For a minute I thought transit was integrated in some new beta or something.

    • nickjeremiah - 9 years ago

      The fact that it has a 9to5Mac watermark on the image, I’d say it’s an in-house mock-up of what it could look like with new features.

  3. Air Burt - 9 years ago

    Attention commenters, please copy and paste this entire comment (including this text) onto each article that you see a comment from herb02135go (or any other iteration that he might create):

    Please ignore any and all comments from herb02135go (or any other iteration that he might create), especially responses to your own comments. He is a known Samsung troll and Apple-hater. None of the information he posts is supported by facts and is completely driven by ignorance. Continuing to respond to him will only encourage him to continue his trolling. Purposely ignoring him is the option we need to choose to take back the comments section for those of us who this website is geared toward. If you are able to do so, please call for his banning from 9to5Mac, either by commenting or emailing the editors. Please continue to pass this on until our mission has been accomplished and herb02135go (or any other iteration that he might create) is no longer allowed to comment on here.

Author

Avatar for Jordan Kahn Jordan Kahn

Jordan writes about all things Apple as Senior Editor of 9to5Mac, & contributes to 9to5Google, 9to5Toys, & Electrek.co. He also co-authors 9to5Mac’s Logic Pros series.