TechRadar

4 ways Google Maps needs to improve now

TechRadar logo TechRadar 21.08.2022 14:14:51 Hamish Hector
Two lost backpackers on the street, confused by GPS location on their smartphone

Google Maps may be one of the best navigation apps out there, but that doesn't mean it's perfect.

Having spent years relying on Google Maps to take me everywhere, using it to help me save on fuel costs, and making sure I never miss the last train home, I'm aware of both its benefits and its faults.

So here are four improvements that I'd love to see made to Google Maps.

Google Maps is generally pretty accurate. Its traffic warnings and journey times are consistently right, and its routes always get me to where I want to go.

That said, it can make mistakes on more minor details. On quite a few occasions recently, I've found that the speed limit for a particular road indicated by Maps is incorrect, being either too high and too low on certain stretches of my journey. 

In addition, while navigating towns and cities on foot, Google Maps can sometimes disregard alleys and paths that could simplify or even shorten my route, overly favoring paths along main roads. 

These minor issues aren't going to be the easiest to get right all the time - after all, Google Maps is trying to keep track of data from all over the world - but there are some ways it could be fixed.

Better promoting crowdsourcing tools is one, giving users a more obvious way to offer corrections for what Google Maps is reporting. Additionally, it would be great if the car navigation system could use your phone's rear camera to detect road signs, live-updating the recommended speed limit as you drive. Traffic sign recognition is already appearing in many cars, and adding it to Google Maps shouldn't be too difficult.

A big time-saver when planning my routes on the web version of Google maps would be the option to easily craft a single route that uses multiple modes of transportation.

I live in the UK's countryside, where public transport is a lot more miss than it is a hit. As such, if I want to take a bus to the local train station, it will likely take me about an hour, including the walk on either end. By contrast, I can drive there in about 20-25 minutes, depending on traffic. 

On another journey, I've found myself wanting to walk to a train station or ride my bike there. Being able to combine these eco-friendlier options would help me better plan when I need to leave, so I can arrive in time, without having to sprint to catch my train.

Being able to combine Google Maps' different transportation options into a single route on the main page would be a huge help. There are ways to get around this - by using multiple tabs with different sections of the route mapped out, for example - but none are as simple as I want them to be.

Google Maps' voice options are severely lacking. 

Back when I was a kid, I remember our sat nav had access to a slew of celebrity and famous character voices from which you could choose. You even had the option to record your own.

Admittedly, these voices could grate after a while - Yoda's navigation narration lasted barely 5 minutes - but for the occasional blast of fun, I'd love to be guided by the potty-mouthed Billy Butcher from The Boys, or hear the delightfully odd intonation of Nicolas Cage.

If you're looking for things that Google Maps can do, then check out these 5 hidden features that you might not know about. 

dimanche 21 août 2022 17:14:51 Categories: TechRadar

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