Skip to main content

How can Apple truly leverage Waze?

Rumors broke today that Apple is rumored to be acquiring Waze. The latest rumors have Apple's offer at $500 Million ($400 Million cash and $100 Million incentives), with Waze rumored holding out for $750 Million.

Of course, these aren't the first rumors of Waze acquisition talks.  Last August it was Facebook that was the rumored suitor, which did come to fruition as increased integration of Facebook into Waze's app.  The consensus is that Apple needs Waze to beef up its Apple Maps product, and by acquiring Waze Apple will strengthen its position vis-a-vis Google. But it's all still rumors.

We've already compared Waze to Google Maps, and Waze definitely has advantages, especially its crowd-sourced traffic data.  If Apple can improve the usability a bit, the results should be amazing.

But the question still remains: How would Apple benefit from owning Waze?  Is there more to it than a strong product on iPhone that it could deny to Android and Windows Phone devices?

Grizzly Analytics believes that Apple has a lot more in the works than just an exclusive maps application.

One possibility is integrating Waze navigation, particularly their ability to estimate driving time more accurately than other navigation services, into an "integrated calendar and map application" that Apple has been researching since 2008.  The idea sounds great: If I have a calendar item across town later today, the calendar app can use driving time estimates from a navigation app to give me a reminder when I need to get on the road, to avoid being late because of traffic. This feature would benefit hugely from accurate traffic data like Waze has.

Integrating navigation into iPhone calendars would join location-based reminders in adding location-orientation to iPhone calendars and to-do lists. They're not revolutionary, but they can change how people use smartphone calendars.

Apple also has other location-based research underway, such as location-based media and finding friends along routes being navigated.

All in all, Waze could give Apple more than just a great mapping app, it can give them a kind of intelligence about driving time and routing that Apple will be able to leverage in a lot of ways.

Will the deal happen? We'll all have to wait and see. But if it does, expect innovative new features from Apple that incorporate driving time and routing into other phone features.  And look forward to iPhone users arriving at meetings on time.

Popular posts from this blog

Intel demos indoor location technology in new Wi-Fi chips at MWC 2015

Intel made several announcements  at MWC 2015, including a new chipset for wireless connectivity (Wi-Fi) in mobile devices. This new chipset, the 8270, include in-chip support for indoor location positioning. Below we explain their technology and show a video of it in action. With this announcement, Intel joins Broadcom, Qualcomm and other chip makers in moving broad indoor location positioning into mobile device hardware. The transition of indoor location positioning into chips is a trend identified in the newest Grizzly Analytics report on Indoor Location Positioning Technologies , released the week before MWC 2015. By moving indoor location positioning from software into hardware, chips such as Intel's enable location positioning to run continuously and universally, without using device CPU, and with less power consumption. Intel's technology delivers 1-3 meter accuracy, using a technique called multilateration, generating a new location estimate every second. While 1-

The year indoor location will truly take off

For years I've been writing sentences like "this will be the year that indoor location will explode into the market." I, and many others, have been expecting indoor location technology to enable the huge range of location-enabled apps, which currently work only outside where GPS signals are available, to work inside. But until now the promise of indoor location has remained a promise. But if we look at the reasons for this, we'll see that it is about to change. 2017 and 2018 are poised to be the years that the challenges keeping indoor location from going mainstream will be solved. First is accuracy. Most indoor location technologies until a year or so ago had accuracy in the range of 4 to 8 meters. This sounds good in principle, and in fact is better than GPS in many cases. But GPS systems are able to use road details to hide their inaccuracies, so that the blue dot seems to follow your driving car almost perfectly. But indoors, this sort of inaccuracy means y

Waze and Google Maps: A Quick Comparison

I've been a big Waze fan for years, relying on it to make my daily commute as quick as possible.  I try to never leave my hometown without checking Waze first to avoid getting stuck in traffic. For those of you who don't know about Waze, they basically crowd-source traffic information, learning where traffic is slow by measuring how fast their users are moving.  This traffic information is then used to route people in ways that will truly be fastest.  (Apple has reportedly licensed Waze data for their upcoming maps app.) Waze is used most heavily abroad, and is only recently building a following in the States.  (It was also just reviewed on the Forbes site .)  So on a recent trip to the States, I decided to compare Waze to the latest USA-based version of Google Maps for Android. In a nutshell, I reached three conclusions.  (1) Google's use of text-to-speech in their turn-by-turn directions is very nice.   (2) Google's got Waze beat in terms of explaining what